It is the Dolphins that have blubber. They use the blubber to keep the body warm especially when they are in cold water.
Arctic animals have thick blubber and fur to help ,but sometimes they have to get in a den or shelter.
they have coats of blubber
Whale, seal, walrus.
Marine arctic animals use their fat stores for buoyancy and insulation. The fat is made into a specialized form called blubber.
Seals have a layer of blubber.
A blobber is another term for a blubber, a fatty layer of adipose tissue or thick coat of fat worn by many arctic animals.
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.
Arctic animals have excellent insulation to stop their body heat from escaping. They may have dense hair, fur or feathers, or have a think layer of fat or blubber
Blubber in any animal is body fat.
Animals living in the adapted to the cold condition very well by mostly having a thick coat under their skin, known as blubber. Such animals are penguins, polar bears, whales, seals, wolves, arctic foxes, arctic hares, reindeer, sables, arctic ground squirrels, lynxes, etc.
Whale blubber, fish and lots of meat!
no, their thick coat keeps them warm during the winter