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Beluga whales do not breach.
No, Beluga Whales, and Killer (Humpback) Whales might become extinct.
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.
Humpbacks are baleen whales, filter feeders. They don't have the teeth to be able to eat anything as big as Belugas.
Their population number is between 34,000 and 52,000 Humpback Whales.
Their population number is between 34,000 and 52,000 Humpback Whales.
The first three are for Australia and the others are common. Southern Right Whales Humpback Whales Orcas ( Killer whales ) Blue Whale Beluga Whale Fin Whale
Although Beluga whales and kangaroos are both mammals, there are numerous differences between them.* Beluga whales live in the sea and kangaroos live on land* Kangaroos are marsupials and have pouches, while beluga whales are placental mammals and do not have pouches* Kangaroos can only be found in the southern hemisphere, in Australia (and tree kangaroos are also found in New Guinea) but beluga whales are found in many countries and international waters in Arctic and subarctic regions of the northern hemisphere.* Female kangaroos, like other marsupials, have two vaginas, or what are called paired lateral vaginae. These are for the purpose of transporting the sperm to the womb, but there is a midline pseudovaginal canal for actually giving birth. As well as two vaginas and two uteruses, female marsupials have two fallopian tubes and two cervixes. Beluga whales do not.* Kangaroos have four limbs and a tail. Beluga whales have fins and a tail.* Kangaroos have fur, but beluga whales have skin.
In Southeast Alaska, mainly humpbacks. You can also see killer whales and Dall's and harbor porpoises. In Cook Inlet you can see beluga whales. Off Kodiak Island you can see fin and humpback whales. In northern Alaska, you can see bowhead whales.
A list of whales would included the sperm whale, blue whale, killer whale, and the humpback whale. Other species include the beluga whale, pilot whale, bowhead whale, and the baleen whale.
Humpback whales do have an internal compass to guide them between Alaska and Hawaii each year.