No. Adult blue whales have no natural predators. They are too big and too strong to be attacked and killed by any animal. However, Orca's (Killer Whales) are known to attack and kill youngsters. A group of Orca's can easily hunt a baby blue whale if its mother is not around. Otherwise, they have no natural predators
no they are not
plankton
A pod of killer whales. sharks
Giant squid and humans.
Double No. Jaguars aren't known to be ocean swimmers, and blue whales are filter feeders.
Of course they do, their enemies is whales and shark.
Adult blue whales have no natural predators. They are too big and too strong to be attacked and killed by any animal. However, Orca's (Killer Whales) are known to attack and kill youngsters. A group of Orca's can easily hunt a baby blue whale if its mother is not around. Otherwise, they have no natural predators Humans are the biggest threat to blue whales. Nearly 90% of the world population of these animals were wiped out over the past century by humans by whaling.
The calves of blue whales are hunted by killer whales.
Yes, whalers. They're enemies are whalers because they kill whales.
no whales do not have enemies because there are big mammals
Although blue whales tend to be solitary creatures, the correct term for a group of any whales, including blue whales, is a pod. e.g. A pod of blue whales suggests that multiple whales are together.
YesSpotted dolphins do have enemies : Killer whales and big sharks such as the Blue, Greenland, Riff, Hammerhead, The great white, and the mako sharks.