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NEWS RELEASE
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IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 8, 2007
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Local
Researcher Tracks Predator and Prey: Uses Electronic Tags to
Simultaneously Monitor Sperm Whales and Squid
Galveston, Texas
– In a recent study, a team of marine scientists reports the
successful tagging of sperm whales and jumbo squid swimming
together off Mexico’s Pacific coast—the first time that
electronic tracking devices have been applied simultaneously
to deep-diving predators and prey in the same waters. The
sperm whale and its large prey, the jumbo squid, are among the
deepest divers in the ocean, routinely reaching depths of
3,000 feet or more.
The research team included principal
investigator William Gilly, professor of biological sciences
at Stanford University, and lead author Randall Davis,
professor of marine biology at Texas A&M University at
Galveston. Their results, published in the March 12 edition of
the journal Marine Ecology Progress Series (MEPS),
raise new questions about the diving behavior of both species.
“Sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus)
and jumbo squid (Dosidicus gigas) are both major
predators that spend much of their lives in one of the world’s
largest ecosystems, the mesopelagic zone [650 to 3,300 feet
below sea level],” the authors wrote. “How sperm whales search
for, detect and capture their prey remains uncertain.” To find
out, the researchers traveled to the Gulf of California, also
called the Sea of Cortez—a narrow stretch of ocean that
separates the Mexican mainland from the Baja Peninsula.
“The central Gulf of California is a uniquely
advantageous location to study the behavioral ecology of sperm
whales and their squid prey,” the authors wrote. “Sperm whales
are abundant year-round and appear to feed heavily on jumbo
squid, a species that is easily captured and amenable to
tagging. To our knowledge, this is the first attempt to
simultaneously study a mesopelagic predator and its prey using
electronic tagging techniques.”
Size matters
The jumbo (or Humboldt) squid is a large
cephalopod species found only in the Pacific. A mature jumbo
squid can weigh more than 100 pounds and grow more than 6 feet
long. Sperm whales, the biggest of all toothed whales, inhabit
every ocean. An adult male can reach nearly 60 feet in length
and weigh 57 tons.
The sperm whale was immortalized by Herman
Melville in his novel Moby-Dick.
Heavily hunted for their oil during Melville’s time, the sperm
whale population today ranges somewhere between 360,000 to 1
million. These giants have a voracious appetite for squid.
According to one estimate, worldwide sperm whale predation on
squid may exceed 100 million metric tons a year—roughly
equivalent to the entire annual harvest of all the commercial
fisheries on Earth.
Humans also are big consumers of squid,
including jumbo squid, now the target of a thriving commercial
fishery in Baja California. “Even though this species is found
only in the eastern Pacific, it reaches from Alaska to Chile
and supports the largest cephalopod fishery in the world,”
said Gilly, an authority on squid who is based at Stanford’s
Hopkins Marine Station.
“It’s very rare to find a place like the Gulf
of California where you can actually see sperm whales together
with their prey,” added Davis, an expert on marine mammal
behavior. “I can’t think of another place in the world where
this would be possible.”
Despite the vital role that jumbo squid and
sperm whales play in oceanic ecosystems and fisheries, many
aspects of their lifestyle—including feeding and hunting—are
as mysterious today as they were when Melville made the
following observation in Moby-Dick:
“For though other species of whales find their food above
water, and may be seen by man in the act of feeding, the
spermaceti whale obtains his whole food in unknown zones below
the surface; and only by inference is it that any one can tell
of what, precisely, that food consists.”
The sperm whale remains a challenging research
subject for scientists today, Davis noted. “Adult sperm whales
can stay underwater for more than an hour, but nobody knows
exactly what they’re doing down there,” he said.
“We also know relatively little about the
behavior of jumbo squid in the wild,” Gilly added. “For
example, it was only a couple of years ago that we discovered
an area in the central Gulf of California where spawning and
mating of these animals probably take place.”
Electronic tags
The MEPS study was
conducted in fall 2004 near Santa Rosalia, a coastal Baja
California town that is the center of Mexico’s jumbo squid
fishery.
During six days at sea, the research team
identified 74 individual sperm whales in a 27-square-mile
area. To locate whales, researchers towed an array of
hydrophones from the back of a boat and listened for the
animals’ distinct clicking vocalizations. When they finally
encountered a whale, the scientists carefully approached the
animal and attached an electronic depth recorder to its back.
Later, whenever the tagged whale surfaced for a breath of air,
the device would transmit recorded data about the animal’s
movements to an orbiting satellite.
Jumbo squid also were abundant, with numerous
small fishing boats hauling in a total catch of about 10,000
squid per night throughout the six-day study. Captured squid
were outfitted with a pop-up archival transmitting tag, which
periodically sampled the animal’s depth. Unlike the
instruments used on whales, the squid tags were designed to
detach at a predetermined time, then float to the surface and
transmit stored data to the satellite.
