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HIGH PERFORMANCE TURNING CAPABILITIES DURING FORAGING BY BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS (TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS)
Authors:Jennifer L  Maresh Frank E  Fish Douglas P  Nowacek Stephanie M  Nowacek Randall S  Wells
Institution:Duke University, Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Durham, North Carolina 27707, U. S. A.;Department of Biology, West Chester University, West Chester, Pennsylvania 19380, U. S. A. E-mail:;Oceanography Department, Florida State University, 509 OSB, West Call Street, Tallahassee, Florida 32306, U. S. A.;Mote Marine Laboratory, Sarasota, Florida 34236, U. S. A.
Abstract:Large predators should have difficulty catching small prey because small animals demonstrate greater maneuverability and agility compared to large animals. The ability of a predator to capture small prey indicates locomotor strategies to compensate for inequities in maneuverability. Bottlenose dolphins ( Tursiops truncatus ) in Sarasota Bay, Florida feed on fish at least one order of magnitude smaller than themselves. To examine the locomotor strategies involved in prey capture, the foraging movements of these dolphins were videotaped from overhead using a remotely-controlled camera suspended from a helium-filled aerostat, which was tethered to an observation vessel. Dolphins were observed to rapidly maneuver during chases of fish in open water or around patches of rooted vegetation. Video analysis of the chase sequences indicated that the dolphins could move the rostrum through small radius turns with a mean value of 0.20 body lengths and with a minimum value of 0.08 body lengths. Mean rate of turn was 561.6°/sec with a maximum rate measured at 1,372.0°/sec. High turning rates with small turning radii were primarily the result of maneuvers in which the dolphin rolled 90° and rapidly flexed its body ventrally. The ability of dolphins to change body orientation in multiple rotational axes provides a mechanism to reduce turning radius and increase turning rate to catch small, elusive prey.
Keywords:bottlenose dolphin              Tursiops truncatus            foraging  predator-prey  maneuverability  turning  pinwheel  swimming
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