its teeth and body.
defense
Size and ferociousness are the key defense tactics these whales use for their own protection. They have sharp teeth and can charge other animals. Smashing into them, or tearing chunks from their bodies.
they use its teeth or as i say brush and their body.
A killer whales's defense is to kill for survival.
Size and ferociousness are the key defense tactics these whales use for their own protection. They have sharp teeth and can charge other animals. Smashing into them, or tearing chunks from their bodies.
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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.
They generally don't. When hunted by killer whales or whaling ships, they usually swam away at speed. When overtaken by the former, they don't show any physical defense and are devoured alive. There have been a few instances of fin whales ramming and damaging or even sinking whaling ships in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
They don't need it. Blue whales are, by far, the largest animal to have ever existed, and can get up to about 100 feet long. The only predators that even come close are great white sharks and killer whales, which are about a fifth to a quarter of that length, at most.
Bowhead whales are baleen whales.
Blue Whales, Beluga Whales, Killer Whales, Sperm Whales, and Narwhals.
No. Killer whales eat gray whales.