throw something at it in the water or poke it, with a sick of some sort, if its by the surface, but not hard so that it will hurt it, but not too soft to where it cant feel it. and if u want to throw something at it, not being mean, i love animals, you could get a rock and put it in the water and get it to land on the whale
I was the one who ask the question.
They do interact in same way other whales may do. They may see a boat and approach it cautiously then the may swim by the boat. This is why other whales are vulnerable to being hunted due to their natural curiosity like humans.
"Curiosity killed the whale". Got it ?
They speak using sonar
Most whales don't actually play, but spend their lives eating, breathing, and swimming.
Penguins interact with other animals when hunting for food. They hunt for krill and compete with other animals such as whales, seals and squid for krill.
humans listen to their sounds but they still don't know how to interact with humpback whales, but sometimes researchers put tags on the whales, so they can track the whales' movements, and also people in the 16oo's, 1700's, and 1800's hunted whales for their fat to burn for oil for lamps.
humans listen to their sounds but they still don't know how to interact with humpback whales, but sometimes researchers put tags on the whales, so they can track the whales' movements, and also people in the 16oo's, 1700's, and 1800's hunted whales for their fat to burn for oil for lamps.
Plankton, shrimp, algae, any small bodied creature that is sifted through their comb-like teeth. Killer whales, however, will eat anything they can find such as seals, birds, etc.
No, humpback whales are not bioluminescent. Bioluminescence, the ability to produce light biologically, is found in certain organisms like some jellyfish, fungi, and deep-sea creatures, but humpback whales do not possess this capability. They have adaptations for deep-sea navigation and communication, but they do not emit light. Instead, they rely on other senses and behaviors to interact with their environment.
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Sea pigs, a type of deep-sea sea cucumber, do not directly interact with right whales in any significant way. These marine animals primarily inhabit the ocean floor and feed on organic matter. Right whales, on the other hand, are large baleen whales that primarily feed on tiny zooplankton. The two species occupy different ecological niches and generally do not impact each other directly.