Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2472780 | Der Zoologische Garten | 2015 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
Comparing the collected data we show a considerable decrease of Daisy's distance swimming before birth, an increase after birth, followed again by a significant decrease until day III. Distances travelled by Daisy per day were exceptionally large (ca. 100Â km). Before birth her respiratory rate was significantly lower than after birth, and then it was relatively constant over time. Periods of inactivity were frequent before birth, not observed after birth, and began to increase from day II. The respiratory rate of Darwin increased over time (day I to day III) exceeding that of Daisy (day II, III). Frequency and number of suckling bouts decreased over time. Some of the behavioral changes of Daisy shown during the observation period can be associated with Daisy's care of the calf and its increasing independence. Altogether our approach allowed quantifying behavioural elements of mother and calf very detailed even in recordings not necessarily suitable for such studies. The fine-scale analysis revealed reproducible and reliable data, which show in the present case again the considerable changes in the behaviour of mother and calf even within a period of only two weeks.
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Authors
Nina Höttges, Kerstin Ternes, Hartmut Greven,