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Humpback Whale Feeding
The humpback is the fifth largest whale. A diet of krill
(thumb sized prawn-like animals) and small crustaceans support its
massive bulk. There are a number of different species of krill, although
it is Euphausia superba which is the largest and most
abundant in the Antarctic. The whales sieve food from huge amounts
of water through specialised fringed mouth plates made of baleen.
Baleen, also known as "whalebone" is not really bone, but
is made of keratin, the same protein substance as our own hair and
nails, and the horns of cattle. Instead of teeth, they have hundreds
of thin, horny baleen plates attached to their upper jaws. The plates
have bristly inner edges which intertwine to form a filtering mechanism.
The humpbacks baleen is coarse and stiff, excluding the possibility
of feeding on smaller forms of plankton. The scientific name for baleen
whales, mysticetes, comes from the Greek word mystax which means moustache!
Baleen whales feed by opening their mouths and taking in
large quantities of water- as much as 2000 litres (500 gallons) at
a time. The baleen plates serve as a strainer. Water filters through
and the whale's food which includes small fish such as herring and
mackerel and krill, a tiny shrimp-like organism, is filtered out as
it is trapped in the hairy fringes of the plates. The whale then uses
its large rasping tongue to remove its food and swallows its meal.
Even though the Humpback's mouth opens to an angle greater than 90
degrees its throat is not very big and cannot swallow anything bigger
that a baseball.
Baleen whales consume between 1 and 8 tones (2000 and 9000 pounds) of fish and krill a day! They do not feed all year round, however, but only during half of the year when they are in the cold, nutrient-rich waters of their antarctic summer feeding grounds. Approximately 25% of what they eat during the summer is stored in the form of fat to provide extra energy and insulation during their winter fast when they migrate to warmer waters.
Normally humpbacks feed by lunging forward at the surface
or by rushing on their prey from below. They have also developed a
technique involving the creation of a 'bubble net' to trap and concentrate
the prey long enough for them to grab it. To do this, the whale starts
below the surface, weaving a net of bubbles by forcing air out through
their blowholes as they swim upwards in a tight spiral, finally surfacing
open-mouthed right amongst the food.
Southern Humpbacks feed in the Antarctic in preparation for their lengthy northern migration when they abstain from feeding. Although they may be opportunistic feeders in the northern waters and feed occasionally on schools of small fish and prawns. They have been observed by some of the local whale boat skippers feeding at the northern tip of Fraser Island.
All photographs
shown on this page are copyright
© 1997 Seaspray Charters - used with
permission.
Krill drawing taken from We come in peace by Eddy May
copyright
© 1997 Eddy May - used with permission.

