Title: BIOLOGY 457/657 PHYSIOLOGY OF MARINE
1BIOLOGY 457/657PHYSIOLOGY OF MARINE ESTUARINE
ANIMALS
- May 5, 2004
- MIGRATION
- IN THE SEA
2INTRODUCTIONCues for Migration
- Marine Animals Use Every Available Sensory
Modality to Orient Their Migrations, Both Short
and Long-Distance
3INTRODUCTIONCues for Orientation
- Light (visual systems eyes)
- Sound (auditory senses)
- Gravity (mechanical systems)
- Pressure (several receptor types)
- Chemical gradients (chemosenses)
- Currents (mechanoreception)
- Wind (mechanoreception)
- Wave surge (acceration receptors gravity sense)
- Temperature (thermal sense)
- Celestial cues (visual systems)
- Electrical fields (electroreception)
- Magnetic fields (magnetoreceptors)
- Landmarks (visual systems)
4INTRODUCTIONTypes of Navigation
- Piloting - Navigation involving the use of
landmarks. - Dead Reckoning - Navigation involving
compass and distance cues. - True Navigation - Navigation requiring a
reliable map sense requires 2 independent
sets of coordinates. - As animals migrate, they often combine all
possible strategies during their travels. For
instance, they may use true navigation to figure
out where they are, dead reckoning to get near
their destination, and piloting to reach the
exact point they want to go. In fact, this is
what a human navigator often does!
5INTRODUCTIONTypes of Migration
Definition The act of moving from one spatial
unit to another (Robin Baker, 1978). Accidental
Migration vs Non-accidental Migration Removal
Migration vs Return Migration Periodic
Migration vs Ontogenetic Migration Homing
Behavior
6INTRODUCTIONBiological Features of Migration
Is species characteristic. Generally involves a
large fraction (frequently all) of the
individuals in a population. Is multimodal.
Involves the use of diverse cues for orientation
and navigation. Is periodic. Periodicity may
be ontogenetic, annual, lunar or semilunar,
diel, or tidal. Has physiological aspects.
Includes sensory, internal drive, and
orientational/navigational components.
7Migrations in the SeaShort-Range Migrations
Diel Vertical Migration
- Common patterns
- Nocturnal (animals at surface at night, by far
the most common pattern) - Twilight (animals at surface at dawn and dusk a
modification of the nocturnal pattern) - Reverse (animals at surface during the day)
- Tidal (keyed to to tides phase shifts with
regard to LD cycle) - Substrate-Water Column (common for animals that
are riding tidal currents or only feeding for
part of the day) - Patterns may vary with age, sex, season, mating
condition, and presence of food or predators. - Diel vertical migration is considered the
greatest mass movement of animals on earth that
takes place each day!
8Diel Vertical Migration
9Vertical Migration Mechanisms
- Light plays a central role in all but tidal
vertical migration. - Does not involve phototaxis (an oriented swimming
response to light). - Light orientation may be modified by other
depth-related factors. - Two Major Hypotheses
- (1) Preferendum Hypothesis - the animals
follow a preferred level of light (a particular
isolume). - (2) Rate-of-Change Hypothesis - the migration
is stimulated by changing light conditions. For
instance, a decrease in light intensity might cue
upward swimming, while an increase could initiate
downward swimming.
10Vertical Migration Mechanisms
- Isolume-following by the deep scattering layer
at sunrise (left) and sunset (right). Notice
that the layer seems to stay with a particular
level of light. But also notice that this
apparent following behavior could be caused by
changes in light intensity.
11Vertical Migration Mechanisms
- Isolume-following by crab larvae in an estuary.
Note that while the larvae often stay with a
particular isolume, they also migrate in response
to other (less obvious) cues.
12Vertical Migration Mechanisms
13Vertical MigrationAdaptive Significance
- Optimal light value - old idea, but what does
it mean??? - Photoprotection
- Accidental byproduct of station-keeping.
- Enhancement of dispersal by currents at different
levels. - Predator avoidance ()
- Metabolic advantages (feed in warm water, digest
and assimilate in cold) - Feeding advantages (chlorophyll and
photosynthetic products are highest at sunset) -
14Migrations in the SeaShort-Range Migrations
Y-Axis Orientation
- Animals on beaches commonly orient towards the
water. This is called y-axis orientation,
since it is perpendicular to the beach. There is
evidence that the preferred orientation (with
respect to the sun) is inherited, at least in
beach amphipods.
www.gla.ac.uk/ibls/DEEB/honsproj/
izzie_2/graphics/tal.jpg
15Migrations in the SeaIntermediate-Range
Migrations
- Example The spiny lobster Panulirus argus in
the Bahamas (research done by William Herrnkind
and collaborators) - The migration is
- unusual in that
- the lobsters
- actually travel
- in single-file
- queues.
- Queuing
- reduces drag.
-
16Migrations in the SeaIntermediate-Range
Migrations
stevegoldfarb.com/bvi/ art/spinylobster.gif
17Migrations in the SeaIntermediate-Range
Migrations
- Summary of migration
- Premigration. Lobsters move independently.
