David E. Cade
Stanford University
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Publication
Featured researches published by David E. Cade.
Annual Review of Marine Science | 2017
Jeremy A. Goldbogen; David E. Cade; John Calambokidis; Ari S. Friedlaender; Jean Potvin; Paolo S. Segre; Alexander J. Werth
Baleen whales are gigantic obligate filter feeders that exploit aggregations of small-bodied prey in littoral, epipelagic, and mesopelagic ecosystems. At the extreme of maximum body size observed among mammals, baleen whales exhibit a unique combination of high overall energetic demands and low mass-specific metabolic rates. As a result, most baleen whale species have evolved filter-feeding mechanisms and foraging strategies that take advantage of seasonally abundant yet patchily and ephemerally distributed prey resources. New methodologies consisting of multi-sensor tags, active acoustic prey mapping, and hydrodynamic modeling have revolutionized our ability to study the physiology and ecology of baleen whale feeding mechanisms. Here, we review the current state of the field by exploring several hypotheses that aim to explain how baleen whales feed. Despite significant advances, major questions remain about the processes that underlie these extreme feeding mechanisms, which enabled the evolution of the largest animals of all time.
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2016
Paolo S. Segre; David E. Cade; Frank E. Fish; Jean Potvin; Ann N. Allen; John Calambokidis; Ari S. Friedlaender; Jeremy A. Goldbogen
ABSTRACT Maneuverability is one of the most important and least understood aspects of animal locomotion. The hydrofoil-like flippers of cetaceans are thought to function as control surfaces that effect maneuvers, but quantitative tests of this hypothesis have been lacking. Here, we constructed a simple hydrodynamic model to predict the longitudinal-axis roll performance of fin whales, and we tested its predictions against kinematic data recorded by on-board movement sensors from 27 free-swimming fin whales. We found that for a given swimming speed and roll excursion, the roll velocity of fin whales calculated from our field data agrees well with that predicted by our hydrodynamic model. Although fluke and body torsion may further influence performance, our results indicate that lift generated by the flippers is sufficient to drive most of the longitudinal-axis rolls used by fin whales for feeding and maneuvering. Summary: A simple hydrodynamic model predicts fin whale rolling performance.
Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2017
Jeremy A. Goldbogen; David E. Cade; A.T. Boersma; J. Calambokidis; S.R. Kahane-Rapport; Paolo S. Segre; Alison K. Stimpert; Ari S. Friedlaender
The anatomy of large cetaceans has been well documented, mostly through dissection of dead specimens. However, the difficulty of studying the worlds largest animals in their natural environment means the functions of anatomical structures must be inferred. Recently, non‐invasive tracking devices have been developed that measure body position and orientation, thereby enabling the detailed reconstruction of underwater trajectories. The addition of cameras to the whale‐borne tags allows the sensor data to be matched with real‐time observations of how whales use their morphological structures, such as flukes, flippers, feeding apparatuses, and blowholes for the physiological functions of locomotion, feeding, and breathing. Here, we describe a new tag design with integrated video and inertial sensors and how it can be used to provide insights to the function of whale anatomy. This technology has the potential to facilitate a wide range of discoveries and comparative studies, but many challenges remain to increase the resolution and applicability of the data. Anat Rec, 300:1935–1941, 2017.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Ken P. Findlay; S. Mduduzi Seakamela; Michael A. Meÿer; Stephen P. Kirkman; Jaco Barendse; David E. Cade; David Hurwitz; Amy Kennedy; Pieter G. H. Kotze; Steven McCue; Meredith Thornton; O. Alejandra Vargas-Fonseca; Christopher G. Wilke
