The advantages of diving deep: fin whales quadruple their energy intake when targeting deep krill patches
Abstract/Contents
- Abstract
1. How predators maximize energetic gains while minimizing the costs associated with exploiting heterogeneous prey remains a difficult ecological principle to test in natural systems.
2. Deep-diving, air-breathing predators face conflicting demands of oxygen conservation to extend dive time and oxygen usage from the exercise required to find and capture prey. How predators balance these opposing factors is additionally complicated by prey patches that are heterogeneous spatially, temporally, and in quality.
3. Tags deployed on foraging fin whales revealed that deeper dives consisted of higher feeding rates (lunges/hour), as generally predicted by optimal foraging theory. By simultaneously measuring prey density and distribution in the local environment, we show that whales increased their dive depths in order to forage on the densest prey patches.
4. Despite the increased travel time needed to find deeper prey during a breath-hold dive, the increase in feeding rates of fin whales and modeled prey consumption quadrupled compared to shallow foraging. Because the cost of transport is low at this extreme in body size, we posit that feeding on the deep prey patches significantly increases the energetic efficiency of foraging.
5. Given the increasing recognition that anthropogenic disturbance can curtail deep foraging dives in many cetacean species, endangered fin whales may be susceptible to significant energetic losses that may impact individual fitness and population health in some areas.
Description
Type of resource | software, multimedia |
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Date created | 2010 - 2018 |
Creators/Contributors
Author | Friedlaender, A. S. |
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Author | Bowers, M. T. |
Author | Hazen, E. L. |
Author | Stimpert, A. K. |
Author | Allen, A. N. |
Author | Calambokidis, J. |
Author | Fahlbusch, J. |
Author | Segre, P. |
Author | Visser, F. |
Author | Southall, B. L. |
Author | Goldbogen, J. A. |
Subjects
Subject | baleen whale |
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Subject | filter feeding |
Subject | diving |
Subject | foraging |
Subject | krill |
Genre | Dataset |
Bibliographic information
Related Publication | Friedlaender, Ari S., et al. (2019). The advantages of diving deep: Fin whales quadruple their energy intake when targeting deep krill patches. Functional Ecology. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.13471 |
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Location | https://purl.stanford.edu/fh584sg8391 |
Access conditions
- Use and reproduction
- User agrees that, where applicable, content will not be used to identify or to otherwise infringe the privacy or confidentiality rights of individuals. Content distributed via the Stanford Digital Repository may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor.
Collection
Goldbogen Lab
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- Contact
- jergold@stanford.edu
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