Project: Determining the Field Metabolic Rate of Marine Predators: Integrating Accelerometry and Respirometry to Bridge the Gap Between the Laboratory and the Field

Acronym/Short Name:Shark Metabolic Rate
Project Duration:2012-04 - 2016-03
Geolocation:Gulf Coast of South Florida and Bimini, Bahamas

Description

Description from NSF award abstract:
Energetics is a central theme in ecology, and metabolism may be the primary factor determining the structure of biological systems as a whole. Despite the importance of top level predators in marine ecosystems and the need to understand the impact of their global population declines, surprisingly little is known about energy flow in upper trophic levels. This gap in knowledge is due to the difficulty of assessing the metabolic rate of marine predators and the inability to link experimentally derived metabolic rates to those of free-ranging animals in their natural habitat. Novel accelerometry technology is now making this link possible for the first time. Because Overall Dynamic Body Acceleration (ODBA) has been shown to correlate closely with oxygen consumption in numerous vertebrate taxa, this potentially transformational technique can be used to derive time-energy budgets for free-ranging marine predators.

This study will integrate the use of respirometry and accelerometry technology to bridge the gap between laboratory- and field-based metabolic rates for three species of sharks with different behaviors. The PIs will conduct respirometry experiments on accelerometer-equipped animals in the laboratory to determine the relationship between metabolic rate and ODBA for each species over a range of swim speeds and water temperatures. Using these relationships, the PIs will then conduct field experiments using accelerometry to calculate the absolute energetic expenditure of sharks in their natural habitat over several days. Because accelerometers also provide data with which specific shark behaviors can be quantified, the PIs will be able to partition between standard and active metabolic rate and determine how the relationship changes at varying temperatures. This aspect will have implications for predicting how seasonal or long-term changes in sea surface temperatures are likely to affect the impact of ectothermic predators on their prey.



People

Lead Principal Investigator: Dr Nicholas Whitney
Mote Marine Laboratory (Mote)

Principal Investigator: Dr Samuel Gruber
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (UM-RSMAS)

Co-Principal Investigator: Dr Robert Hueter
Mote Marine Laboratory (Mote)

Contact: Dr Nicholas Whitney
Mote Marine Laboratory (Mote)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Whitney_Gruber_OCE-1156141_1156145.pdf (111.56 KB)
02/09/2025