Southern Hemisphere humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) generally undertake annual migrations from polar summer feeding grounds to winter calving and nursery grounds in subtropical and tropical coastal waters. Evidence for such migrations arises from seasonality of historic whaling catches by latitude, Discovery and natural mark returns, and results of satellite tagging studies. Feeding is generally believed to be limited to the southern polar region, where Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) has been identified as the primary prey item. Non-migrations and / or suspended migrations to the polar feeding grounds have previously been reported from a summer presence of whales in the Benguela System, where feeding on euphausiids (E. lucens), hyperiid amphipods (Themisto gaudichaudii), mantis shrimp (Pterygosquilla armata capensis) and clupeid fish has been described. Three recent research cruises (in October/November 2011, October/November 2014 and October/November 2015) identified large tightly-spaced groups (20 to 200 individuals) of feeding humpback whales aggregated over at least a one-month period across a 220 nautical mile region of the southern Benguela System. Feeding behaviour was identified by lunges, strong milling and repetitive and consecutive diving behaviours, associated bird and seal feeding, defecations and the pungent “fishy” smell of whale blows. Although no dedicated prey sampling could be carried out within the tightly spaced feeding aggregations, observations of E. lucens in the region of groups and the full stomach contents of mantis shrimp from both a co-occurring predatory fish species (Thyrsites atun) and one entangled humpback whale mortality suggest these may be the primary prey items of at least some of the feeding aggregations. Reasons for this recent novel behaviour pattern remain speculative, but may relate to increasing summer humpback whale abundance in the region. These novel, predictable, inter-annual, low latitude feeding events provide considerable potential for further investigation of Southern Hemisphere humpback feeding behaviours in these relatively accessible low-latitude waters.
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2018
David E. Cade; Kelly R. Barr; John Calambokidis; Ari S. Friedlaender; Jeremy A. Goldbogen
ABSTRACT How fast animals move is critical to understanding their energetic requirements, locomotor capacity and foraging performance, yet current methods for measuring speed via animal-attached devices are not universally applicable. Here, we present and evaluate a new method that relates forward speed to the stochastic motion of biologging devices as tag jiggle, the amplitude of the tag vibrations as measured by high sample rate accelerometers, increases exponentially with increasing speed. We successfully tested this method in a flow tank using two types of biologging devices and in situ on wild cetaceans spanning ∼3 to >20 m in length using two types of suction cup-attached tag and two types of dart-attached tag. This technique provides some advantages over other approaches for determining speed as it is device-orientation independent and relies only on a pressure sensor and a high sample rate accelerometer, sensors that are nearly universal across biologging device types. Summary: Aquatic animal speed correlates exponentially with high-frequency accelerometer motion in underwater animal-attached devices, and the quantification of this motion can be used as a speed metric.
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2014
David E. Cade; Kelly J. Benoit-Bird
The ecology in the Gulf of California has undergone dramatic changes over the past century as Humboldt squid (Dosidicus gigas) have become a dominant predator in the region. The vertical overlap between acoustic scattering layers, which consist of small pelagic organisms that make up the bulk of D. gigas prey, and regions of severe hypoxia have led to a hypothesis linking the shoaling of oxygen minimum zones over the past few decades to compression of acoustic scattering layers, which in turn would promote the success of D. gigas. We tested this hypothesis by looking for links between specific oxygen values and acoustic scattering layer boundaries. We applied an automatic layer detection algorithm to shipboard echosounder data from four cruises in the Gulf of California. We then used CTD data and a combination of logistic modeling, contingency tables, and linear correlations with parameter isolines to determine which parameters had the largest effects on scattering layer boundaries. Although results were ...
Current Biology | 2016
David E. Cade; Ari S. Friedlaender; John Calambokidis; Jeremy A. Goldbogen
Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers | 2015
David E. Cade; Kelly J. Benoit-Bird
Limnology and Oceanography-methods | 2014
David E. Cade; Kelly J. Benoit-Bird
Current Biology | 2017
Ari S. Friedlaender; James E. Herbert-Read; Elliott L. Hazen; David E. Cade; John Calambokidis; Brandon L. Southall; Alison K. Stimpert; Jeremy A. Goldbogen