3.8 Article Proceedings Paper

The diving behavior of blue and fin whales:: is dive duration shorter than expected based on oxygen stores?

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S1095-6433(01)00348-8

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diving; aerobic dive limit; blue whale; fin whale; foraging; Balaenoptera physalus; Balaenoptera musculus; rorquals; Balaenopteridae

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Many diving seabirds and marine mammals have been found to regularly exceed their theoretical aerobic dive limit (TADL). No animals have been found to dive for durations that are consistently shorter than their TADL. We attached time-depth recorders to 7 blue whales and 15 fin whales (family Balaenopteridae). The diving behavior of both species was similar, and we distinguished between foraging and traveling dives. Foraging dives in both species were deeper, longer in duration and distinguished by a series of vertical excursions where lunge feeding presumably occurred. Foraging blue whales lunged 2.4 (+/-1.13) times per dive, with a maximum of six times and average vertical excursion of 30.2(+/- 10.04) m. Foraging fin whales lunged 1.7 (+/-0.88) times per dive, with a maximum of eight times and average vertical excursion of 21.2 (+/-4.35) m. The maximum rate of ascent of lunges was higher than the maximum rate of descent in both species, indicating that feeding lunges occurred on ascent. Foraging dives were deeper and longer than non-feeding dives in both species. On average, blue whales dived to 140.0 (+/- 46.01) m and 7.8 (+/- 1.89) min when foraging, and 67.6 (+/- 51.46) m and 4.9 (+/-2.53) min when not foraging. Fin whales dived to 97.9 (+/- 32.59)m and 6.3 (+/-1.53) min when foraging and to 59.3 (+/- 29.67)m and 4.2 (+/-1.67) min when not foraging. The longest dives recorded for both species, 14.7 min for blue whales and 16.9 min for fin whales, were considerably shorter than the TADL of 31.2 and 28.6 min, respectively. An allometric comparison of seven families diving to an average depth of 80-150 m showed a significant relationship between body mass and dive duration once Balaenopteridae whales, with a mean dive duration of 6.8 min, were excluded from the analysis. Thus, the short dive durations of blue whales and fin whales cannot be explained by the shallow distribution of their prey. We propose instead that short duration diving in large whales results from either: (1) dispersal behavior of prey; or (2) a high energetic cost of foraging. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.

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