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  • One of the reasons that I'm fascinated by the ocean

    我對海洋著迷的其中一個原因是

  • is that it's really an alien world on our own planet.

    它是地球上陌生的區域

  • From our perspective,

    從我們的觀點

  • sitting on the shoreline or even out on a boat,

    坐在海灘、甚至是船上

  • we're given only the tiniest glimpses

    我們對浪花之下

  • at the real action that's happening

    所發生的事情

  • beneath the surface of the waves.

    所知甚少

  • And even if you were able to go down there,

    即使你潛入水下

  • you wouldn't see very much

    你也看不到多少

  • because light doesn't travel very far in the ocean.

    因為光線在海水中穿透力很差

  • So, to answer questions about how the ocean works,

    所以為了回答我想問的問題

  • in my research, we use sound.

    在我們的研究中是用聲音

  • We use sonars that send out pulses of sound

    我們用聲納送出

  • made up of a number of different frequencies, or pitches,

    由不同頻率和強度組成的音波

  • that are shown with different colors.

    這在圖上以不同顏色標示

  • That sound bounces off things in the habitat

    聲波撞到棲地中不同東西時

  • and comes back to us.

    就會回傳給我們

  • If it were to bounce off this dolphin,

    如果聲波被海豚阻擋

  • the signal we got back

    我們收到的訊號

  • would look very much like the one we sent out

    和發出去的相去不遠

  • where all the colors are represented pretty evenly.

    在圖上就是不同顏色平均分佈

  • However, if we were to bounce

    但是如果是撞到

  • that same sound off of a squid,

    讓我們假設

  • which in this case is about the same size as that dolphin,

    一隻和海豚一樣大的烏賊

  • we'd instead only get the lowest frequencies back strongly,

    我們只能得到低頻率的回波

  • shown here in the red.

    在圖上以紅色標示

  • And if we were to look at the prey of that squid,

    讓我們看看烏賊的獵物

  • the tiny little krill that they're eating,

    那些牠們所吃的小磷蝦(krill)

  • we would instead only get the highest frequencies back.

    我們只能得到高頻率的回波

  • And so by looking at this,

    所以藉此

  • we can tell what kinds of animals are in the ocean,

    我們可以知道海中有哪些生物

  • we can look at how dense they are,

    牠們的密度如何

  • where they are distributed,

    以及牠們的分佈

  • look at their interactions

    互動

  • and even their behavior

    甚至行為

  • to start to study the ecology of the ocean.

    藉此研究海洋生態學

  • When we do that, we come up with

    當我在進行研究時

  • something sort of surprising:

    我們遇到了許多驚奇

  • on average, there isn't very much food in the ocean.

    平均而言,海中的食物不多

  • So even in places which we think of as rich, the coasts,

    即使在被認為 食物豐富的珊瑚礁區

  • we're talking about two parts of every million contain food.

    也只在每 5 萬分之 1 的地方有食物

  • So what does that mean?

    這代表什麼呢?

  • Well, that means that in the volume of this theater,

    以今天講堂大小的空間而言

  • there would be one tub of movie theater popcorn

    只有一桶爆米花

  • available to be eaten.

    可供大家享用

  • But of course, it wouldn't be collected

    但這些爆米花不回集中在一起

  • for you neatly in this bucket.

    讓你舒服的想用

  • Instead, you'd actually have to be swimming

    事實上,你必須在其中

  • through this entire volume Willy Wonka style,

    以威利.旺卡的方式游泳(Willy Wonka)

  • picking off individual kernels of popcorn,

    才能吃到四散各處的爆米花

  • or perhaps if you were lucky,

    也有可能你很幸運

  • getting a hold of a few small clumps.

    拿到了一小塊

  • But, of course, if you were in the ocean,

    當然如果在海洋

  • this popcorn wouldn't be sitting here

    這些食物不會等在那裡

  • waiting for you to eat it.

    讓你來吃

  • It would, instead, be trying to avoid becoming your dinner.

