Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
Blue whales are the largest animals
that have ever roamed the planet.
They’re at least two times
as big as the biggest dinosaurs—
“that’s big!“—
the length of a basketball court,
and as heavy as 40 African elephants.
If that’s not enough to make you marvel,
here’s something that will.
They’ve grown to this enormous size
by feeding exclusively on tiny shrimp-like
creatures called krill—
that are no bigger
than your little finger.
In many ways, the sheer size of krill
seems to have driven
the evolution of the blue whale.
See, krill are so small
but are found in dense patches.
For increased efficiency,
blue whales have evolved to use
a feeding strategy called lunge feeding.
Basically,
the whale accelerates towards a prey patch
and opens its mouth wide.
To increase the capacity,
its mouth expands.
The special, accordion-like
blubber layer
that extends from its snout
to its belly button
enables the whale to engulf
large quantities of prey-laden water.
With each giant gulp,
the whale takes in 125% of its body weight
in water and krill.
The whale must then expel the water
while retaining the yummy krill.
To do this, it uses its baleen,
the comb-like structure made of the same
stuff our nails and hair are made of,
and its tongue.
It’s pretty crazy that the blue whale’s
heart is as big as a small car,
a child could crawl through its arteries,
its tongue weighs as much as an elephant,
but its esophagus is so small,
the whale could choke on a loaf of bread.
These whales are really not designed
to feed on anything larger than krill.
It’s estimated that blue whales eat
four tons of krill per day.
Because of their incredible design,
each dive provides the blue whale
with 90 times as much energy as is used.
Every mouthful of krill provides
almost 480,000 calories,
the same amount you get
from eating 1,900 hamburgers.
But, why are blue whales so big?
Blue whales are considerably larger
than the largest living land animal,
the elephant.
The heavier an animal is,
the greater its relative surface area.
As weight increases,
there’s a point at which the legs
of that animal would simply collapse.
That explains why elephants don’t stand
on the delicate legs of a horse.
They need legs shaped like stout pedestals
to hold their bodies up against gravity.
In water, the situation
is quite different.
Buoyancy counteracts
the gravitational pull on the body
and their great bulk is therefore
partially supported by the water.
So, the ocean is a great place for species
that want to grow bigger.
The other secret to their size
is their diet.
By evolving such a huge mouth,
the whale’s have specialized to catch
enormous quantities
of highly abundant and nutritious prey,
which provides the energy needed
to grow so big.
But, now maybe you’re wondering
why blue whales aren’t any bigger?
After all, the ocean sounds like nirvana
for any growing beast.
Well, while lunge feeding may
have allowed blue whales
to become the biggest animal
to have ever roamed the planet,
by enabling them to feed efficiently
in dense prey patches,
it isn't cost free.
Scientists compared all the costs
involved with lunge feeding
to the energy gained
from the krill they eat.
What they found is that when the whale’s
body increases in size,
the energy that body demands rises faster
than the extra energy they get
from their food.
Feeding whales needs 15 times the energy
required to remain still
and 5 times more energy
than used when swimming.
Calculations show that the largest
a lunge feeder can grow is 33 meters,
pretty much blue whale size.
Turns out blue whales have a lot
to thank krill for:
neat, evolutionary adaptations that would
not have been possible
if krill were not so small.
It’s incredible that these tiny creatures
have allowed blue whales
to really push the limits
of size on our planet.
Makes you wonder if that old adage,
“you are what you eat,”
really does apply in blue whale world.