No. According to research, very young whales usually do not head to breeding grounds, and females not wishing to mate that season will stay in the feeding grounds. Also animals too old, who no longer feel the urge to mate, or perhaps older females no longer going into estrus will not migrate.
they migrate a lot
Humpback Whales live in all oceans over the world but do migrate and spend time in one place
The Humpback Whale is not in California. It is in the Pacific Ocean near California. The Humpback Whales migrate every year up and down the coast of California, down to Hawaii. There are also Humpback Whales in the Atlantic Ocean and in the Pacific Ocean surrounding the NW, W, SW, S, and SE coasts. It all depends on the time of year as to where the Humpback Whales will be as well as where they have grown up and lived their whole life.
Hawaii and the carribean
They get hungry! You see, they eat krill and small schooling-type fishes all summer and then they fast all winter, surviving from their accumulated fat reserves. Humpback whales are known to migrate 16,000 miles EACH year!
The Humpback Whales live incoastal orcontinental self waters.
Humpback whales migrate to polar waters, but mates and calves in the tropics
The best location to see humpback whales in their natural habitat is in places like Hawaii, Alaska, or the coast of California, where they migrate to feed and breed.
no
Humpback whales migrate every year. This is similar to every other whales. They usually migrate to either the Arctic or Antarctic regions for food then migrate to around the equator where they breed.
Humpback whales are not that nasty. They are very friendly and peaceful creatures. Like all whales, they are curious animals who are protective of each other.
humpback whales are endangered because of commercial whaling and drift net fishing. these are the only know factors contributing to the decline of humpback whales all over the world.