Distance (minimum distance between the orca and the diving guide reached during a given approach) |
The orca approaches the diver from: |
- Very close (less than 5 meters) |
- Close (between 5 and 20 meters) |
- Far (more than 20 meters). |
Angle of approach
|
The orca approaches the diver from: |
- The front: |
* from the right side of the diver (angle: 30 to 120°) |
* from the left side of the diver (angle: 200 to 330°) |
* facing the diver (angle: 0°) |
- Below: |
* moving just under the diver |
* arriving vertically from deep water |
- The back. |
Swimming speed
|
- Slow: the orca moves but the movements of its caudal fin are hardly detectable |
- Fast: at least one caudal fin movement per second. |
Gaze laterality
|
The orca looks at the diver with: |
- its right eye |
- its left eye |
- both eyes (bilateral) |
For a given approach, the eye used may change during the behavioural sequence and each gaze change is counted for the laterality analysis. |
Gaze duration (mono- and binocular pooled) |
The orca looks at the diver for: |
- less than 6 seconds (Short gaze) |
- more than 6 seconds (Long gaze) |
For a given approach, we measured the total gazing duration. |
Head movements
|
- Horizontal (the orca turns slightly its head towards the diver) |
- Vertical (the orca is facing the diver and moves the head up and down several times in a row). |
Whistle calls
|
- Whistling (a high-pitched modulated frequency is heard) |
- Silence (no species-specific sound is heard) |
It is not possible to confirm whether the caller is the observed orca or a neighbouring one. |
Belly presentation
|
The orca moves the head up presenting its belly to the humans. |
Body rotation
|
The orca rotates its body along the horizontal axis. |