1 / 22

Marine Mammals Cetacea Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species

Right whale Fig. 12-15. Marine Mammals Cetacea Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species Includes largest animal ever on earth Blue whale – To 33.5 m long, 100+ tons Baleen plates attached to upper jaws Made of keratin (same protein as hair, fingernails)

duard
Download Presentation

Marine Mammals Cetacea Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Right whale Fig. 12-15 • Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species • Includes largest animal ever on earth • Blue whale – To 33.5 m long, 100+ tons • Baleen plates attached to upper jaws • Made of keratin (same protein as hair, fingernails) • Squeeze water through baleen and lick off retained food (usually organisms) • Primarily feed on zooplankton • Three families: • Balaenidae (right and bowhead whales) • Balaenopteridae (rorquals) • Eschrichtidae (gray whale)

  2. Fig. 12-14 Blue

  3. Right whale Fig. 12-15 • Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species • Includes largest animal ever on earth • Blue whale – To 33.5 m long, 100+ tons • Baleen plates attached to upper jaws • Made of keratin (same protein as hair, fingernails) • Squeeze water through baleen and lick off retained food (usually organisms) • Primarily feed on zooplankton • Three families: • Balaenidae (right and bowhead whales) • Balaenopteridae (rorquals) • Eschrichtidae (gray whale)

  4. Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species • Balaenidae – 5 species • Bowhead, N Atlantic, N Pacific, Southern, Pygmy Right • No: dorsal fin, throat grooves • Feed continuously while swimming • Long, fine baleen • Balaenopteridae – 9 species • Bryde’s, Blue, Eden’s, Fin, Humpback, Antarctic Minke, Common Minke, Omura’s, Sei • Feed by gulping schools of fish or krill • Ventral grooves expand during “gulp” • Large blue whales may enclose up to 17,500 gallons (70 tons) of water in one gulp • Blue whales eat 3,000-5,000 kg of food each day! • Short baleen, small dorsal fin, ventral grooves • Eschrichtidae – 1 species • Gray • Feed by scooping sediments & organisms from sea floor • Short coarse baleen, no dorsal fin, 2-5 ventral grooves Humpback Right Blue Gray

  5. North Atlantic Right Whale

  6. Fig. 12-14 Southern Right

  7. Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species • Balaenidae – 5 species • Bowhead, N Atlantic, N Pacific, Southern, Pygmy Right • No dorsal fin, throat grooves • Feed continuously while swimming • Long, fine baleen, no dorsal fin, no ventral grooves • Balaenopteridae – 9 species • Bryde’s, Blue, Eden’s, Fin, Humpback, Antarctic Minke, Common Minke, Omura’s, Sei • Feed by gulping schools of fish or krill • Ventral grooves expand during “gulp” • Large blue whales may enclose up to 17,500 gallons (70 tons) of water in one gulp • Blue whales eat 3,000-5,000 kg of food each day! • Short baleen, small dorsal fin, ventral grooves • Eschrichtidae – 1 species • Gray • Feed by scooping sediments & organisms from sea floor • Short coarse baleen, no dorsal fin, 2-5 ventral grooves Humpback Right Blue Gray

  8. Fig. 12-14 Humpback

  9. Fig. 12-16

  10. Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) – 15 species • Balaenidae – 5 species • Bowhead, N Atlantic, N Pacific, Southern, Pygmy Right • No dorsal fin, throat grooves • Feed continuously while swimming • Long, fine baleen, no dorsal fin, no ventral grooves • Balaenopteridae – 9 species • Bryde’s, Blue, Eden’s, Fin, Humpback, Antarctic Minke, Common Minke, Omura’s, Sei • Feed by gulping schools of fish or krill • Ventral grooves expand during “gulp” • Large blue whales may enclose up to 17,500 gallons (70 tons) of water in one gulp • Blue whales eat 3,000-5,000 kg of food each day! • Short baleen, small dorsal fin, ventral grooves • Eschrichtidae – 1 species • Gray • Feed by scooping sediments & organisms from sea floor • Short coarse baleen, no dorsal fin, 2-5 ventral grooves Humpback Right Blue Gray

  11. Fig. 12-19

  12. Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Odontoceti (Toothed Whales) – 74 species • Sperm whales – 3 species • Sperm, Dwarf, Pygmy • Bulbous head contains spermaceti (waxy substance) that may function in buoyancy and sound generation • Sperm whales can dive to 3000 m and stay under water for up to two hours! • Feed on fishes and squids, esp. giant squids • Produce ambergris, undigested material in stomach • Toothed whales – 28 species • Beaked, Beluga, False Killer, Narwhal, Orca, Pilot • Most common in cold water • Dolphins & Porpoises – 43 species • Distinctive beak • Travel in pods

  13. Fig. 12-20 Ambergris

  14. Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Odontoceti (Toothed Whales) – 74 species • Sperm whales – 3 species • Sperm, Dwarf, Pygmy • Bulbous head contains spermaceti (waxy substance) that may function in buoyancy and sound generation • Sperm whales can dive to 3000 m and stay under water for up to two hours! • Feed on fishes and squids, esp. giant squids • Produce ambergris, undigested material in stomach • Toothed whales – 28 species • Beaked, Beluga, False Killer, Narwhal, Orca, Pilot • Most common in cold water • Dolphins & Porpoises – 43 species • Distinctive beak • Travel in pods

  15. Beluga Beaked Pilot Narwhal False Killer

  16. Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Odontoceti (Toothed Whales) – 74 species • Sperm whales – 3 species • Sperm, Dwarf, Pygmy • Bulbous head contains spermaceti (waxy substance) that may function in buoyancy and sound generation • Sperm whales can dive to 3000 m and stay under water for up to two hours! • Feed on fishes and squids, esp. giant squids • Produce ambergris, undigested material in stomach • Toothed whales – 28 species • Beaked, Beluga, False Killer, Narwhal, Orca, Pilot • Most common in cold water • Dolphins & Porpoises – 43 species • Distinctive beak • Travel in pods

  17. Dall’s Porpoise Bottlenose Dolphin Pacific White-Sided Dolphin Harbor Porpoise Spectacled Porpoise Dusky Dolphin

  18. Marine Mammals • Cetacea • Echolocation • Common in dolphins, porpoises, toothed whales • May occur in some baleen whales and pinnipeds • Sounds generally consist of sharp clicks • Low-frequency clicks can travel long distances • Functions • Detect objects (orientation clicks) • Characterize objects (discrimination clicks) • Sonic hunting • Mechanism • Air forced through air sacs and focused through melon • Sperm whales may use spermaceti organ • Sound received through lower jaw

  19. Fig. 12-24 Dolphins Dolphins Whales Whales

More Related