On behalf of my colleagues,
I am pleased to announce the publication of the last one of my PhD chapters in 
Marine Ecology Progress Series,
focusing on the use of different feeding lunges at different depths in Bryde's 
whales,
available at this link https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v761/meps14845

TITLE
How deep is their lunch: Inshore South African Bryde’s whales shift attack mode 
at different depths.

ABSTRACT
Understanding animal foraging behaviour can answer pertinent questions in 
behavioural ecology and help conservation efforts. Baleen whales have extreme 
adaptations for feeding on some of the smallest animals. One species of special 
interest is the Bryde’s whale Balaenoptera edeni, which feeds in various ways 
across different ecosystems. No previous study on foraging kinematics exists 
for the vulnerable inshore population of Bryde’s whales B. edeni brydei in South
Africa. Over 2 consecutive years, we deployed multisensory camera-tag 
dataloggers on 8 Bryde’s whales in Plettenberg Bay, South Africa. Combining 
supervised and unsupervised clustering algorithms, we analysed 190 feeding 
lunges to investigate whether different foraging techniques were performed and, 
if so, at what depths. The whales showed 3 distinct ways of attacking their 
prey: (1) ‘Slow lunges’, which started and concluded at a very low speed, 
regardless of the depth at which they were performed; (2) ‘Neutral lunges’, 
occurring between 40 and 100 m depth, in which whales had high initial speeds 
and moved vertically in the acceleration phase of the lunge while being less 
acrobatic; and (3) ‘Ambush lunges’, used at shallow depths (<30 m), with the 
whale pitching upwards and accelerating faster compared to other techniques, 
often reaching the surface right after lunging. When engulfing prey, individual 
whales switched between different techniques throughout a deployment. Our 
findings form the basis of understanding the energetic costs of feeding 
techniques of this species, and for further investigation of any 
spatial–temporal factors that could impact the development of their foraging 
behaviour.


Feel free to contact me for a .pdf.

Take care,
Jacopo


_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to