Whales are a group of mammals that live in oceans. They include some of the largest animals on Earth. The blue whale is the ...
A group of whale watchers, look in horror as a huge humpback whale emerges from the water and swallows two kayakers whole!
A newborn Southern Resident killer whale calf with distinctive peachy coloring captured attention as it bonded with its family, not long after a tragic loss surfaced when a grieving mother was seen ...
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Live Science on MSNDolphins: Facts about the intelligent marine mammals that use tools to huntDespite their name, killer whales (orcas) are actually dolphins.
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The Brighterside of News on MSNThe surprising impact of whale pee on the health of ocean ecosystemsBaleen whales undertake some of the longest migrations of any mammal, traveling thousands of miles between nutrient-rich ...
Now we can add whale urine to that list, according to a paper published in the journal Nature Communications. “Lots of people ...
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Study Finds on MSNHow whales fuel ocean ecosystems with their pee, placentas, and carcassesIn a nutshell Migrating baleen whales transport thousands of tons of nutrients from cold, nutrient-rich feeding grounds to ...
Whales do more than just swim the seas—they power the ocean's ecosystem. By transporting nutrients from deep waters to the ...
“One big difference is that whales are often traveling thousands of miles across ocean basins–great whales undertake the ...
Scientists have discovered that whales move nutrients thousands of miles—in their urine—from as far as Alaska to Hawaii.
Unusual marine events, from mass whale strandings to deep-sea creatures appearing in shallow waters, have sparked concerns ...
New research has shown that whales ferry substantial quantities of nutrients for thousands of miles in their urine and other ...
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