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The largest animal in Earth’s history survives on tiny shrimp - and the numbers are insane
Blue whales are the largest animals to ever exist on Earth - even bigger than the biggest dinosaurs. This video explores how these massive creatures survive by feeding almost entirely on tiny krill, ...
A trove of photos and videos gathered from social media has helped researchers propose a few possible reasons for the seldom ...
A new approach to better assessing whale population data has emerged, led by a research team of marine biologists from ...
A research team of Cal Poly statisticians and marine biologists from UC San Diego have developed a new way to monitor local ...
A new approach to better assessing whale population data has emerged, led by a research team of marine biologists from Scripps Institution of ...
Mongabay News on MSN
China and Norway push to increase krill harvests around Antarctica
By Francesco De Augustinis China and Norway are working to expand the Southern Ocean krill fishery, promoting a new ...
Some animals don’t just break records, they make the record look impossible. A whale longer than a basketball arena. A beetle ...
Cascadia Research Collective co-founder and senior research biologist John Calambokidis said the Samish Island fin whale didn’t show signs of blunt-force trauma from a vessel but it did seem to have ...
Scientists said that Timmy, an ailing humpback whale, should be left to die in peace. Instead, a motley crew of veterinarians, millionaires, a celebrity biologist, and a YouTuber set out to rescue him ...
(via MinuteEarth) The most massive land animals in the world all eat little stuff: grass and leaves. And almost all of the most massive aquatic animals also eat something itty bitty: tiny crustaceans ...
SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — While San Diego’s beaches are renowned worldwide, there are also breathtaking works of nature that dwell just below the surface, and at times, peak above to provide an ...
Trying to find a whale song in the ocean is like trying to find a needle in a haystack. But now, UNSW Sydney researchers say they've trained a model, with just a single case study, to find blue whale ...
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