Whales and sharks use a special camouflage. Their bellies are white because when something or something looks up from the bottom of the ocean, the white bottom will blend in with the surface water. When you look down from above the water, their top will blend in with the rest of the ocean.
if you're looking at an orca from above it, it will seem camoflaged because you'll be looking at the black of the orca on the dark dark navy of the water. if you look at it from below it will also seem somewhat camoflagued because the white bottom of the orca will be on the light coming down from the sun.
Yes :) They blend with the deep, dark water, their white markings look like mere glints in the water
no but if its deep enough under water, which it is very dark down there it can hide.
A Blue Whale is blue. The ocean is blue. It is hard for others to see a blue whale in a blue ocean. [I don't know what the dosage is.]
yes
yes
No
by communicating an d camouflage
They camouflage by there grey darkish color blend in with the ground surface in the deep ocean........
Killer whales, also known as orcas, have a distinctive black and white pattern that is a type of camouflage called "disruptive coloration". Disruptive coloration is where an animal's color pattern contradicts its body shape. This helps killer whales because in the flickering/filtered light under the sea, other animals may not recognize it as a potential predator.
Humpback whales use their tails to slap their predators.
camouflage
This depends on your definition of camouflage. It can be said that all animals camouflage themselves to some degree, called Crypsis camouflage. i guess a crypsis camouflage
no shark do not camouflage
Camouflage
no they do not
Many insects use camouflage. Name one of the laws of camouflage.
Camouflage covers the entire spectrum of defense mechanisms employed by an animal to hide in its environment. It involves properties like "blending coloration", "cryptic behavior".