Blue Whale lunge feeding

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  • Опубликовано: 16 май 2024
  • The Blue Whale first appeared on earth well after the extinction of the dinosaurs, but well before the appearance of the first humans.
    This magnificent mammal has broken all the records when it comes to size.
    The largest known creature to ever exist, the Blue Whale surpasses all land and sea creatures that came before it or exist to this day.
    Graceful and gentle, this non predatory animal has been decimated throughout the early 1900's.
    The International Whaling Commission banned all blue whale hunting in 1966 and in 2018 the International Union for Conservation of Nature listed the blue whale as Endangered, but It continues to face numerous man-made threats such as ship strikes, pollution, ocean noise, and climate change.
    Today the Blue Whale is making a slow recovery, but ongoing research and conservation efforts are crucial to the survival of this absolutely magnificent creature.
    In this video you can marvel at the Blue Whale size and sounds as you watch under water footage, Blue Whale drone views, Blue Whale body cam, and, even listen to the Blue Whale song.
    FOOTNOTE: When researching the Blue Whale, I came across a wide variety of slightly conflicting data and information from many sources. The narrative in this video is a compilation of information that I believe to be the most accurate as of posting.
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    MUSIC:
    All music is provided by and licensed with inaudio.org/
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    REFERENCES AND LINKS:
    How Did Blue Whales Get So Big
    American Museum of Natural History
    • How Did Blue Whales Ge...
    What Are Blue Whales Doing Underwater
    American Museum of Natural History
    • What Are Blue Whales D...
    How Does a Blue Whale Feed
    American Museum of Natural History
    • How Does a Blue Whale ...
    Why Does Whale Feeding Behaviour Matter
    American Museum of Natural History
    • Why Does Whale Feeding...
    What Colour Is a Blue Whale
    American Museum of Natural History
    • What Color Is a Blue W...
    Blue whale feeding
    Natural History Museum
    • Blue whale feeding | N...
    Species at Risk in Atlantic Canada Blue Whale
    Canada Science and Technology Museum
    • Species at Risk in Atl...
    Blue Whale Mother and Calf
    Noyo Center for Marine Science
    • Blue Whale Mother and ...
    Blue Whale Song
    Ocean Networks Canada
    • Blue Whale Song
    This is what biggest whale in the world can do
    Smart Pizza
    • This Is What Biggest W...
    Etruscan shrew:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Trebol-a, CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/b... via Wikimedia Commons
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    Proud supporter of The Wilderness Society:
    / @wilderness_aus
    Proud supporter of The World Wildlife Fund (WWF):
    / @worldwildlifefund
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    "Content shared for informational/educational purposes"
    The materials used in this video are adapted and used for educational purposes only. This transformation constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law.
    For copyright queries or general inquiries please get in touch: brossy2424@gmail.com
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    More from The WoW Factor:
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    #thewowfactor #the wow factor #weird #wonderful
    Episode_20
    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    0:20 Size
    0:47 Whaling ban
    1:23 A lot to learn
    1:37 Mother and calf
    2:09 Feeding
    3:06 Diving
    3:32 Behavioural study
    4:37 Conservation
    5:21 Outro
    5:53 Bonus
    7:03 Thanks
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Комментарии • 12

  • @MangySquirrel
    @MangySquirrel 29 дней назад +4

    One day A.I.’s will learn their language and help us communicate with them.

    • @TheWoWfactor44
      @TheWoWfactor44  29 дней назад +3

      That would be amazing wouldn't it? Thanks for the comment. 👍

    • @MangySquirrel
      @MangySquirrel 29 дней назад +3

      @@TheWoWfactor44 Project CETI is underway, its a start. sperm whales I believe. would be fasicnating to learn how they share information and tell each other about hunting grounds, where they've been, how they find each other, etc. Pierre Robert de la Tour (Orca Whisperer) who has been studying orca in norway says much of their language is 'body language' but that's a much smaller being than the majestic blue whales of course. somewhat limited body language, lol.

    • @TheWoWfactor44
      @TheWoWfactor44  29 дней назад +3

      @@MangySquirrel wow. That’s interesting. I’ll have to look this up. Thanks so much for sharing. 👍🙂 I’m currently working on a video on Shark species. Drop in next week and see what you think. Take care.

  • @bradjoy
    @bradjoy 24 дня назад +1

    100 MILLION!!!!
    That's like...roolly bigger!
    Gimme more o' that whale stuff!
    How about Orcas! Love Orcas! Ask anyone!
    Great sequel mate, well done!

  • @michaelcrossley4716
    @michaelcrossley4716 28 дней назад +3

    Excellent video. Thanks for sharing.

    • @TheWoWfactor44
      @TheWoWfactor44  28 дней назад

      So glad you enjoyed, and you're most welcome. 👍🙂

  • @Benafex
    @Benafex Месяц назад +5

    No wonder Geppetto was swallowed

    • @TheWoWfactor44
      @TheWoWfactor44  Месяц назад

      Well, Monstro was blue...but he had teeth. 🐳

  • @Aplusinskal
    @Aplusinskal 27 дней назад +1

    Great video Sir, thank you for sharing!