    它們會盡力避免被捕

  • So I want to know how do animals solve this challenge?

    我想知道動物如何克服這項挑戰

  • We're going to talk about animals in the Bering Sea.

    我會談談在白令海中的生物(Bering Sea)

  • This is where you may have see "Deadliest Catch" framed,

    你們可能會在致命捕撈中(Deadliest Catch)

  • in the northernmost part of the Pacific Ocean.

    看到的太平洋最北端水域

  • We've been looking specifically at krill,

    我們專注在磷蝦觀察上

  • one of the most important food items in this habitat.

    牠們是這棲地中 最重要的食物來源之一

  • These half-inch long shrimp-like critters

    這些半英尺長、長得像蝦子的動物

  • are about the caloric equivalent

    所能提供的熱量

  • of a heavily buttered kernel of popcorn.

    大概和一顆重奶油爆米花相同

  • And they're eaten by everything

    而牠們是大家的食物

  • from birds and fur seals that pick them up one at a time

    從海鳥、海狗一口一隻的吃

  • to large whales that engulf them in huge mouthfuls.

    到大鯨魚一次吞下一大群

  • So I'm going to focus in the area

    所以我們專注在

  • around three breeding colonies for birds and fur seals

    白令海的東南部

  • in the southeastern Bering Sea.

    是三個海鳥和海狗繁衍的棲地

  • And this is a map of that habitat

    這是棲地的地圖

  • that we made making maps of food

    這是一張依據傳統方法

  • the way we've always made maps of food.

    所繪製出的食物分布圖

  • This is how many krill are in this area of the ocean.

    顯示這海域內有多少的磷蝦

  • Red areas represent lots of krill

    紅色區域有豐富的磷蝦

  • and purple basically none.

    而紫色代表幾乎沒有

  • And you can see that around the northern two most islands,

    你們可以看到最北邊

  • which are highlighted with white circles

    被圓圈標示的

  • because they are so tiny,

    兩座小島周圍

  • it looks like there's a lot of food to be eaten.

    看起來食物充沛

  • And yet, the fur seals and birds on these islands

    但是島上的海狗和海鳥

  • are crashing.

    正在減少

  • Their populations are declining

    儘管數十年來的保育

  • despite decades of protection.

    牠們的族群依然在縮小

  • And while on that southern island

    而在南方的小島

  • at the very bottom of the screen

    就是地圖下方的那座

  • it doesn't look like there's anything to eat,

    看起來十分貧脊

  • those populations are doing incredibly well.

    但是島上生物卻未減少

  • So this left us with a dilemma.

    這讓我們面臨一個難題

  • Our observations of food don't make any sense

    我們對食物分佈的觀察

  • in the context of our observations of these animals.

    和動物的狀況不服

  • So we started to think about how we could do this differently.

    我們開始思考要換其他方法

  • And this map shows not how many krill there are,

    這張圖不顯示磷蝦個體數

  • but how many clumps of krill there are,

    而是顯示有幾群磷蝦

  • how aggregated are they.

    也就是牠們集中的程度

  • And what you get is a very different picture of the landscape.

    結果你得到了一張完全不同的圖

  • Now that southern island looks

    現在南方小島

  • like a pretty good place to be,

    看起來是個不錯的地方

  • and when we combine this

    當我們結合

  • with other information about prey,

    關於掠食者的資訊

  • it starts to explain the population observations.

    就可以解釋族群上的觀察結果

  • But we can also ask that question differently.

    但我們也可以用不同角度問問題

  • We can have the animals tell us what's important.

    我們藉由標記並追蹤動物

  • By tagging and tracking these animals

    以瞭解什麼是關鍵因子

  • and looking at how they use this habitat,

    看看牠們如何使用棲地資源

  • we are able to say, "What matters to you?"

    我們就可以解釋

  • about the prey.

    獵物對掠食者的影響

  • And what they've told us

    而這項觀察告訴我們

  • is that how many krill there are really isn't important.

