They live in the water and eat crill
another mammal that shares the same habitat with a whale is a dolphin
Definition for Baleen Whale: Any whale that has baleen or is a odontocetes whale.So, they are not technically same thing, but a blue whale is a type of baleen or odontocetes whale. This is because other whales have baleen, such as the Right Whale.
Blue whales are baleen whales or filter feeders. Any whale classified as a toothed whale has a different mode of feeding, hence do not have baleen, but teeth.
The killer whale and blue whale have different feeding structures. Killer whales have teeth because they feed mainly on seals and fish. Blue whales have baleen or rows of filaments that they use to capture krill from the ocean water.
No, they are certainly not. Blue whales and killer whales both belong to the same order: Cetacea, the order of the whales. Though that's where the liking stops. Because Killer whales belong to the suborder Odontoceti (toothed whales) and Blue whales belong to the suborder Mysticeti (baleen whales).
Blue Whales are the biggest mammals and the Whale Shark is the biggest fish. Also, both are filter feeders, straining their food from the water in the form of plankton and krill.
Only one. The same as every whale or dolphin.
It depends on the truck and the whale, but in most cases the answer to that question is that the whale is bigger. There are records of blue whales as long as 110 feet and weighing 210 tons. The biggest trucks in the United States are about the same length, but their maximum weight is only 73.5 tons, so the whales are much bigger.
A blue whale has an enormous heart. The heart of a blue whale beats 8 to 10 times per minute and pumps 2000 to 5000 liters through the veins at the same time.
A whale's habitat is pretty much determined by where they were born and/or which pod they join. These pods then follow a route that generally stays the same throughout the whale's life or they live in the same area year-round, depending on what type of whale we're talking about.
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".
yes the white whale is just another name for the beluga whale