“…() examined the relation between foraging activity and energy stores (estimated from changes in buoyancy) of female southern elephant seals ( Mirounga leonina ) over the course of a foraging trip. Other applications have inferred changes in energy stores from models of foraging activity that either treat energy explicitly using a bioenergetic approach (Beltran, Testa, & Burns, ; Christiansen & Lusseau, ; Farmer, Noren, Fougères, Machernis, & Baker, ; McHuron, Costa, Schwarz, & Mangel, ; McHuron, Mangel, Schwarz, & Costa, ; Noren, ; Pirotta, Mangel, et al., ; Villegas‐Amtmann et al., , ) or use an arbitrarily scaled energy metric that represents an underlying motivational state (Nabe‐Nielsen et al., , ; New, Harwood, et al., ; Pirotta, Harwood, et al., ; Pirotta, New, Harwood, & Lusseau, ). Although technologies that can measure the morphometrics of individuals remotely may make it easier to estimate changes in body condition directly (e.g., Christiansen, Dujon, Sprogis, Arnould, & Bejder, ; Miller, Best, Perryman, Baumgartner, & Moore, ), extensive health assessment in cetaceans will probably remain limited to a few closely monitored coastal populations, due to logistical constraints (Wells et al., ).…”