New findings suggest the evolution and behavior of at least some baleen whales has been significantly shaped by fear of orca attack.
The study focused on a handful of baleen species — namely, gray whales, humpback whales and right whales — which display ...
14d
Study Finds on MSNHow whales fuel ocean ecosystems with their pee, placentas, and carcassesIn a nutshell Migrating baleen whales transport thousands of tons of nutrients from cold, nutrient-rich feeding grounds to warm, nutrient-poor breeding areas through their urine, placentas, skin, and ...
New research shows that whales move nutrients thousands of miles—in their pee and poop—from as far as Alaska to Hawaii, supporting the health of tropical ecosystems and fish. UC Santa Cruz professors ...
9d
ScienceAlert on MSNWhale Pee Transports Nutrients Across Thousands of Miles, Study RevealsGreat rivers of whale pee make a remarkable contribution to Earth's cycling of nutrients, a new study reveals.
The study focused on a handful of baleen species — namely, gray whales, humpback whales and right whales — which display “traditional migratory patterns,” moving from colder waters in the ...
Phys.org on MSN15d
Whales move nutrients from Alaska to Hawaii in their urine, supporting tropical ecosystemsThey need this energy for an amazing journey. Baleen whales migrate thousands of miles to their winter breeding grounds in the tropics—without eating. Gray whales travel nearly 7,000 miles between ...
“One big difference is that whales are often traveling thousands of miles across ocean basins–great whales undertake the ...
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