Fish Most
forage fish are filter feeders. For example, the
Atlantic menhaden, a type of
herring, lives on
plankton caught in midwater. Adult menhaden can filter up to four gallons of water a minute and play an important role in clarifying ocean water. They are also a natural check to the deadly
red tide. In addition to these bony fish, four types of
cartilaginous fishes are also filter feeders. The
whale shark sucks in a mouthful of water, closes its mouth and expels the water through its
gills. During the slight delay between closing the mouth and opening the gill flaps, plankton is trapped against the
dermal denticles which line its gill plates and
pharynx. This fine sieve-like apparatus, which is a unique modification of the gill rakers, prevents the passage of anything but fluid out through the gills (anything above 2 to 3 mm in diameter is trapped). Any material caught in the filter between the gill bars is swallowed. Whale sharks have been observed "coughing" and it is presumed that this is a method of clearing a build up of food particles in the gill rakers. The
megamouth shark likely convergently evolved a similar filter feeding mechanism. The
basking shark is a passive filter feeder, filtering
zooplankton, small fish, and
invertebrates from up to 2,000 tons of water per hour. Unlike the megamouth and whale sharks, the basking shark does not appear to actively seek its quarry; but it does possess large
olfactory bulbs that may guide it in the right direction. Unlike the other large filter feeders, it relies only on the water that is pushed through the gills by swimming; the megamouth shark and whale shark can suck or pump water through their gills.
Baleen whales The
baleen whales (
parvorder Mysticeti), one of the two
extant groups of the
marine mammalian
infraorder Cetacea (
whales,
dolphins and
porpoises), are characterized by having
baleen plates for filtering food such as
krill from water. This distinguishes them from the other parvorder of cetaceans, the
toothed whales (Odontoceti). Baleen whales contains four families and fourteen species. They typically seek out a concentration of
zooplankton, swim through it, either open-mouthed or gulping, and filter the prey from the water using their baleens. A baleen is a row of a large number of
keratin plates attached to the upper jaw with a composition similar to those in human hair or fingernails. These plates are triangular in section with the largest, inward-facing side bearing fine hairs forming a filtering mat.
Right whales are slow swimmers with large heads and mouths. Their baleen plates are narrow and very long — up to in
bowheads — and accommodated inside the enlarged lower lip which fits onto the bowed upper jaw. As the right whale swims, a front gap between the two rows of baleen plates lets the water in together with the prey, while the baleens filter out the water.
Prions are specialised petrels with filter-feeding habits. Their name comes from their saw-like jaw edges, used to scope out small planktionic animals. The extinct
swan Annakacygna is speculated to be a filter-feeder due to its bill proportions being similar to those of
shoveler ducks. It is unique in being a large, flightless marine animal, unlike the smaller still volant flamingos and prions.
Pterosaurs Traditionally,
Ctenochasmatoidea as a group has been listed as filter-feeders, due to their long, multiple slender teeth, clearly well adapted to trap prey. However, only
Pterodaustro showcases a proper pumping mechanism, having up-turned jaws and powerful jaw and tongue musculature. Other ctenochasmatoids lack these, and are now instead thought to have been
spoonbill-like catchers, using their specialised teeth simply to offer a larger surface area. Tellingly, these teeth, while small and numerous, are comparatively unspecialised to the baleen-like teeth of
Pterodaustro.
Boreopterids are thought to have relied on a kind of rudimentary filter feeding, using their long, slender teeth to trap small fish, though probably lacking the pumping mechanism of
Pterodaustro. In essence, their foraging mechanism was similar to that of modern young
Platanista "
dolphins".
Marine reptiles Filter feeding habits are conspicuously rare among
Mesozoic marine reptiles, the main filter feeding niche being seemingly instead occupied by
pachycormid fish. However, some sauropsids have been suggested to have engaged in filter feeding.
Henodus was a placodont with unique baleen-like denticles and features of the hyoid and jaw musculature comparable to those of flamingos. Combined with its lacustrine environment, it might have occupied a similar ecological niche. In particular, it was probably a
herbivore, filtering out
algae and other small-sized
flora from the substrates.
Stomatosuchidae is a family of freshwater
crocodylomorphs with rorqual-like jaws and minuscule teeth, and the unrelated
Cenozoic Mourasuchus shares similar adaptations.
Hupehsuchia is a lineage of bizarre
Triassic reptiles adapted for suspension feeding. Some
plesiosaurs might have had filter-feeding habits. == Lancelets ==