Published on 27 April 2023 |
Data for: Hunting behavior of a solitary sailfish Istiophorus platypterus and estimated energy gain after prey capture
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Foraging behavior and interaction with prey is an integral component of the niche of predators but is inherently difficult to observe for highly mobile animals in the marine environment. Billfish have been described as ‘energy speculators’, expending a large amount of energy foraging, expecting to offset high costs with periodic high energetic gain. Surface-based group feeding of sailfish, Istiophorus platypterus, is commonly observed, yet sailfish are believed to be solitary roaming predators with high metabolic requirements, suggesting that individual foraging also represents a major component of predator-prey interactions. Here, we use biologging data and video to examine daily activity levels and foraging behavior, estimate metabolic costs, and document a solitary predation event. We estimate a median active metabolic rate of 218.9 ± 70.5 mgO2 kg-1 h-1 which increased to 518.8 ± 586.3 mgO2 kg-1 h-1 during prey pursuit. Assuming a successful predation, we estimate a daily net energy gain of 2.4 MJ (5.1 MJ acquired, 2.7 MJ expended), supporting the energy speculator model. While group hunting may be a common activity used by sailfish to acquire energy, our calculations indicate that opportunistic individual foraging events offer a net energy return that contributes to the fitness of these highly mobile predators.
Citations (2)
Cited on 01 January 2026
Weight: 1.00
- https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-28748-0DataCite MDC
Cited on 27 January 2023
Weight: 1.00
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Publication Details
Subfield
Nature and Landscape Conservation
Field
Environmental Science
Domain
Physical Sciences
Confidence Score
56%
Source
Scholar Data Model