Not on purpose, but sometimes it does happen.
For example, there were three killer whales (orcas) and plenty of tiger seals on the beach. In between, there was a group of another type of seal, lets say fur seals. Both the hunters were going for them. They both trapped the fur seals and they both caught them together, getting a fair share each.
no. gray whales do not hunt. they feed on krill.
According to an internet search, the countries that still hunt whales includeJapanNorwayIceland
Orcas hunt seals by temporarily breaching themselves on the shore at high speed to catch a seal before thrashing it around to kill it.
Seals are the favorite food of many predators. Sharks, killer whales, and polar bears are three of the largest predators of seals. Polar bears hunt for seals by finding the places where the seal is hiding on the ice, and pouncing on them. Sharks can hunt seals by hiding very deep in the sea, and rushing upwards when they see a seal overhead. Humans sometimes hunt seals too.
yes
yes and no
Korean people do not hate and hunt whales. It is the japanese who kills whales for food. The chinese are reported to hunt whales on certain occasions.
Depended on where they lived. If they were Native Americans in the northeast they would hunt game animals like deer, but if they were in the middle of the country on the plains they would hunt buffalo. The Northwestern tribes fished for seal, whales, and salmon. As you can see there is no general answer for this question.
they hunt the harp seal mainly for their fur
the Inuit people used a weapon called the unaq which (was basically a harpoon) to hunt the seal's and whales
generally they hunted seals, whales, arctic foxes, walrus and other things
Whales