Quantifying the swimming gaits of veined squid (Loligo forbesi) using bio-logging tags

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Date
2019-10-21
Authors
Flaspohler, Genevieve Elaine
Caruso, Francesco
Mooney, T. Aran
Katija, Kakani
Fontes, Jorge
Afonso, Pedro
Shorter, K. Alex
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DOI
10.1242/jeb.198226
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Keywords
Persistent monitoring
Gait
Movement patterns
Energetics
Biotelemetry
Abstract
Squid are mobile, diverse, ecologically important marine organisms whose behavior and habitat use can have substantial impacts on ecosystems and fisheries. However, as a consequence in part of the inherent challenges of monitoring squid in their natural marine environment, fine-scale behavioral observations of these free-swimming, soft-bodied animals are rare. Bio-logging tags provide an emerging way to remotely study squid behavior in their natural environments. Here, we applied a novel, high-resolution bio-logging tag (ITAG) to seven veined squid, Loligo forbesii, in a controlled experimental environment to quantify their short-term (24 h) behavioral patterns. Tag accelerometer, magnetometer and pressure data were used to develop automated gait classification algorithms based on overall dynamic body acceleration, and a subset of the events were assessed and confirmed using concurrently collected video data. Finning, flapping and jetting gaits were observed, with the low-acceleration finning gaits detected most often. The animals routinely used a finning gait to ascend (climb) and then glide during descent with fins extended in the tank's water column, a possible strategy to improve swimming efficiency for these negatively buoyant animals. Arms- and mantle-first directional swimming were observed in approximately equal proportions, and the squid were slightly but significantly more active at night. These tag-based observations are novel for squid and indicate a more efficient mode of movement than suggested by some previous observations. The combination of sensing, classification and estimation developed and applied here will enable the quantification of squid activity patterns in the wild to provide new biological information, such as in situ identification of behavioral states, temporal patterns, habitat requirements, energy expenditure and interactions of squid through space–time in the wild.
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Author Posting. © Company of Biologists, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Company of Biologists for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Experimental Biology 222 (2019):jeb.198226, doi: 10.1242/jeb.198226.
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Flaspohler, G. E., Caruso, F., Mooney, T. A., Katija, K., Fontes, J., Afonso, P., & Shorter, K. A. (2019). Quantifying the swimming gaits of veined squid (Loligo forbesi) using bio-logging tags. The Journal of Experimental Biology, 222, jeb.198226.
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