Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The scaling of diving time budgets: Insights from an optimality approach.

Stephens, P.A.; Carbone, C.; Boyd, I.L.; McNamara, J.M.; Harding, K.C.; Houston, A.I.

Authors

C. Carbone

I.L. Boyd

J.M. McNamara

K.C. Harding

A.I. Houston



Abstract

Simple scaling arguments suggest that, among air-breathing divers, dive duration should scale approximately with mass to the one-third power. Recent phylogenetic analyses appear to confirm this. The same analyses showed that duration of time spent at the surface between dives has scaling very similar to that of dive duration, with the result that the ratio of dive duration to surface pause duration is approximately mass invariant. This finding runs counter to other arguments found in the diving literature that suggest that surface pause duration should scale more positively with mass, leading to a negative scaling of the dive-pause ratio. We use a published model of optimal time allocation in the dive cycle to show that optimal decisions can predict approximate mass invariance in the dive-pause ratio, especially if metabolism scales approximately with mass to the two-thirds power (as indicated by some recent analyses) and oxygen uptake is assumed to have evolved to supply the body tissues at the required rate. However, emergent scaling rules are sensitive to input parameters, especially to the relationship between the scaling of metabolism and oxygen uptake rate at the surface. Our results illustrate the utility of an optimality approach for developing predictions and identifying key areas for empirical research on the allometry of diving behavior.

Citation

Stephens, P., Carbone, C., Boyd, I., McNamara, J., Harding, K., & Houston, A. (2008). The scaling of diving time budgets: Insights from an optimality approach. The American Naturalist, 171(3), 305-314. https://doi.org/10.1086/527491

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2008-03
Journal American Naturalist
Print ISSN 0003-0147
Electronic ISSN 1537-5323
Publisher The University of Chicago Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 171
Issue 3
Pages 305-314
DOI https://doi.org/10.1086/527491
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1553288