No.
It is called Blubber.
The animals that have blubber are: whales, seals, sea lions, elephant seals, walruses and 40% of Americans most aquatic and/or semi-aquatic animals. Don't forget penguins, a lot of seabird chicks have a heavy blubber layer which is lost before fledging. Most animals with blubber live in freezing and/or arctic climates.
No they have still and wool.
People make chewing gum out of whales blubber, and i think its disgusting. Whales are beautiful animals which live in the sea, they do no harm to man kind, so we should do no harm to them.
Sea animals and sea birds visit Antarctica during summer, to breed.
The layer of fat under the skin of sea mammals is called blubber. Blubber serves as insulation to help sea mammals regulate their body temperature in cold environments. It also acts as a source of energy during periods of fasting.
Many animals including whales, seals, manatees and penguins have a thick layer of fat called blubber. Only marine animals have blubber (but not every marine animal). Blubber provides buoyancy, hydrodynamic shape, and stores energy.
A blubber fish is actually made up of tiny sea creatures
No, quite a few animals contain blubber as part of their anatomy. Basically any oxygen breathing animal, who's habitat is by the ocean like seals walrus sea lion, and whales.
There are no animals that are native to Antarctica. However, many sea animals, including penguins visit the beaches in the summer to breed.
The mammal(s) that have blubber are those around the sea - dolphins, whales, seals, sea lions, etc. - because they use the blubber to keep them warm in the cold sea water (especially at the deep depths they are known to dive too). The blubber is much the equivalent of a diver's wet suit.
body blubber