Date: August 8, 2016
Source: University of Miami
Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science
An international team that
includes University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric
Science researchers found behavioral evidence that tiger sharks prefer to
opportunistically scavenge on dead or weakened green turtles rather than
actively hunting healthy individuals despite more opportunities to do so. The
study, conducted off the coast of Australia during the turtle nesting season,
also found the behavior of healthy green turtles suggests that they do not
perceive tiger sharks as a major threat during nesting season.
In the new study, the research
team used data from satellite tagged tiger sharks and green turtles off the
northern coast of Australia's Great Barrier Reef in the waters around Raine
Island collected over a five-year period. During some years, up to as many as
12,000 green sea turtles aggregate around Raine Island to lay eggs on the
beach, which offers scientists a natural laboratory to compare the movements
and behaviours of the turtles and tiger sharks during a time when sea turtle
concentrations are higher than average.
"After long nesting periods
onshore, many green turtles become weakened from exhaustion. Up to as many as
80 individuals a night may die in certain years, and their bodies eventually
get washed into the water during high tide," said study co-investigator
Adam Barnett from BioPixel.
They researchers found surfacing
of both tiger sharks and green turtles was highest where they overlapped in
core home range, closest to the island, and surfacing also increased for both
animals with increasing proximity to the shoreline. In other studies where
green sea turtles and tiger shark home range overlap have been analyzed,
scientists have observed turtles that avoid isolating themselves at the water
surface when they are vulnerable to ambush from tiger sharks. Likewise, when
tiger sharks are actively hunting turtles, they stalk their prey from deep
below to launch a stealthy attack.
"From analyzing the
behavioral data from tracked tiger sharks and green turtles, it appears that
tiger sharks are patrolling the shores of Raine Island for a few opportunities
to scavenge on the few dead turtles that get washed into the water or the
weakened individuals that make their way in the water, instead of actively
hunting the hundreds of healthy green turtles that they are encountering daily
during the turtle nesting season," said the study's lead author Neil
Hammerschlag, a research assistant professor at the UM Rosenstiel School and UM
Abess Center for Ecosystem Science and Policy. "The sharks are probably
having to go out of their way to avoid hundreds of live turtles to find the
dead and weakened ones. It is energetically more advantageous and also safer
for sharks to scavenge on carcasses rather than have to chase down live
turtles. In this way, tiger sharks are similar to terrestrial carnivores, such
as hyenas and polar bears, which will selectively scavenge when the opportunity
arises."
"Raine Island is the most
biologically significant island on the Great Barrier Reef. It is home to the
largest sea bird nesting population on the Reef and the largest green sea
turtle nesting site in the world," said study co-investigator Richard
Fitzpatrick from BioPixel. "To date, lots of research has been done on the
turtles and birds. This research has increased our understanding of the
predators that use the Raine Island region, and in turn enhanced our
understanding of the whole Raine Island ecosystem."
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine &
Atmospheric Science. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
Neil Hammerschlag, Ian Bell,
Richard Fitzpatrick, Austin J. Gallagher, Lucy A. Hawkes, Mark G. Meekan, John
D. Stevens, Michele Thums, Matthew J. Witt, Adam Barnett. Behavioral evidence
suggests facultative scavenging by a marine apex predator during a food pulse.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 2016; DOI: 10.1007/s00265-016-2183-2
Cite This Page:
University of Miami Rosenstiel
School of Marine & Atmospheric Science. "Tiger sharks opt for
scavenging on dead and dying sea turtles as a feeding strategy: Study provides
new insight into the behavior of an ocean top predator." ScienceDaily.
ScienceDaily, 8 August 2016. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/08/160808115903.htm>.
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