Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.

Air-breathing marine animals face a complex set of physical challenges associated with diving that affect the decisions of how to optimize feeding. Baleen whales (Mysticeti) have evolved bulk-filter feeding mechanisms to efficiently feed on dense prey patches. Baleen whales are central place forager...

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Main Authors: Friedlaender, Ari, Johnston, David, Tyson, Reny, Kaltenberg, Amanda, Goldbogen, Jeremy, Stimpert, Alison, Curtice, Corrie, Hazen, Elliott, Halpin, Patrick, Read, Andrew, Nowacek, Douglas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/97741639
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt97741639 2024-02-11T09:56:50+01:00 Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager. Friedlaender, Ari Johnston, David Tyson, Reny Kaltenberg, Amanda Goldbogen, Jeremy Stimpert, Alison Curtice, Corrie Hazen, Elliott Halpin, Patrick Read, Andrew Nowacek, Douglas 2016-05-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/97741639 unknown eScholarship, University of California qt97741639 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/97741639 public Royal Society Open Science, vol 3, iss 5 diving foraging decisions predator–prey interactions article 2016 ftcdlib 2024-01-22T19:06:12Z Air-breathing marine animals face a complex set of physical challenges associated with diving that affect the decisions of how to optimize feeding. Baleen whales (Mysticeti) have evolved bulk-filter feeding mechanisms to efficiently feed on dense prey patches. Baleen whales are central place foragers where oxygen at the surface represents the central place and depth acts as the distance to prey. Although hypothesized that baleen whales will target the densest prey patches anywhere in the water column, how depth and density interact to influence foraging behaviour is poorly understood. We used multi-sensor archival tags and active acoustics to quantify Antarctic humpback whale foraging behaviour relative to prey. Our analyses reveal multi-stage foraging decisions driven by both krill depth and density. During daylight hours when whales did not feed, krill were found in deep high-density patches. As krill migrated vertically into larger and less dense patches near the surface, whales began to forage. During foraging bouts, we found that feeding rates (number of feeding lunges per hour) were greatest when prey was shallowest, and feeding rates decreased with increasing dive depth. This strategy is consistent with previous models of how air-breathing diving animals optimize foraging efficiency. Thus, humpback whales forage mainly when prey is more broadly distributed and shallower, presumably to minimize diving and searching costs and to increase feeding rates overall and thus foraging efficiency. Using direct measurements of feeding behaviour from animal-borne tags and prey availability from echosounders, our study demonstrates a multi-stage foraging process in a central place forager that we suggest acts to optimize overall efficiency by maximizing net energy gain over time. These data reveal a previously unrecognized level of complexity in predator-prey interactions and underscores the need to simultaneously measure prey distribution in marine central place forager studies. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic baleen whales Humpback Whale University of California: eScholarship Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic diving
foraging decisions
predator–prey interactions
spellingShingle diving
foraging decisions
predator–prey interactions
Friedlaender, Ari
Johnston, David
Tyson, Reny
Kaltenberg, Amanda
Goldbogen, Jeremy
Stimpert, Alison
Curtice, Corrie
Hazen, Elliott
Halpin, Patrick
Read, Andrew
Nowacek, Douglas
Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.
topic_facet diving
foraging decisions
predator–prey interactions
description Air-breathing marine animals face a complex set of physical challenges associated with diving that affect the decisions of how to optimize feeding. Baleen whales (Mysticeti) have evolved bulk-filter feeding mechanisms to efficiently feed on dense prey patches. Baleen whales are central place foragers where oxygen at the surface represents the central place and depth acts as the distance to prey. Although hypothesized that baleen whales will target the densest prey patches anywhere in the water column, how depth and density interact to influence foraging behaviour is poorly understood. We used multi-sensor archival tags and active acoustics to quantify Antarctic humpback whale foraging behaviour relative to prey. Our analyses reveal multi-stage foraging decisions driven by both krill depth and density. During daylight hours when whales did not feed, krill were found in deep high-density patches. As krill migrated vertically into larger and less dense patches near the surface, whales began to forage. During foraging bouts, we found that feeding rates (number of feeding lunges per hour) were greatest when prey was shallowest, and feeding rates decreased with increasing dive depth. This strategy is consistent with previous models of how air-breathing diving animals optimize foraging efficiency. Thus, humpback whales forage mainly when prey is more broadly distributed and shallower, presumably to minimize diving and searching costs and to increase feeding rates overall and thus foraging efficiency. Using direct measurements of feeding behaviour from animal-borne tags and prey availability from echosounders, our study demonstrates a multi-stage foraging process in a central place forager that we suggest acts to optimize overall efficiency by maximizing net energy gain over time. These data reveal a previously unrecognized level of complexity in predator-prey interactions and underscores the need to simultaneously measure prey distribution in marine central place forager studies.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Friedlaender, Ari
Johnston, David
Tyson, Reny
Kaltenberg, Amanda
Goldbogen, Jeremy
Stimpert, Alison
Curtice, Corrie
Hazen, Elliott
Halpin, Patrick
Read, Andrew
Nowacek, Douglas
author_facet Friedlaender, Ari
Johnston, David
Tyson, Reny
Kaltenberg, Amanda
Goldbogen, Jeremy
Stimpert, Alison
Curtice, Corrie
Hazen, Elliott
Halpin, Patrick
Read, Andrew
Nowacek, Douglas
author_sort Friedlaender, Ari
title Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.
title_short Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.
title_full Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.
title_fullStr Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.
title_full_unstemmed Multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.
title_sort multiple-stage decisions in a marine central-place forager.
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2016
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/97741639
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
baleen whales
Humpback Whale
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
baleen whales
Humpback Whale
op_source Royal Society Open Science, vol 3, iss 5
op_relation qt97741639
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/97741639
op_rights public
_version_ 1790606344150056960