In Focus
Humpback whales catch prey with
bubble nets
Marine biologist David Wiley of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and others report in the latest issue of Behaviour
how humpback whales in the Gulf of Maine catch prey with advanced water
technology.
Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) are large baleen whales (up
to 14 m long) that feed on a small prey in dense concentrations, such as
krill or herrings. Humpbacks whales have large flukes relative to their
size providing greater thrust for quick manoevres.

While other baleen whales feed by swimming rapidly forward, humpbacks
are adapted for fine-scale movement to create bubble nets.
Behaviourally, humpback whales capture prey by engaging in complex
feeding manoevres that are often accompanied by the apparently directed
use of air bubble clouds (the production of single or multiple bursts of
seltzer-sized bubbles) to corral or herd fish.
These whales create bubble nets to corral and contain planktonic prey
into a small area so that they can more efficiently scoop them up in
their large filter-feeding mouths.
Based on surface observations, these bubble-feeding behaviours appear
to vary in nature among both individuals and regions.
To learn more about how these whales use bubble nets in feeding,
David Wiley and colleagues attached digital suction cup tags to whales
that recorded depth and orientation in 3-D, allowing the scientists to
recreate three dimensional images of whale swimming behaviour and bubble
release. The data revealed the release of bubbles while swimming in
upward spirals and during a novel behaviour called "double-loops" not
previously known.
Double-loops consist of one upward spiral to corral the prey, a smack
of the fluke on the ocean surface (known as a "lobtail") then a second
upward lunge to capture the corralled prey.
This sequence of tools and targeting of prey seems as complex as the
tool use of apes in the forest.
The study also reports that humpback whales work in teams of at least
two individuals and are not beyond robbing the prey from the bubble nets
set up by others.
-ScienceDaily
1929
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