Scientists said on Friday a study of blue whales off California's
coast that used tags to track their movements and their prey, tiny
shrimp-like crustaceans called krill, showed these marine mammals
are not indiscriminate grazers as long thought.
Instead, they feed more intensely when krill density is high but
avoid doing so when there is less krill in order to save oxygen for
future dives.
"We found that blue whales have a complex strategy of switching from
conserving oxygen when prey quality is low, to intense foraging at
the expense of oxygen when prey quality is high," said research
ecologist Elliott Hazen of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration Fisheries' Southwest Fisheries Science Center and the
University of California Santa Cruz.
Blue whales are filter-feeders, using baleen plates in the mouth
made of keratin, also found in people's fingernails, to strain krill
from ocean water.
When lunge-feeding, the whale accelerates and opens its mouth,
taking in a volume of prey-laden water up to 130 percent of its
weight. Its throat distends, filling with water, and then it uses
throat muscles and its tongue to force water out of its mouth
through baleen plates that act as a sieve to keep the krill.
Blue whales eat up to around four tons of krill daily. "The whales
are much more actively assessing their environment and taking
advantage of prey in ways that were unknown before, to maximize
energy gain," added ecologist Ari Friedlaender of Oregon State
University's Marine Mammal Institute.
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The study included information from more than 50 whales, using tags
applied via suction cups and data on prey.
Blue whales, found in all the world's oceans, are listed as
endangered thanks to 20th century whaling that drove them nearly to
extinction. There are about 10,000 worldwide. They reach up to about
98 feet (30 meters) long and 180 tons.
"Blue whales face a gauntlet of risks in the ocean from ship-strikes
to human noise, and for an animal living on the knife-edge these
dense patches of prey are critical to put on mass and ultimately
reproduce," Hazen said.
The research appears in the journal Science Advances.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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