Whales are mighty. Blue whales, for example, aren’t only the largest animal on Earth, but as far as we know, they’re the ...
Humpback whales will sometimes use an intricate strategy to catch food called bubble-net feeding. A new study suggests they're spreading the knowledge of how to do it to each other.
One of the world’s largest mammals, the humpback whale is an incredible species for many reasons. They may even be the ocean’s protectors. Researchers have witnessed humpback whales intervening during ...
Not long ago, spotting a humpback whale in Arctic seas felt like winning a lottery ticket. In the early 2000s, University of Southern Denmark whale researcher Olga Filatova spent years searching ...
Scientists have analysed almost 30 years of data to discover how whales in the North Atlantic Ocean are learning to co-exist ...
9don MSN
As the Gulf of St. Lawrence warms, whales are switching up the menu and may be sharing lunch
New Canadian research, using decades of samples from the Gulf of St. Lawrence, shows that as Arctic krill becomes scarce, fin and minke whales are eating more of the kinds of fish that humpback whales ...
The North Atlantic Ocean is warming up. Higher temperatures and increased human activity in the region can trigger abrupt ...
Scientists have analysed almost 30 years of data to discover how whales in the North Atlantic Ocean are learning to co-exist ...
ZME Science on MSN
These humpback whales are using bubble nets to hunt and pass on the knowledge through their own version of culture
In the fjords of northern British Columbia, the ocean can look calm from the surface, but underneath, the action is just ...
Whales in the Gulf of St. Lawrence are changing their feeding habits as ocean temperatures rise and food becomes harder to find.
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