Abstract

ABSTRACTHigh efficiency lunate-tail swimming with high-aspect-ratio lifting surfaces has evolved in many vertebrate lineages, from fish to cetaceans. Baleen whales (Mysticeti) are the largest swimming animals that exhibit this locomotor strategy, and present an ideal study system to examine how morphology and the kinematics of swimming scale to the largest body sizes. We used data from whale-borne inertial sensors coupled with morphometric measurements from aerial drones to calculate the hydrodynamic performance of oscillatory swimming in six baleen whale species ranging in body length from 5 to 25 m (fin whale, Balaenoptera physalus; Bryde's whale, Balaenoptera edeni; sei whale, Balaenoptera borealis; Antarctic minke whale, Balaenoptera bonaerensis; humpback whale, Megaptera novaeangliae; and blue whale, Balaenoptera musculus). We found that mass-specific thrust increased with both swimming speed and body size. Froude efficiency, defined as the ratio of useful power output to the rate of energy input ( Sloop, 1978), generally increased with swimming speed but decreased on average with increasing body size. This finding is contrary to previous results in smaller animals, where Froude efficiency increased with body size. Although our empirically parameterized estimates for swimming baleen whale drag were higher than those of a simple gliding model, oscillatory locomotion at this scale exhibits generally high Froude efficiency as in other adept swimmers. Our results quantify the fine-scale kinematics and estimate the hydrodynamics of routine and energetically expensive swimming modes at the largest scale.

Highlights

  • IntroductionReceived 11 September 2020; Accepted 3 June 2021 convergent morphological adaptations that facilitate life in water (Kelley and Pyenson, 2015)

  • We found that the mean oscillatory frequency for the three species with the most data decreased with increasing body length, with the Antarctic minke whale having the highest values, followed by the humpback whale and the blue whale

  • The thrust power and drag coefficient produced by rorquals during routine swimming increased with body size

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Summary

Introduction

Received 11 September 2020; Accepted 3 June 2021 convergent morphological adaptations that facilitate life in water (Kelley and Pyenson, 2015) Among these adaptations are the evolution of a fusiform body shape, flattened control surfaces and sickle-shaped caudal fin to achieve high performance locomotion (Fish et al, 2008). These morphological adaptations are functionally analogous among swimming animals such as thunniform fish, lamnid sharks, cetaceans and the extinct ichthyosaurs (Motani, 2002; Donley et al, 2004; Gleiss et al, 2011). Cetaceans are unique among oscillatory swimmers because of their extreme body mass, exemplified in modern baleen whales (Mysticeti), which evolved massive body sizes within the last five million years (Slater et al, 2017)

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