Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Blue whales rely on memory to choose annual migration route

-

WASHINGTON: Every spring, the largest animals in the world, blue whales, migrate from their winter breeding grounds off of Costa Rica to the coast of the Pacific Northwest of the United States. They are in search of their favourite food, the tiny crustacean­s known as krill.

Scientists have long tracked the migration of the behemoths, which can weigh well over 100 tons, but could not explain how they chose their itinerary.

Were they choosing their annual migration route based on current conditions? Or did they always embark on the same journey at the same dates?

A team US scientists think they have the answer. They examined 10 years of data on the movements of 60 tagged blue whales and compared it with the timing of the annual spring bloom of phytoplank­ton, which krill feed on. In a study, they said the whales appear to be relying heavily on memory in making their movement decisions, unlike most migratory land animals, which will take detours to adapt to shifting resources.

As for the blue whales, “they’re using their memory,” said Briana Abrahms, a research ecologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. “Or they’re using expectatio­ns that they’ve developed through experience over time, to basically go with the average timing (of the krill) rather than trying to follow what’s happening at any given year,” Abrahms said. “We think that they must be using their memory, or their own experience­s from the past, to kind of hedge their bets,” she said. One reason for doing so, Abrahms said, is because “there’s so much variabilit­y in the ocean that it’s really hard to predict exactly when something’s going to happen.

“The ocean is so dynamic and habitats are shifting in time,” she said. “And there’s a lot of variabilit­y year to year.“so, I think of it as a way to hedge their bets by just going with the average,” she said.abrahms said climate change, however, is posing a challenge to the blue whale, which is classified as endangered.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India