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    Drone footage helps scientists study acrobatic ballet of whales feeding

    By Talker News,

    23 days ago

    By Dean Murray via SWNS

    Researchers have captured the acrobatics of gray whales as they feed.

    New insight into their movements observed them doing headstands and using "bubble blasts" to catch food.

    Drone footage by Oregon State University’s Marine Mammal Institute was taken as the whales foraged in waters off the state's coast.

    The whales’ movements, including forward and side-swimming, change as the whales grow, said Clara Bird, a researcher in the Marine Mammal Institute’s Geospatial Ecology of Marine Megafauna Laboratory .

    Using drone footage captured over seven years, Bird quantified the gray whales’ behavior and their individual size and body condition. She found that the probability of whales using these behaviors changes with age.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0e6Wzr_0vklQ0OI00
    The gray whale at the top of the image is performing a headstand while feeding off the coast of Oregon.
    (GEMM Lab/Oregon State University via SWNS)

    Younger, smaller whales are more apt to use forward swimming while foraging. Older, larger whales are more likely to headstand, a head-down position where the whale is pushing its mouth into the ocean floor. The probability of whales using these behaviors changes with age.

    Clara Bird said: "Our findings suggest that this headstanding behavior requires strength and coordination. For example, we often see whales sculling much like synchronized swimmers do while they are head standing.

    "It is likely this behavior is learned by the whales as they mature. We have footage of whale calves trying to copy this behavior and they’re not able to do it successfully."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0gTEfA_0vklQ0OI00
    A gray whale performs a bubble blast, depicted by the ring of bubbles on the surface, while foraging off the coast of Oregon.
    (GEMM Lab/Oregon State University via SWNS)

    The findings were just published in two new papers authored by Bird and co-authored by Associate Professor Leigh Torres, who leads the GEMM Lab at Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport.

    The researchers also investigated why the gray whales perform “bubble blasts” – a single big exhale while they’re underwater that produces a large circle pattern at the surface.

    “While it was thought that bubble blasts helped gray whales aggregate or capture prey, our study shows that bubble blasts are a behavioral adaptation used by the whales to regulate their buoyancy while feeding in very shallow water,” Leigh Torres explained.

    The post Drone footage helps scientists study acrobatic ballet of whales feeding appeared first on Talker .

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