yes Narwhals do kill humans they kill humans because they think humans are a threat they kill them by stabbing there horn through them. Man I sure love having the education of a Mexican.
narwhals dont eat humans but they LOVE cotton candy comment your thoughts
by killing with its with its tusk
As big as a adult humans mouth open.
Yes, it's possible that narwhals indeed kill each other. Male narwhals have been found, dead and alive, with scars and wounds to the heads and tusks. Males engage in what tends to be called playful tusking. But perhaps that gets carried away at times.
Answer #1 They hunt them for their tusks. Answer #2 by Ginezumi Humans affect narwhals by hunting, competing for their food sources, and cluttering and polluting their Arctic environment. The Inuits of Canada and Greenland hunt narwhals for food, shelter, and tools. Other hunters kill the narwhal just to take and sell the precious, valuable tusk. Humans compete with narwhals for food sources. Narwhals are picky eaters; and prefer cod, halibut, shrimp, and squid. This aquatic fare also appeals to humans, as food and as subjects of research study. Humans also impact the narwhal environment. They clutter narwhal sea routes with surface and underwater vessels and scientific equipment. They pollute the narwhal's Arctic habitat with emissions and waste from equipment and vehicles. Likewise is the narwhal's Arctic habitat sullied by global warming, whose natural causes are worsened by human inputs to warming temperatures and waters, melting ice, and impacted marine life. For example, narwhals have specific feeding and living conditions to meet. Ice formations and marine life need certain temperature, salinity and pressure levels to abound or perish.
Humans kill Narwhals
Harold A. Ballitch II md
Yes. They are. So don't kill the narwhals, or you will kill unicorns.
narwhals dont eat humans but they LOVE cotton candy comment your thoughts
by killing with its with its tusk
Whales are mammals, and like humans, whales have an internal skeleton and a spine - only on a much larger scale!
As big as a adult humans mouth open.
Yes, it's possible that narwhals indeed kill each other. Male narwhals have been found, dead and alive, with scars and wounds to the heads and tusks. Males engage in what tends to be called playful tusking. But perhaps that gets carried away at times.
Answer #1 They hunt them for their tusks. Answer #2 by Ginezumi Humans affect narwhals by hunting, competing for their food sources, and cluttering and polluting their Arctic environment. The Inuits of Canada and Greenland hunt narwhals for food, shelter, and tools. Other hunters kill the narwhal just to take and sell the precious, valuable tusk. Humans compete with narwhals for food sources. Narwhals are picky eaters; and prefer cod, halibut, shrimp, and squid. This aquatic fare also appeals to humans, as food and as subjects of research study. Humans also impact the narwhal environment. They clutter narwhal sea routes with surface and underwater vessels and scientific equipment. They pollute the narwhal's Arctic habitat with emissions and waste from equipment and vehicles. Likewise is the narwhal's Arctic habitat sullied by global warming, whose natural causes are worsened by human inputs to warming temperatures and waters, melting ice, and impacted marine life. For example, narwhals have specific feeding and living conditions to meet. Ice formations and marine life need certain temperature, salinity and pressure levels to abound or perish.
It could, but probably wouldnt, as narwhals are very peaceful creatures.
No, they can't kill humans.
Humans kill beavers for their fur.