The gray whales habitat is the Pacific Ocean surrounding the coasts around North America (USA, Canada & Mexico) on one side and Asia on the other side. They migrate southwards for nearly 10000 kilometers each October and return back to their northern territories post winter.
yes gray whales have theet
No. Killer whales eat gray whales.
no. gray whales do not hunt. they feed on krill.
Only Killer Whales (Orcas) prey on gray whales.
Their population number is between 18,000 and 30,000 Gray Whales.
No gray whales are killed. Indigenous communities in Alaska kill 50 bowhead whales a year.
Gray whales - like all whales - are warm blooded.
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.
umm....tough one but blue whales are unharmful and gray whales are very harmful for example 'the killer whale"...
Adult gray whales can stay underwater for approximately 10 - 15 minutes.
Killer Whales (Orcas), Large Sharks, and Humans are the Gray Whales only natural predators
Everywhere, actually. Gray whales are baleen whales, which means they have a thick, straw looking, thing in their mouths instead of teeth. Baleen is grey. When Gray Whales get hungry they suck in a huge mouthful of water, with their mouth open. Krill, very small sea creatures get stuck behind the baleen and the whale pushes the seawater out. The baleen acts as a filter, trapping the krill. All the whales have to do next is swallow. Krill are wherever whales are, which is almost everywhere.