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Metabolic Expenditures of Lunge Feeding Rorquals Across Scale: Implications for the Evolution of Filter Feeding and the Limits to Maximum Body Size

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, September 2012
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Title
Metabolic Expenditures of Lunge Feeding Rorquals Across Scale: Implications for the Evolution of Filter Feeding and the Limits to Maximum Body Size
Published in
PLOS ONE, September 2012
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0044854
Pubmed ID
Authors

Jean Potvin, Jeremy A. Goldbogen, Robert E. Shadwick

Abstract

Bulk-filter feeding is an energetically efficient strategy for resource acquisition and assimilation, and facilitates the maintenance of extreme body size as exemplified by baleen whales (Mysticeti) and multiple lineages of bony and cartilaginous fishes. Among mysticetes, rorqual whales (Balaenopteridae) exhibit an intermittent ram filter feeding mode, lunge feeding, which requires the abandonment of body-streamlining in favor of a high-drag, mouth-open configuration aimed at engulfing a very large amount of prey-laden water. Particularly while lunge feeding on krill (the most widespread prey preference among rorquals), the effort required during engulfment involve short bouts of high-intensity muscle activity that demand high metabolic output. We used computational modeling together with morphological and kinematic data on humpback (Megaptera noveaangliae), fin (Balaenoptera physalus), blue (Balaenoptera musculus) and minke (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) whales to estimate engulfment power output in comparison with standard metrics of metabolic rate. The simulations reveal that engulfment metabolism increases across the full body size of the larger rorqual species to nearly 50 times the basal metabolic rate of terrestrial mammals of the same body mass. Moreover, they suggest that the metabolism of the largest body sizes runs with significant oxygen deficits during mouth opening, namely, 20% over maximum VO2 at the size of the largest blue whales, thus requiring significant contributions from anaerobic catabolism during a lunge and significant recovery after a lunge. Our analyses show that engulfment metabolism is also significantly lower for smaller adults, typically one-tenth to one-half VO2|max. These results not only point to a physiological limit on maximum body size in this lineage, but also have major implications for the ontogeny of extant rorquals as well as the evolutionary pathways used by ancestral toothed whales to transition from hunting individual prey items to filter feeding on prey aggregations.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 5 3%
Germany 1 <1%
Norway 1 <1%
United Kingdom 1 <1%
Czechia 1 <1%
Argentina 1 <1%
New Zealand 1 <1%
Unknown 140 93%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 31 21%
Student > Ph. D. Student 29 19%
Student > Bachelor 22 15%
Student > Master 21 14%
Other 9 6%
Other 21 14%
Unknown 18 12%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 80 53%
Environmental Science 27 18%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 10 7%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 6 4%
Veterinary Science and Veterinary Medicine 3 2%
Other 5 3%
Unknown 20 13%