Since technically fur is hair and whales, being mammals, do have body hair, yes, you truthfully could state that a whale has fur.
Whales do not have fur.
Whales don't have fur their have skin.
No, but they do have short hairs.
Killer Whale Polar Bears Great White Sharks.
Mammal Species under NMFS Jurisdiction: Blue Whale, Bowhead Whale, Chinese River Dolphin, Fin Whale, Gray Whale, Gulf of CA harbor porpoise/vaquita, Humpback Whale, Indus River dolphin, Killer Whale, North Atlantic right Whale, North Pacific right Whale, Sei Whale, Southern right Whale, Sperm Whale, Caribbean fur Seal, Guadalupe Fur Seal, Hawaiian Monk Seal, Mediterranean Monk Seal, Saimaa Seal, Steller Sea Lion (Eastern and Western) This goes on to turtles, fish, and invertebrates, along with a list of candidates. If this is what you are asking about "gbr"?
Gray Whale Cove State Beach was created in 1966.
they traded rum, fur, molasses, whale, fish, timber, etc.
the correct spelling is platypus
A state mammal is the official or representative mammal of a U.S. state. States also have separate state birds, and sometimes state fish or state butterflies or state reptiles. States similarly have state flowers, state trees and state songs. States which have sea animals as state animals are : California - Gray whale Connecticut - Sperm whale Florida - Manatee, Porpoise or dolphin Georgia - Right whale Hawaii - Hawaiian monk seal, Humpback whale Massachusetts - Right whale Mississippi - Bottlenosed dolphin South Carolina - Bottlenose dolphin, Right whale Washington - Orca United Nations Farms
they traded rum, fur, molasses, whale, fish, timber, etc.
A whale is covered in a layer of 'blubber', a fat and flesh composite particular to whales, beneath an outer layer of thick, shaggy fur.
The area of Gray Whale Cove State Beach is 12,545.25490944 square meters.