    磷蝦個體數並不重要

  • It is how closely spaced those krill are

    重要的是牠們有多集中

  • because that's how they are able to make a living.

    因為牠們是掠食者賴以為生的食物

  • We see the same pattern

    我們在不同海域

  • when we look in very different ocean,

    觀察到相同的模式

  • further south in the Pacific,

    包含太平洋的南端

  • in the warm waters around the Hawaiian islands.

    被溫暖海水圍繞的夏威夷群島

  • So a very different habitat,

    這是個截然不同的棲地

  • and yet the same story.

    但卻訴說著相同的故事

  • Under some conditions,

    在某一些

  • the physics and the nutrients, the fertilizer,

    物理、營養、肥料條件下

  • set up aggregations in the plants, the phytoplankton.

    會造成浮游植物的集中

  • And when that happens,

    這時候

  • these very dense aggregations of phytoplankton

    密集的浮游植物

  • attract their predators,

    吸引了掠食者

  • which themselves form very dense layers.

    這些浮游植物形成了密密麻麻的層次

  • That changes the behavior and distribution

    這對更高級掠食者的

  • of their predators as well,

    行為、分佈造成影響

  • starting to set up how this entire ecosystem functions.

    也塑造生態系運作的特性

  • Finally, the predators that eat

    最終,那些吃

  • these small fish, shrimp, and squid,

    小魚、小蝦或烏賊

  • we're talking about two- to three-inch long prey here,

    這種 2 到 3 英呎長獵物的掠食者

  • changes how they use their habitat

    改變牠們搜尋、利用

  • and how they forage.

    棲地資源的方式

  • And so we see changes in the spinner dolphins

    我們看到飛旋海豚行為改變(spinner dolphins)

  • that are related to the changes

    這些改變源自於

  • we're seeing in the plant life.

    浮游植物的改變

  • And just by measuring the plants,

    藉由測量浮游植物數量

  • we can actually predict very well

    我們可以預測

  • what's going to happen in the top predator

    食物鏈往上三層

  • three steps away in the food web.

    那些高級掠食者的行為

  • But what's interesting is

    但有趣的是

  • that even the densest aggregations of their prey

    飛旋海豚仍不足以

  • aren't enough for spinner dolphins to make it.

    依賴這種密度的獵物存活

  • It's a pretty tough life there in the ocean.

    在海中生活很困苦

  • So these animals actually work together

    所以動物會密切合作

  • to herd their prey into even denser aggregations,

    將最初找到的獵物群

  • starting with patches that they find in the first place.

    驅趕成更密集的形式

  • And that's what you're going to see in this visualization.

    你們從這張動畫中可以看到

  • We have a group of 20 dolphins,

    上面有 20 隻海豚

  • you notice they're all set up in pairs,

    你會看到牠們會兩兩一組

  • that are working together

    並通力合作

  • to basically bulldoze prey

    驚嚇、驅趕

  • to accumulate it on top of itself.

    使獵物群更緊密

  • And once they do that,

    一但達成目標

  • they form a circle around that prey

    牠們會繞著獵物群打轉

  • to maintain that really dense patch

    迫使其保持密集

  • that is a couple thousand times higher density

    這和最早的獵物群相較

  • than the background that they started with

    密度多出數千倍

  • before individual pairs of dolphins

    接著成對的海豚

  • start to take turns feeding

    會依序進入

  • inside this circle of prey that they've created.

    牠們集中的獵物群中進食

  • And so, this work is showing us

    這個結果告訴我們

  • that animals can first give us the answers

    動物行為讓我們知道

  • that aggregation is critical to how they make their living.

    獵物密集程度和牠們能否存活有關

  • And by looking more deeply at the ocean,

    若往更深的海底看

  • we're starting to understand our interactions with it

    我們開始瞭解我們對海洋生物的影響

  • and finding more effective ways of conserving it.

    藉此找出更有效的保育方法

  • Thank you.

    謝謝

One of the reasons that I'm fascinated by the ocean

我對海洋著迷的其中一個原因是

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