WHALES 101 POWERPOINT created by Kristi M. Willis Photo Credits: Kenneth C. Balcolmb III, Ken...

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WHALES 101 POWERPOINT created by Kristi M. Willis Photo Credits: Kenneth C. Balcolmb III, Ken Bohn/SEAWORLD, Carpenter family, Bob Cranston/Innerspace Visions, Paul Forestell, John Green, Dan McSweeney, Tony Martin, Planet Earth Pictures, Greg Spencer, Larry Foster, and Kristi M. Willis.

Transcript of WHALES 101 POWERPOINT created by Kristi M. Willis Photo Credits: Kenneth C. Balcolmb III, Ken...

WHALES 101

POWERPOINT created by Kristi M. Willis

Photo Credits: Kenneth C. Balcolmb III, Ken Bohn/SEAWORLD, Carpenter family, Bob Cranston/Innerspace Visions, Paul Forestell, John Green, Dan McSweeney, Tony Martin, Planet Earth

Pictures, Greg Spencer, Larry Foster, and Kristi M. Willis.

CETACEAN• From the Latin “cetus,” meaning a

large sea animal

• From the Greek “ketos,” meaning a sea monster

• Taxonomic Order of marine mammals including whales,

dolphins and porpoises

Taxonomic Comparison HUMAN BLUE

WHALE

•KINGDOM: Animalia Animalia

•PHYLUM: Chordata Chordata

•CLASS: MammaliaMammalia

•ORDER: Primates Cetacea

•FAMILY: Hominidae Balaenopteridae

•GENUS: Homo Balaenoptera

•SPECIES: sapiens musculus

Mysticeti vs. Odontoceti

* ~10 recognized species * ~70 recognized species

* 2 blowholes

* females larger than males

* 1 blowhole* males larger than

females* teeth are used to

catch prey, but not for chewing

* age determined by counting growth layers in waxy ear plug

* age determined by counting growth layers in teeth

the baleen whales the toothed whales

* baleen plates act as a sieve to strain organisms from the water

* undertake lengthy migrations

between distinct breeding and feeding

grounds

* make smaller seasonal movements (inshore-offshore)

Basic Anatomy

Rostrum 2 blowholes

Caudal fin or “fluke”

Pectoral fin

Baleen plates

Throat pleats

of a mysticete

Dorsal fin

MYSTICETESBaleen plates hang from upper jaw only and vary in size,

color and shape. Gray whales have creamy-colored baleen.

Right whales have black baleen plates.

Baleen is made of keratin – same protein as human hair and fingernails! This is a

humpback’s open mouth.

Crustaceans called “KRILL” are a major food source for many of the world’s

mysticetes.

Here’s a look at open blowholes…

…and here’s what they look like closed.

Migaloo: the world’s only known albino humpback whale

Migaloo “breaches” and offers a rare look at his all-

white body.

Basic Anatomyof an odontocete

Dorsal fin

1 blowhole Rostrum

Pectoral fins

Caudal fin or “fluke”

Teeth

ODONTOCETESTeeth come in all shapes and sizes, too. These are the conical shaped teeth of a killer whale.

Here is the single open blowhole of a

bottlenose dolphin.

And let’s not forget the“Unicorn of the Sea”

the arctic Narwhal

Dolphins vs. Porpoises

• Prominent beak and melon• Longer, more sleek bodies• More tapered pectoral fins• Cone-shaped teeth

• No true beak and melon is streamlined

• Short, stocky bodies• Blunt pectoral fins• Spade-shaped teeth

…so what IS the difference, anyway?!

Sperm Whale

Bottlenose Dolphin

Harbor Porpoise

Stejneger’s Beaked Whale

Baird’s Beaked Whale

Teeth are uniform

throughout a cetacean’s

mouth because they are not

specialized for purposes of

chewing. They are strictly for

catching prey or tearing flesh.

Food is swallowed

whole.

Whale Camp,Grand Manan Island

Highest & Lowest Tidal Range

Investigating local ecosytems

The carnivorous “Pitcher Plant” in the bog

One of the Bay of Fundy’s impressive

inverts!

Visiting a Puffin nesting colony

Razorbills nest there, too.

So do the Common Murres…

…and Terns also.

Watching a Harbor Porpoise dissection

And let’s not forget the WHALES!

Distinctive V-shaped blow of a Right Whale

Flukes are entirely cartilagenous.

North Atlantic Right Whales are critically endangered

Mottled belly of a female suggests male suitors are

courting beneath the surface.

They are positively buoyant so they need to thrust their flukes out of the water in

order to make a dive.

San Ignacio Lagoon, Baja Mexico

Winter breeding and calving grounds for the Gray Whale

Mother and calf

An encounter with the “Friendly Whale Syndrome”

that’s me!

“Valentina” was a favorite.

Close-up of whale lice and barnacles on Gray

Whale’s skin

Collecting “treasures” on the beach

Whale Camp

www.whalecamp.com

1-888-54-WHALE

San Ignacio Lagoon

www.bajadiscovery.com

1-800-829-2252

Kristi M. Willis

7th Grade ScienceGreat Neck South Middle

[email protected]