The scientific name of the humpback whale, Megaptera novaeangliae, means "big-winged New Englander." It refers to the whale's large pectoral fins, or flippers, that can grow up to one-third of its body length and its frequent sightings off the coast of New England.
Superregnum: Eukaryota
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Superphylum: Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum: Gnathostomata
Superclassis: Tetrapoda
Classis: Mammalia
Subclassis: Theria
Infraclassis: Placentalia
Superordo: Cetartiodactyla
Ordo: Cetacea
Subordines: †Archaeoceti - Mysticeti - Odontoceti
you will have to be more specific than just 'whale' to get a more detailed name.
The humpback is a predator, taking krill and small schooling fish, such as herring, salmon, capelin and sand lance as well as mackerel, pollock and haddock in the North Atlantic. Krill and copepods have been recorded from Australian and Antarctic waters. Humpbacks hunt by direct attack or by stunning prey by hitting the water with pectoral fins or flukes.
The humpback is a predator, taking krill and small schooling fish, such as herring, salmon, capelin and sand lance as well as mackerel, pollock and haddock in the North Atlantic. Krill and copepods have been recorded from Australian and Antarctic waters. Humpbacks hunt by direct attack or by stunning prey by hitting the water with pectoral fins or flukes.
a blue whale can weigh up to 150 tons ( 136,000 kg ) .
Female humpback whales typically breed every two or three years. The gestation period is 11.5 months. Some females have been known to breed in two consecutive years. The peak months for birth are January, February, July, and August. There is usually a 1-2 year period between humpback births.
Because of my past experiances seeing humpback whales on tv and that I've never seen 2 baby whales next to one mother, I would say one. They also give birth underwater, so that means it would be hard to get two calfs to surface.
Barnacles are actually very helpful to whales. The relationship that they have is mutualism. They attach on to them and they eat the algae and the other harmful things on them. The whales don't mind the barnacles because the whale acually benefits off the barnacles. Barnacles are benefited because they eat the things that are on the whale
No, the humpback is the fifth largest. Largest is the blue at 90 plus, finback is next to 82', right whale to 60' and sperm to 60' approximately.
This information may change soon online as there is a large female seen in Hawaiian waters who is 63 feet long. She is approximately 40 years old.
3omillion seconds
Humpbacks have been known to be down longer than 45 minutes, diving several hundred feet. When they rise, they exhale very loudly while sending a plume of cooled air up to 20 feet. They exchange over 90% of the air in their lungs being extremely efficient breathers. The larger the whale, the higher the 'blow'. The height of blows also is dependent on the activity at the time. When fighting, the blows can be easily heard, sometimes with a 'wheezing' sound when very labored. A resting animal wouldn't be breathing as loudly.
Big enough to fit a lot of seals, sharks, or humans, that much is true.
But it only feeds on small creatures, since it's a filter-feeder.
Humpbacks are gulpers, taking in as much a 1 ton of fish per day. They eat herring (their favorite) capelin, scad, sardines, needle fish, sand lance, small salmon, squid, and krill. Their stomachs are three chambered to break down the nutrition more slowly and thereby using every bit for their body's needs. The size of their stomachs would depend on the size of the whale. First and second chambers can hold well over 200 gallons and 1 ton of krill. Some cetaceans (grey whale) eat sand and stones to aid their digestion by grinding food (like birds). Others, the vertebrae of their prey does this for them. RA
A big blue whale can be 100 feet long and weigh up to 150 tons. That's as large as a Boeing jet.
Adult Humpback Whales range in length from 12 to 16 metres (39 to 52 ft) and weigh approximately 36,000 kilograms (79,000 lb (35 tons)
The humpback is a predator, taking krill and small schooling fish, such as herring, salmon, capelin and sand lance as well as mackerel, pollock and haddock in the North Atlantic. Krill and copepods have been recorded from Australian and Antarctic waters. Humpbacks hunt by direct attack or by stunning prey by hitting the water with pectoral fins or flukes
The key ways is to reduce human activity that effects the humpback whale directly and indirectly. Human activity includes, Bycatch of their food, Whaling for their blubber, pollution, ship collision and whale watch effects. These are their only threats and all of them are human activities, so it's preventable. A good way to start is to raise money for a campaign or a organisation that directly tries to save the whale.
The surplus amount of blubber and warmblooded nature, and the huge amount of fish that lives in that part of the ocean, oh i almost forgot, the fact that its large body mass and tender skin(if you will call it that) it is hard for the cold to penetrate its thick layers.
Adult Humpback whales are known to have an average lifespan of around 50 to 60 years. For decades man has hunted them extensively and hence we really do not know what their actual life expectancy is. Researchers recently discovered that a whale nearly 200 years old was captured near Alaska.
Currently in the North Pacific, there is a large female who is 64 years old, and about 63 feet long. She is well known to researchers. During whaling the largest humpback was over 90 feet long, a female, and we will never know how old she was.
By protecting it
Blubber is used as an insulation against the colder climate waters. The more food they eat, the thicker the blubber layer. New calves do not have blubber when born and drink up to 100 gallons per day to gain sufficient weight for survival.
baby humpback whales are 2 1/2 tons when they are born
Yes, whales and dolphins do sleep; however, they do not sleep in the same way that humans do. For example, while human sleep involves a period of unconsciousness followed by a period of conscious dreaming or REM sleep, cetaceans (whales and dolphins) show a pattern of unihemispheric slow-wave sleep, meaning that they only sleep with one half of their brain at a time. This allows them to remain aware of their surroundings and continue to surface for air, even while sleeping.
The humpback is a predator, taking krill and small schooling fish, such as herring, salmon, capelin and sand lance as well as mackerel, pollock and haddock in the North Atlantic. Krill and copepods have been recorded from Australian and Antarctic waters. Humpbacks hunt by direct attack or by stunning prey by hitting the water with pectoral fins or flukes
The Humpback Whales live incoastal orcontinental self waters.