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Supplementary material from "Prominent Fin-Contributed Swimming in Squid (Loligo forbesii) Supports Efficient Movement in Seamount Habitats"

Posted on 2025-07-04 - 14:04
Animal movements and the associated energy costs dictate an individual’s scope for activity and habitat use. Yet in situ measurements of movement often fail to quantify whole-body movement and their physiological costs. These challenges lead to data gaps connecting how movement behaviors and energy output interact to constrain species’ biogeography. Here we combined swim-tunnel respirometry and multi-positional field biologging data to estimate the energy output of squid (Loligo forbesii), an ecologically key marine invertebrate. Lab respirometry experiments revealed a strong correlation between body mass and metabolic rate during fin-contributed swimming, enabling energy cost estimates in the wild. Free-ranging squid enacted dynamic and diverse fin and jet swimming that varied on short time scales. Animals largely selected (66%) low amplitude fin-contributed movements where fin waves propagated metachronally. Higher amplitude fin and jet movements were rare, accounting for 4% of time budgets. Application of the bioenergetic model on naturally exhibited behaviors estimated animals consume 3,117 ±532 mg O2 per day to fuel the predominant metachronal fin movements, an expenditure energetically comparable to similar-niche fishes. These unique data reveal substantial behavioral flexibility and indicates squid prefer low-cost movement behaviors that may enable squids high growth rates and successful competition with fishes.

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Royal Society Open Science

AUTHORS (9)

  • Seth Cones
  • Nathan Formel
  • Jorge Fontes
  • Pedro Afonso
  • K. Alex Shorter
  • Gonçalo Graça
  • Robert Priester
  • Diya Das
  • T. Aran Mooney
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