Dear MARMAM colleagues,

We are pleased to announce that the following paper has been published online:


John Symons, Enrico Pirotta, and David Lusseau (2014). Sex differences in risk 
perception in deep-diving bottlenose dolphins leads to decreased foraging 
efficiency when exposed to human disturbance. Journal of Applied Ecology.


ABSTRACT:


  1.  Individuals make behavioural decisions by weighing potential advantages 
and costs (e.g. increased food intake vs. increased risk of predation). When 
animals change their activities in response to a perceived threat, their 
energetic input may decline. Marine ecotourism, including whale and dolphin 
watching, is growing globally and cetaceans perceive interactions with tour 
vessels as a form of risk. Observable behavioural changes need to be linked to 
bioenergetic effects to determine the potential population consequences of this 
disturbance.
  2.  We developed a theoretical optimal dive model for bottlenose dolphins 
under three potential types of perceived risk resulting from human interactions 
at the surface (decreasing instantaneous risk, increasing instantaneous risk 
and no risk). We compared the predictions of these theoretical models to 
observed dive cycles of foraging male and female dolphins in the presence and 
absence of tour vessels. We used mixture models to classify dive types and 
mixed effects models to analyse changes in the interbreath interval of surface 
and bottom dives and the frequency of estimated bottom dives.
  3.  Males significantly increased bottom time and performed fewer bottom 
dives when boats were present, matching predictions of our theoretical model 
for perceived decreasing instantaneous risk. In contrast, females significantly 
decreased bottom times and increased the frequency of bottom dives, matching 
predictions from the model for perceived increasing instantaneous risk. 
Therefore, our empirical results suggest differences in the perception of risk 
between sexes.
  4.  Synthesis and applications. By comparing theoretical predictions with 
observed dive data, our study suggests that boat interactions during foraging 
can cause decreased net energy gain over a foraging bout for both sexes, with 
females being more impacted. The population under study is currently listed as 
critically endangered. Understanding whether these predicted energetic impacts 
affect an individual's vital rates will provide a link to the population-level 
consequences of this disturbance. Previous analytical approaches have failed to 
capture the costs associated with disturbance during foraging, leading to 
management recommendations that only protect animals from increased energetic 
expenditure. We suggest that the current management scheme should be revised to 
include foraging areas in order to secure the energy intake of animals.


KEY WORDS:

  5.  bioenergetics;
  6.  consequences of disturbance;
  7.  dive modelling;
  8.  ecology of fear;
  9.   PCOD ;
  10. predation risk;
  11. Tursiops truncatus?


A PDF copy of the work can be downloaded from:


http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2664.12337/full



Cheers,

John Symons
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