Yes, it is likely to have at least some residual function or role in the physiology of the whale. Even wisdom teeth in humans, although often detrimental in effect and hardly unmissable, can be said to have a role in our digestive tract. What makes it evidence for common descent is not any presumed function or lack thereof, but the fact that it is morphologically what we should expect it to be if whales descended from land mammals.
it has 1200000000000000000 babies a week. tmd
200 days about
That would be the elephant. ==Or...== If you're including marine mammals, that would be the blue whale.
the whale goes and dies :) enjoy
No not really
No the reproductive cells of a whale are not much large then those present in Humans. The sperm cells even in the large sperm whale would still be too small to be seen by the naked eye.
yes it does
When it is born yes. No really it does!
YES
The orca, or killer whale..This animal is not really a whale, but the largest species of dolphin.
In mammals, the female reproductive organs are named alike. The Blue Whale, Balaenoptera musculus, is the largest mammal living today. It is also the largest known mammal to have ever lived on Earth. The Blue whale is the largest animal ever to have lived on the planet as far as we know and according to scientists is bigger than even the largest Dinosaur.The whale is a mammal, and most of its parts are named the same way the corresponding ones in humans are named. As such, a female whale's reproductive parts are referred to as vaginas.
tailbone of a human whale pelvis bone