Inferring spatial and temporal behavioral patterns of free-ranging manatees using saltwater sensors of telemetry tags
Tipo de material:
- Texto
- Computadora
- Recurso en línea
- Trichechus manatus
- Artfrosur
- Trichechus manatus
- Conducta animal
- Animal behavior
- Ecología animal
- Animal ecology
- Bahía de Chetumal, Othón P. Blanco (Quintana Roo, México)
- Chetumal Bay, Othon P. Blanco (Quintana Roo, Mexico)
- Biología y química Ciencias de la vida Biología animal (zoología) -- Ecología animal
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Estado | Código de barras | |
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Artículos | Biblioteca Electrónica Recursos en línea (RE) | ECOSUR | Recurso digital | ECO400535193827 |
Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
Diving or respiratory behavior in aquatic mammals can be used as indicator of physiological activity and consequently, to infer behavioral patterns. Five Antillean manatees, Trichechus manatus manatus, were captured in Chetumal Bay and tagged with GPS tracking devices. The radios were equipped with a micropower saltwater sensor (SWS), which records the times when the tag assembly was submerged. The information was analyzed to establish individual fine-scale behaviors. For each fix, we established the following variables: Distance (D), sampling interval (T), movement rate (D/T), number of dives (N), and total diving duration (TDD). We used logic criteria and simple scatterplots to distinguish between behavioral categories: 'Travelling' (D/T≥3 km/h), 'Surface' (↓TDD,↓N), 'Bottom feeding' (↑TDD,↑N) and 'Bottom resting' (↑TDD,↓N). Habitat categories were qualitatively assigned: Lagoon, Channels, Caye shore, City shore, Chanel edge, and Open areas. The instrumented individuals showed a daily rhythm of bottom activities, with surfacing activities more frequent during the night and early in the morning. More investigation into those cycles and other individual fine-scale behaviors related to their proximity to concentrations of human activity would be informative. Inglés