No the blue whales have bristles like the humpback to act as a filter to catch plankton and krill.
Blue Whales, Beluga Whales, Killer Whales, Sperm Whales, and Narwhals.
Yes, the killer whale
Usually killer whales kill blue whales.
The killer whale and blue whale have different feeding structures. Killer whales have teeth because they feed mainly on seals and fish. Blue whales have baleen or rows of filaments that they use to capture krill from the ocean water.
Most definately. Killer Whales -- odonticetes -- are pure carnivores and do in fact have teeth. Mysticetes or baleen whales do not.
No. Killer Whales are like wolf packs in ocean, they will hunt large baby blue whale, kill and eat them. Blue Whales don't have teeth like Killer Whales (sometimes referred to as Orcas). Blue Whales staple diet is mainly Krill. "Krill is the common name given to the order Euphausiacea of shrimp-like marine crustaceans."
A pod of killer whales. sharks
Killer whales have sharp teeth's seals,and they have canine teeth. Polar bears have sharp teeth's fish,and the also have canine teeth
blue whales dont have teeth
The killer whales mouth is armed with sharply pointed teeth.
THE TOOTHLESS WHALES: blue whales, finback whales, right whales, sei whales, humpback whales, and gray whales. THE TOOTHED WHALES: white beluga whales, black beluga whales (pilot whales), orcas (killer whales), sperm whales.
Killer whales often eat seals and often go for the babies of bigger whales like the blue and gray whales. Blue whales swim around with their mouths open to feed in so they catch krill. Then because they have baleen bristles instead of teeth, the water filters through that and they keep the krill.