Underwater acrobatics by the world's largest predator: 360° rolling manoeuvres by lunge-feeding blue whales

Author:

Goldbogen Jeremy A.1,Calambokidis John1,Friedlaender Ari S.23,Francis John4,DeRuiter Stacy L.5,Stimpert Alison K.6,Falcone Erin1,Southall Brandon L.3

Affiliation:

1. Cascadia Research Collective, 218 1/2 West Fourth Avenue, Olympia, WA 98501, USA

2. Duke University Marine Laboratory, 135 Duke Marine Laboratory Road, Beaufort, NC 28516, USA

3. Southall Environmental Associates, 9099 Soquel Drive, Suite 8, Aptos, CA 95003, USA

4. National Geographic, 1145 17th Street NorthWest, Washington, DC 20036, USA

5. Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling, University of St Andrews, Fife KY16 9LZ, UK

6. Naval Postgraduate School, Department of Oceanography, Monterey, CA 93943, USA

Abstract

The extreme body size of blue whales requires a high energy intake and therefore demands efficient foraging strategies. As an obligate lunge feeder on aggregations of small zooplankton, blue whales engulf a large volume of prey-laden water in a single, rapid gulp. The efficiency of this feeding mechanism is strongly dependent on the amount of prey that can be captured during each lunge, yet food resources tend to be patchily distributed in both space and time. Here, we measured the three-dimensional kinematics and foraging behaviour of blue whales feeding on krill, using suction-cup attached multi-sensor tags. Our analyses revealed 360° rolling lunge-feeding manoeuvres that reorient the body and position the lower jaws so that a krill patch can be engulfed with the whale's body inverted. We also recorded these rolling behaviours when whales were in a searching mode in between lunges, suggesting that this behaviour also enables the whale to visually process the prey field and maximize foraging efficiency by surveying for the densest prey aggregations. These results reveal the complex manoeuvrability that is required for large rorqual whales to exploit prey patches and highlight the need to fully understand the three-dimensional interactions between predator and prey in the natural environment.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

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