4.5 Article

Keeping momentum with a mouthful of water: behavior and kinematics of humpback whale lunge feeding

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 215, Issue 21, Pages 3786-3798

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.071092

Keywords

baleen whale; Megaptera novaeangliae; gulp feeding; prey capture; dive behavior

Categories

Funding

  1. Oticon Foundation and Ministry of Education, Research and Nordic Cooperation, Greenland Government, Greenland Self Government
  2. National Danish Science Foundation
  3. National Ocean Partnership Program (NOPP)
  4. Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP)
  5. Natural Environment Research Council [smru10001] Funding Source: researchfish

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Rorqual baleen whales lunge feed by engulfment of tons of prey-laden water in a large and expandable buccal pouch. According to prior interpretations, feeding rorquals are brought to a near-halt at the end of each lunge by drag forces primarily generated by the open mouth. Accelerating the body from a standstill is energetically costly and is purported to be the key factor determining oxygen consumption in lunge-feeding rorquals, explaining the shorter dive times than expected given their sizes. Here, we use multi-sensor archival tags (DTAGs) sampling at high rates in a fine-scale kinematic study of lunge feeding to examine the sequence of events within lunges and how energy may be expended and conserved in the process of prey capture. Analysis of 479 lunges from five humpback whales reveals that the whales accelerate as they acquire prey, opening their gape in synchrony with strong fluke strokes. The high forward speed (mean depth rate: 2.0 +/- 0.32 m s(-1)) during engulfment serves both to corral active prey and to expand the ventral margin of the buccal pouch and so maximize the engulfed water volume. Deceleration begins after mouth opening when the pouch nears full expansion and momentum starts to be transferred to the engulfed water. Lunge-feeding humpback whales time fluke strokes throughout the lunge to impart momentum to the engulfed water mass and so avoid a near or complete stop, but instead continue to glide at similar to 1-1.5 ms(-1) after the lunge has ended. Subsequent filtration and prey handling appear to take an average of 46 s and are performed in parallel with re-positioning for the next lunge.

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