Scientists studying the cooperative hunting behavior of killer whales in Antarctic waters observed the animals favoring one type of seal over all other available food sources, according to a new study.
Researchers Robert Pitman and John Durban from NOAA's Southwest
Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla, Calif., observed killer whales
hunting in ice floes, off the western Antarctic Peninsula during January
of 2009. While documenting the whales' behavior of deliberately
creating waves to wash seals off ice floes, the researchers noticed
Weddell seals as their primary target, despite the availability of other
prey species, particularly the more abundant crabeater seals.
"These killer whales would identify and then attack Weddell seals
almost exclusively, even though they made up only about 15 percent of
the available seal population," said Pitman.
Killer whales creating waves to wash seals off ice floes in
Antarctica had previously been observed only a handful of times. The
whales, sometimes as many as seven abreast, charge the ice floe creating
a wave that either washes the seal off the ice or breaks the ice into
smaller pieces and more vulnerable to another attack. A previous study
involving the authors suggested that this very distinctive killer whale
population, which they refer to as "pack ice killer whales," is a
separate species.
Once the seal was washed off the ice, the killer whales worked as a
group to keep it away from hauling onto the safety of another ice floe.
The whales seemed to try and confuse the seal by causing turbulence in
the water with their flukes and blowing bubbles under the water through
their blowholes.
Away from the ice, the whales attempt to tire and eventually drown
the animal by pulling it under water by its hind flippers. Eventually
the seal succumbs to exhaustion and is usually divided up among the pod
members underwater. In most cases, little of the seal's remains float to
the surface, but in one instance the carcass rose to the surface and
appeared to have been methodically skinned and dismembered before being
eaten.
Thi story is taken from Science Daily.
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