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Fundamental scaling relationships influence the physiology of vital rates, which in turn shape the ecology and evolution of organisms. For diving mammals, benefits conferred by large body size include reduced transport costs and enhanced breath-holding capacity, thereby increasing overall foraging efficiency. Rorqual whales feed by engulfing a large mass of prey-laden water at high speed and filtering it through baleen plates. However, as engulfment capacity increases with body length (Engulfment Volume ∝ Body Length 3.57), the surface area of the baleen filter does not increase proportionally (Baleen Area ∝ Body Length1.82), and thus the filtration time of larger rorquals predictablymore »
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Segre, P S ; Cade, D E ; Calambokidis, J ; Fish, F E ; Friedlaender, A S ; Potvin, J ; Goldbogen, J A ( , Integrative and Comparative Biology)
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Goldbogen, J. A. ; Cade, D. E. ; Wisniewska, D. M. ; Potvin, J. ; Segre, P. S. ; Savoca, M. S. ; Hazen, E. L. ; Czapanskiy, M. F. ; Kahane-Rapport, S. R. ; DeRuiter, S. L. ; et al ( , Science)The largest animals are marine filter feeders, but the underlying mechanism of their large size remains unexplained. We measured feeding performance and prey quality to demonstrate how whale gigantism is driven by the interplay of prey abundance and harvesting mechanisms that increase prey capture rates and energy intake. The foraging efficiency of toothed whales that feed on single prey is constrained by the abundance of large prey, whereas filter-feeding baleen whales seasonally exploit vast swarms of small prey at high efficiencies. Given temporally and spatially aggregated prey, filter feeding provides an evolutionary pathway to extremes in body size that aremore »not available to lineages that must feed on one prey at a time. Maximum size in filter feeders is likely constrained by prey availability across space and time.« less