Results
During the study, electronic tags were placed
on five whales and three jumbo squid swimming nearby. Analysis
of the tagging data showed that the whales were traveling up
to 60 miles a day within a relatively small area, suggesting
that they had found an abundant supply of food.
The tagged predators and prey must have crossed
paths at some time during the experiment, Gilly noted. “Based
on the locations of where the squid tags first appeared on the
surface, all three squid had to have moved from the Santa
Rosalia fishing grounds right through the area where the
whales were patrolling,” he said.
As for diving behavior, the majority (91
percent) of sperm whale dives recorded during the study ranged
from 300 to 1,600 feet below sea level and were 15 to 30
minutes in duration. Only 13 dives (3 percent) exceeded 3,200
feet.
These results closely mirrored the diving data
collected from the squid. “Tagged squid in our study occupied
the 100-500 meter [300 to 1,600-foot] zone, the same region to
which the whales dove over 90 percent of the time, consistent
with the idea that whales were primarily preying on jumbo
squid of large body size,” the authors wrote. “Whales did
occasionally dive beyond 500 meters, especially during daytime
when the squid were deep, and we assume these also represent
foraging dives.”
Night and day
During the day, whales and squid spent about 75
percent of the time at depths ranging from 600 to 1,300 feet,
which is “consistent with the idea that the whales were
foraging where the probability of encountering squid was
highest,” the authors wrote.
At night, however, the tagged squid spent at
least half of their time in shallower waters above 600 feet
and the remainder at 600 to 1,300 feet. One likely explanation
for this vertical movement is that the squid were following
small fish and other prey that migrate toward the surface at
night and then return to deeper waters during the day.
Unlike squid, however, the sperm whales did not
alter their diving pattern at night. Instead, they continued
to spend about three-fourths of their time at depths of 600 to
1,300 feet, according to nocturnal tagging data.
“These data show that sperm whales don’t change
their feeding behavior, day or night,” Davis explained.
“Instead, they keep going down to about 1,300 feet, whether
squid are there or not. Perhaps it’s the only way they can
catch them, but no one has ever seen a sperm whale feeding in
the wild, so nobody really knows how they capture their food.”
Stressed squid
The study also revealed that the squid often
made rapid nighttime dives from the surface to deeper waters
preferred by whales. “One reason squid may be going down there
at night is because water near the surface is really warm—up
to 82 F—and they may be getting stressed,” Gilly explained.
“The squid is using energy all of the time, because it has to
swim to breathe. So when it gets into really warm water, I
think it gets out pretty quickly. These deep dives, therefore,
may have some kind of recovery function. We think the stress
may be temperature-related, but another factor could be
oxygen. It’s possible they could be negatively affected by
long exposure to the higher oxygen levels found near the
surface.”
A stressed-out squid may be an easy target for
hungry sperm whales waiting below, according to Gilly. “We
propose that jumbo squid are more susceptible to predation
while they are recovering at depth immediately after a deep
nighttime dive,” he
explained.
In previous studies, Gilly found that jumbo
squid are well adapted to the low-oxygen
environment in deeper waters, where they spend most of their
time. However, he added, at depths of 800 feet or more, where
it’s very cold and oxygen levels are extremely low, the
squid’s reaction time, visual acuity and swimming speed may be
significantly impaired because of an inadequate supply of
oxygen—a condition known as hypoxia.
“Squid need a constant supply of oxygen to
support their metabolism,” Davis added. “Sperm whales, on the
other hand, take the oxygen down with them bound to the
hemoglobin in their blood and the myoglobin in their muscles,
so they don’t have to worry about hypoxia at depth.”
By spending most of their time in cold, deep
waters, he noted, sperm whales can take advantage of a
vulnerable squid, whether it’s slowed down by hypoxia at depth
during the daytime, or at night after it has made a deep dive
to escape the warm, stressful conditions at the surface.
“By hunting deep in this cold, hypoxic
environment at night, as well as during the day, sperm whales
may favor jumbo squid that are in some way compromised and
thus easier to capture,” the authors wrote.
“This research provided a unique opportunity to
learn more about two species that are very difficult to study
in their natural habitat,” Davis noted. “In the future, this
co-tagging approach should yield new insights into
predator-prey interactions with other pelagic species that are
large enough to carry electronic tags.”
Added Gilly: “Although human observers at the
surface of the sea must still infer what the mysterious squid
and the leviathan are doing at great depths, the use of modern
electronic tagging methods will surely guide those inferences,
leading to insights that even Melville might not have
imagined.”
Other co-authors of the study are principal
investigator Nathalie Jaquet of the Provincetown Center for
Coastal Studies, Unai Markaida of El Colegio de la Frontera
Sur, Diane Gendron of
Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas-Instituto
Politécnico Nacional (CICIMAR-IPN)
and Gaston Bazzino of
Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del
Noroeste (CIBNOR) in Mexico.
Research was supported by the National Science
Foundation, the Census of Marine Life Tagging of Pacific
Pelagics program, the National Geographic Society and the
David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
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