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BLUE WHALE DERIVATION: from the Latin balaena for whale; from the Greek pteron for wing-fin, At the ocean's surface, a 27 foot high,
slender, vertical blow reached toward the sky. As the 100 foot long body
of the blue whale begins to descend, it reflects many shades of blue.
As sunset fades to twilight and night, the color of the whale turns from
shades of yellow to orange, pink, lavender, gray and black. The mottled
back of the blue whale, due to its uneven skin pigmentation, reflects
many color changes throughout the day.
When a blue gulps a mouthful of food, it is so fast that camouflage may
not even be necessary. Speed was the key feature that protected the blue
whale until about a hundred years ago when hunters obtained fast catcher
boats and exploding harpoons. It is estimated that of the more than 5,000 that inhabited the North Pacific, only 1,200 to 1,700 are left. Only a few hundred are thought to survive in the North Atlantic, and of the 20,000 in the southern hemisphere in the 19th Century, about 9,000 remain (half of which are pygmy blue whales).
Blue whales are seen with some regularity in at least three areas: the
coastal canyons off central and southern California; far inside the Gulf
of St. Lawrence; and at the whaling grounds for fin whales in Denmark
Strait. DEAD BLUE WHALE WASHES ASHORE IN
A young female blue whale had probably been dead for one to two weeks when she washed ashore at Del Monte Beach near Monterey , California in early October 2004.
Pieces of blubber carved off the carcass were buried on the beach. Tests on the blubber's thickness, as well as tests of fat content, may help to determine if starvation was the cause of death.
Save The Whales has a small piece of blue whale baleen and a very large vertebrae presumed to be from a blue whale. The U.S. Government confiscated them from members of the public as they are from an endangered species. Permission was given to Save The Whales for their use. These artifacts are displayed in our hands-on outreach program, Whales on Wheels WOW™. Of Worms and Whales Two new species of worms have been discovered living on the bones of dead whales in California’s Monterey Bay. The strange worms do not have eyes, stomachs or even mouths. The discovery was made about 9,400 feet below the surface. |
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