2017
DOI: 10.1575/1912/8468
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Effects of added drag on cetaceans : fishing gear entanglement and external tag attachment

Abstract: Animal movement is motivated in part by energetic constraints, where fitness is maximized by minimizing energy consumption. The energetic cost of movement depends on the resistive forces acting on an animal; changes in this force balance can occur naturally or unnaturally. Fishing gear that entangles large whales adds drag, often altering energy balance to the point of terminal emaciation. An analog to this is drag from tags attached to cetaceans for research and monitoring. This thesis quantifies the effects … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 269 publications
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“…The findings in this study might therefore also be relevant to other live-bearing and gravid animals (fish, reptiles, mammals). They might also be pertinent to aquatic animals with disturbances in their body shape due to tags or entangled fishing gear, both of which increase the drag production and animals exhibit a lower swimming speed, circumventing the extra energetic costs associated with the extra drag [35,36]. 1.8 , close to the expected value of U 2 , reflecting the inertial flow regime in which P. gracilis swims (Re .…”
Section: Body Shape Changed During Pregnancymentioning
confidence: 90%
“…The findings in this study might therefore also be relevant to other live-bearing and gravid animals (fish, reptiles, mammals). They might also be pertinent to aquatic animals with disturbances in their body shape due to tags or entangled fishing gear, both of which increase the drag production and animals exhibit a lower swimming speed, circumventing the extra energetic costs associated with the extra drag [35,36]. 1.8 , close to the expected value of U 2 , reflecting the inertial flow regime in which P. gracilis swims (Re .…”
Section: Body Shape Changed During Pregnancymentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Some of the limitations of this method include movement of the tag on the body (e.g. sliding, tag oscillation) and interference from water flow noise, but detailed calibration suggests that it provides robust results (Van der Hoop, 2016).…”
Section: Vital Capacitymentioning
confidence: 99%