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THE TOOTHLESS WHALES: blue whales, finback whales, right whales, sei whales, humpback whales, and gray whales. THE TOOTHED WHALES: white beluga whales, black beluga whales (pilot whales), orcas (killer whales), sperm whales.
The blue, fin, minke, gray, and sperm whale. These whales are not only species that might be a variation of Humpback whales but are acknowledged to have interactions with Humpback whales.
Humpback whales are the greatest whales and travel the farthest in its migration Humpback whales are very big so they can basically travel in a sort of Wolf Packs.
yes gray whales are mammals. They are marine mammals.
Humpback whales are a charcoal gray color, with a dark bluish hue in some light. They have a white underbelly.
Their population number is between 18,000 and 30,000 Gray Whales.
The gray whale and the grey whale are the same whale however, depending on if you are American or English there is a different spelling. UK English uses the spelling "grey" while American English uses the spelling "gray".
North Pacific Right Whale, North Atlantic Right Whale, Blue Whale What he/she means is that the whales in the North Pacific and North Atlantic and the blue whales are endangered because either they can't find enough food, or they are being illegally hunted.
There are a total of 78 species of whales living in the world today. There are 67 species of toothed whales and 11 species of baleen whales.
There are several species of baleen whales, and the're different in size. Baleen whales include some of the largest suborders of whales, the blue whales, humpback whales, gray whales and right whales. The blue whale is the largest. It can grow to 33 meters or 110 feet. The blue whale can also weigh as much as 280 metric tons or 200 short tons.
Right whales, gray whales, humpback whales, and blue whales are baleen whales, which means that they don't have teeth. They cannot eat large fishes, seals, and sea lions. They only eat plankton.
There are 3 types of whaling that are currently happening. The first of these is commercial whaling conducted either under objection or reservation to the moratorium. The second, called aboriginal subsistence whaling is to support the needs of indigenous peoples. The third type is whaling under special permit to kill, take and treat whales for scientific research. Under current IWC regulations, aboriginal subsistence whaling is permitted for: Denmark (Greenland, fin, bowhead, humpback and minke whales), The Russian Federation (Siberia, gray and bowhead whales), St Vincent and the Grenadines (Bequia, humpback whales) The USA (Alaska, bowhead whales; Washington State, gray whales).