Research reveals bottom feeding techniques of tagged humpback whales in Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary
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In this National Geographic Crittercam™ video, a humpback whale rolls over to feed on a school of sand lance fish in Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. The video was taken at a depth of nearly 100 feet, so visibility is poor due to low light penetration from the surface. #555972 size="2" onClick="expandcontent(this, '78fr49700')" style="cursor:hand; cursor:pointer">More...
Sand lance appear as small dark wavy lines on the rippled seafloor. As the whale completes its roll, the head of another whale appears momentarily in the upper right corner of the frame, an indication that whales are coordinating their movement as they eat sand lance on the seafloor. Later in the video, humpbacks can be seen feeding on sand lance in the upper portions of the water column. The video concludes with the tagged whale approaching the surface to breathe.
(Credit: Courtesy of National Geographic - research and photography conducted under permit #14245 issued by the National Marine Fisheries Service) Ari Friedlander, Duke University (top) and Michael Thompson, Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, attach a National Geographic Crittercam™ video camera and a digital acoustic recording tag to the back of a humpback whale. The tags are used to record underwater behavior and attach with suction cups much like those on the bottom of a shower mat, releasing automatically several hours later and floating to the surface where scientists retrieve them. Click here to download.
(Credit: NOAA/Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary - research and photography conducted under permit #14245 issued by the National Marine Fisheries Service)


The study further states that the observed feeding behavior also leads to vulnerability to entanglement in bottom set fishing gear, an issue which is a major mortality factor for the species. This finding reaffirms a NOAA Fisheries regulation that mandates the use of sinking line between fishing traps used in the lobster fishery as a way of reducing entanglements.
The new findings follow earlier NOAA-led studies detailing so-called "bubble net" feeding behaviors near and at the surface. Bubble net feeding is a behavior in which humpback whales corral and contain fish into a small area by trapping them in nets of air bubbles so they can more efficiently scoop them up in their large filter-feeding mouths.The behaviors are used by individual animals and as part of coordinated feeding behaviors involving two or more animals.
"Tagging technology is allowing us to observe whales underwater, much as land-based biologists study animal subjects in their specific environments," said David Wiley, sanctuary research coordinator and a co-author on the paper. "The data have allowed us to detect new feeding techniques as well as nuances in those behaviors. We have determined that bottom feeding is a much more commonly used technique than the more well known bubble net behaviors."
Bottom side-rolling feeding was previously hypothesized from observations of scars on the jaws of humpback whales and from earlier tagging projects. In the recent studies, researchers showed that this behavior happens for extensive periods of time at or near the seafloor, that it occurs in the presence of concentrations of sand lance (a preferred prey fish), and that the behavior is accompanied by the expansion of the animal's ventral (throat) pleats.
Information was collected through the use of DTAGs (synchronous motion and acoustic recording tags) and Crittercam™, National Geographic Society's underwater video and audio recording system.
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| Humpback whale with a scrape on its rostrum. Scientists say injuries such as this one are sometimes a result from bottom-feeding. (Credit: NOAA/Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary ) |
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