A KINEMATIC STUDY OF SUCTION FEEDING AND ASSOCIATED BEHAVIOR IN THE LONG‐FINNED PILOT WHALE, GLOBICEPHALA MELAS (TRAILL)
@article{Werth2000AKS, title={A KINEMATIC STUDY OF SUCTION FEEDING AND ASSOCIATED BEHAVIOR IN THE LONG‐FINNED PILOT WHALE, GLOBICEPHALA MELAS (TRAILL)}, author={Alexander J. Werth}, journal={Marine Mammal Science}, year={2000}, volume={16}, pages={299-314} }
Analysis of videotaped feeding sequences provides novel documentation of suction feeding in captive juvenile long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas). Swimming and stationary whales were videotaped while feeding at the surface, mid-water, and bottom. The ingestion sequence includes a preparatory phase with partial gape followed by jaw opening and rapid hyoid depression to suck in prey at a mean distance of 14 cm (duration 90 msec), although prey were taken from much greater distances…
64 Citations
Comparative feeding kinematics and performance of odontocetes: belugas, Pacific white-sided dolphins and long-finned pilot whales
- BiologyJournal of Experimental Biology
- 2009
Functional variations of suction generation during feeding demonstrate a wider diversity of feeding behaviors in Odontocetes than previously thought, and odontocete suctiongeneration is convergent with that of more basal aquatic vertebrates.
Comparative feeding strategies and kinematics in phocid seals: suction without specialized skull morphology
- Environmental ScienceJournal of Experimental Biology
- 2018
Behavioral and kinematic differences exist between suction feeding and biting in seals, indicating thatsuction feeding is a behaviorally flexible strategy and that skull morphology alone does not capture the true diversity of feeding behaviors used by pinnipeds.
Feeding kinematics, suction and hydraulic jetting capabilities in bearded seals (Erignathus barbatus)
- Environmental ScienceJournal of Experimental Biology
- 2008
Feeding kinematics, suction and hydraulic jetting capabilities of bearded seals support predictions that mouth size, fluid flow speed, and elusiveness of prey consumed are among a suite of traits that determine the specific nature of suction feeding among species.
Comparative anatomy and evolutionary history of suction feeding in cetaceans
- Biology
- 2011
Qualitative and qualitative hyoid and cranial data from 35 extant and 14 extinct cetacean species are incorporated into a multivariate principal component analysis and comparative phylogenetic analyses that indicate that suction feeding likely evolved once, early in cetACEan evolutionary history.
Feeding Kinematics, Suction, and Hydraulic Jetting Performance of Harbor Seals (Phoca vitulina)
- Engineering, Environmental SciencePloS one
- 2014
The feeding kinematics, suction and hydraulic jetting capabilities of captive harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) were characterized during controlled feeding trials. Feeding trials were conducted using a…
Australian Fur Seals (Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus) Use Raptorial Biting and Suction Feeding When Targeting Prey in Different Foraging Scenarios
- Environmental SciencePloS one
- 2014
The behavioural flexibility displayed by Australian fur seals likely assists in capturing and consuming the extremely wide range of prey types that are targeted in the wild, during both benthic and epipelagic foraging.
The better to eat you with: the comparative feeding morphology of phocid seals (Pinnipedia, Phocidae)
- BiologyJournal of anatomy
- 2016
This study provides the first cranial and mandibular morphological evidence for the use of specialized suction feeding in hooded seals, northern elephant seals and southern elephant seals.
Bite performance and feeding kinematics in loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) within the context of longline fishery interactions
- Environmental Science
- 2009
Loggerhead bite performance was measured in several size classes of captive-reared juveniles, captive sub-adults and adults, as well as wild loggerheads, and bite force demonstrated that mean maximum post-hatchling bite force was 2.5N and mass was the best predictor of posthatchlings bite force.
The Better To Eat You With: The Comparative Feeding Morphology And Evolution Of Feeding Strategies In Phocid Seals (Pinnipedia, Phocidae)
- Environmental Science
- 2014
The findings of this study confirm that phocids are apex predators in the marine ecosystem with trophic levels similar to other marine predators, including other marine mammals, rays, and sharks.
Feeding kinematics and performance of basal otariid pinnipeds, Steller sea lions and northern fur seals: implications for the evolution of mammalian feeding
- Environmental ScienceJournal of Experimental Biology
- 2015
Steller sea lions use both suction and biting when foraging but northern fur seals are constrained to a biting feeding mode, which may be ancestral for this clade.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 16 REFERENCES
The Suction Feeding Mechanism in Sunfishes (Lepomis): An Experimental Analysis
- Biology
- 1980
Data indicate that the buccal and opercular cavities are functionally separated by a gill curtain of high resistance, that inertial effects of water are important in the description of the suction feeding process, that a reverse flow of water may occur during the early phase of mouth opening prior to establishment of a buCCal to opercular flow regime, and current models of respiratory pressure and flow pattern cannot be applied to feeding.
STOMACH CONTENTS OF LONG‐FINNED PILOT WHALES (GLOBICEPHALA MELAS) STRANDED ON THE U.S. MID‐ATLANTIC COAST
- Environmental Science
- 1997
The results indicate that the diets of western North Atlantic long-finned pilot whales differ substantially from what has been previously reported in the literature and that results from food-habits studies that utilize different techniques may not be comparable.
Can Odontocetes Debilitate Prey with Sound?
- Environmental ScienceThe American Naturalist
- 1983
The hypothesis is presented that some odontocetes may debilitate prey by use of brief intense sounds, and the forehead sound-beaming anatomy is postulated to allow prey debilitation.
Functional morphology involved in intraspecific fighting of the beaked whale, Mesoplodon carlhubbsi
- Environmental Science
- 1984
The species Mesoplodon carlhubbsi was examined from a structural viewpoint to describe functionally how such scarring may result and indicates that the teeth are used with the mouth closed by bringing the dorsal aspect of the rostrum in contact with the soon to be inflicted whale.
The biology of the pilot or pothead whale Globicephala melaena (Traill) in Newfoundland waters
- Environmental Science
- 1962
The Comparative Anatomy of the Tongues of the Mammalia.—VII. Cetaeea, Sirenia, and Ungulata.
- Biology
- 1922
Summary.
1
The tongues of the Cetacea have their glandular organs better developed, but their gustatory and mobile functions are less, than in other Mammalia.
2
The tongues of the Mystacoceti…
Anatomy of the hyoid apparatus in odontoceli (toothed whales): Specializations of their skeleton and musculature compared with those of terrestrial mammals
- MedicineThe Anatomical record
- 1994
Background: The hyoid apparatus of odontocetes (toothed whales) serves as a major attachment point for many of the muscles and ligaments subserving breathing, swallowing, and sound production.