- Buildup. In autumn, lobsters move into the
migration pathway. - Mass migration. Lobsters begin to form long
cues, moving southward along the margins of the
island. - Post-migration. Following the migration,
lobsters disperse into available cover. The
migration may prepare the animals for cold water
conditions in winter. - (Summarized from Herrnkind)
18Migrations in the SeaIntermediate-Range
Migrations
19Migrations in the SeaIntermediate-to-Long Range
Migrations
- Spiny lobsters also can orient back to their
homes if displaced by several 10s to 100s of
miles. - Boles Lohmann 2003
20Migrations in the SeaIntermediate-to-Long Range
Migrations
- The navigation system is based on detection and
orientation within the earths magnetic field.
21Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations I
Tunas
- Bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) make long-distance
(trans-oceanic) migrations. To study this, tuna
were tagged with implantable archival tags
(recovered at the triangles) and pop-up
satellite archival tags (recovered at the
circles). These tags monitored location, depth,
and temperature.
22Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations I
Tunas
- Individual tuna swam vertically down as much as
1000 m, but often less deep at night (see the
blue trace, right). Body temperature (red) was
relatively constant and almost always higher than
sea temperature outside the fish (black lines
the red dots are maximum body temperature, and
the black dots are minimum environmental
temperature).
23Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations I
Tunas
- Fish often stayed resident in the western
Atlantic, and many made transoceanic return
migrations at least once. Panel A shows data
from 19 fish that migrated only slightly. The
fish in panel B migrated to the Gulf of Mexico
and back. C shows several fish that crossed the
ocean and returned. The bottom panel (D)
illustrates a fish that stayed near North America
in 1999 (black) and then crossed to the east
(where it was caught).
24Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
II Eels
- Fish migrations between sea rivers fall into
two general types - Catadromous migrations. Adults live in fresh
water, but breed in the open sea. The best
examples are the anguillid eels, which live in
rivers (in Europe or Asia) as adults, but breed
in the sea (in the case of the Atlantic
population, Anguilla anguilla, in the Sargasso
Sea). - Anadromous migrations. Adults live in seawater,
but spawn in fresh (or estuarine) waters.
Excellent examples are salmon, lampreys, and
striped bass (rockfish). - Navigational mechanisms are unknown, but it is
clear that chemical cues play major roles.
Almost certainly, geomagnetic senses are involved
too.
25Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
II Eels
26Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
II Eels
- The Japanese counterpart of Anguilla anguilla (A.
japonica) was also known to exhibit a catadromous
migration, but it was only in 1991 that the
location of the reproductive center was located
in the Philippine Sea. - Boles Lohmann 2003
27Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
III Whales
28Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
III Whales
- In sperm whales (Physeter catodon), only the
males carry out the long-distance migrations.
Females and juveniles remain in temperate or
tropical latitudes all year long.
homepage1.nifty.com/surara/ pbooks/kujira/sperm.jp
g
29Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
III Whales
- In humpbacks (Megaptera novaeangeliae), both
sexes carry out the long-distance migrations.
Because the northern and southern hemispheres
have different seasons, the two hemispheres have
populations that are mostly reproductively
isolated.
home.earthlink.net/jimmrc/whale/
whalenews0102/w18.html
30Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
III Whales
- In gray whales (Eschrichtius gibbosus), the
migration occurs along the coastline from Alaska
to Baja California, generally within sight of
land. The animals spy-hop during the
migration, perhaps to spot landmarks along the
way.
31Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
IV Sea Turtles
- Sea turtles (like the green turtle, Chelonia
mydas, illustrated here) often nest on tiny,
isolated islands (here, Ascension Island) or
single beaches (photo, Heron Island, Great
Barrier Reef). How do the adults find their way
back to the beach? How do the nestlings make
their way to the sea and eventually return home?
32Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
IV Sea Turtles
- Emerging hatchlings (1) find their way to the
water using visual cues (the location of a
bright, open horizon), (2) continue offshore by
swimming into approaching waves, and (3)
eventually orient in the open ocean using
geomagnetic cues.
33Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
IV Sea Turtles1. Visual Cues
- The initial orienting cue is the sight of an
open, typically bright horizon. Hatchlings will
orient to a darker horizon if the bright one is
elevated (as would occur on a moonlit night).
However, in cases where the horizon is roughly
equally flat in all directions, they run towards
the brightest part. This is why artificial
lighting is so destructive to sea turtles.
34Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
IV Sea Turtles2. Wave Orientation
- Once the hatchlings reach the water, they orient
by swimming into waves. Since most waves refract
when they approach beaches so that they approach
roughly perpendicular to the shore, wave travel
direction is usually a reliable cue for the
direction offshore when near shore.
35Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
IV Sea Turtles3. Magnetic Orientation
- The final orienting cue is the earths
geomagnetic field. Turtles have an internal
map sense they know what direction to swim
from their current location to get to a given
destination. The strength and direction of the
earths field is used for this orientation.
36Migrations in the SeaLong-Range Migrations
IV Sea Turtles3. Magnetic Orientation
- This figure illustrates the 2 components just
mentioned (field strength and field direction)
that together produce a map in the north
Atlantic Ocean that provides a unique
identification for each location. - Turtles probably dont know where they are in
the sense that a human navigator would, but they
know which way to swim to get to their
destination.
37