I just wanted to pass along a recent manuscript on optimal foraging in blue 
whales as a function of oxygen use and prey density. The abstract is below and 
the full text is open access and available at the following link: 
http://advances.sciencemag.org/content/1/9/e1500469

Terrestrial predators can modulate the energy used for prey capture to maximize 
efficiency, but diving animals face the conflicting metabolic demands of energy 
intake and the minimization of oxygen depletion during a breath hold. It is 
thought that diving predators optimize their foraging success when oxygen use 
and energy gain act as competing currencies, but this hypothesis has not been 
rigorously tested because it has been difficult to measure the quality of prey 
that is targeted by free-ranging animals. We used high-resolution multisensor 
digital tags attached to foraging blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus) with 
concurrent acoustic prey measurements to quantify foraging performance across 
depth and prey density gradients. We parameterized two competing physiological 
models to estimate energy gain and expenditure based on foraging decisions. Our 
analyses show that at low prey densities, blue whale feeding rates and energy 
intake were low to minimize oxygen use, but at hig!
 her prey densities feeding frequency increased to maximize energy intake. 
Contrary to previous paradigms, we demonstrate that blue whales are not 
indiscriminate grazers but instead switch foraging strategies in response to 
variation in prey density and depth to maximize energetic efficiency.
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