Dear Collegues
The following paper has recently been published in Proceedings of the Royal 
Society
 
Simon, M., Johnson, M., Tyack, P. and Madsen, P.T. 2009. Behaviour and 
kinematics of continuous ram filtration in bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus). 
Proceedings of the Royal Society. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1135
 
Abstract

Balaenid whales perform long breath-hold foraging dives despite a high drag 
from their ram filtration of zooplankton. To maximize the volume of prey 
acquired in a dive with limited oxygen supplies, balaenids must either filter 
feed only occasionally when prey density is particularly high, or they must 
swim at slow speeds while filtering to reduce drag and oxygen consumption. 
Using digital tags with three-axis accelerometers, we studied bowhead whales 
feeding off West Greenland and present here, to our knowledge, the first 
detailed data on the kinematics and swimming behaviour of a balaenid whale 
filter feeding at depth. Bowhead whales employ a continuous fluking gait 
throughout the bottom phase of foraging dives, moving at very slow speeds (less 
than 1 m s^-1), allowing them to filter feed continuously at depth. Despite the 
slow speeds, the large mouth aperture provides a water filtration rate of 
approximately 3 m^3 s^-1, amounting to some 2000 tonnes of water and prey 
filtered per dive. We conclude that a food niche of dense, slow-moving 
zooplankton prey has led balaenids to evolve locomotor and filtering systems 
adapted to work against a high drag at swimming speeds of less than 0.07 body 
length s^-1 using a continuous fluking gait very different from that of 
nekton-feeding, aquatic predators.

 

All best,

Malene Simon

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Aarhus, Denmark. [email protected]

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