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Bubble-net feeding is a cooperative feeding method used by groups of humpback whales. This behavior is not instinctual, it is learned; not every population of humpbacks knows how to bubble net feed. [4] Humpback whales use vocalizations to coordinate and efficiently execute the bubble net so they all can feed. [4]
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A seal is lucky to be alive after it was accidentally swallowed by a humpback whale! A group of sightseers got more than they bargained for while on an excursion with Blue Kingdom Whale and ...
A humpback whale straining water through its baleen after lunging. Rorquals feed on plankton by a technique called lunge feeding. [24] Lunge feeding could be regarded as a kind of inverted suction feeding, during which a whale takes a huge gulp of water, which is then filtered through the baleen. [24]
Humpback whales are huge, but they aren't the biggest whales out there - blue whales hold that title. But humpbacks are still pretty impressive, weighing in at up to 40 tons and 60 feet in length.
A humpback whale has been found travelling a record-breaking distance spanning three oceans to mate, raising an alarm about global challenges affecting the migratory behaviour of the species.
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