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- To look up into the mountains and see the steam rolling from a mountain stream
- on a cold winters morning is a beautiful sight. However, to look out over the horizon and
- see the white spray of salt water coming from the blow of a huge hump-back whale is
- much more exciting sight and a whole lot warmer. I lived in the mountains of Colorado
- for most of my childhood. The first time I had the opportunity to see the ocean was on a
- vacation to California, when I was about 15 years old. It was even better than I had
- dreamed it would be. The different animals in the ocean, the color of the water, and the
- warm sand between my toes was probably what led me to come to the islands of Hawaii.
- When I first saw the hump-back whale I was amazed at their huge size and how they could
- breach out of the water so gracefully. It is as if they were trying to play or show off. So
- when we were asked to choose a favorite animal, I had no problem deciding on the hump-
- back whale.
- The hump-back whale gets itÆs name from the distinctive hump in front of the
- dorsal fin and from the way it raises itÆs back high above water before diving. They are a
- member of the order Cetacea. This order is of aquatic mammals and the hump-back
- belongs to the suborder of the Mysticeti. The Mysticeti are the baleen whales which have
- three families and several species. The family in which the hump-back belongs is the
- Balaenopteridae, the true fin backed whale. The thing that separates this genus from the
- other fin-backed whales is the pectoral fins, which grow in lengths of about 5 meters (16.4
- feet). This Genus is called Megaptera meaning great wing (Tinker 290). There was a
- controversy over the species name in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. In
- 1932, Remington Kellogg finally settled the matter with Megatera Novaeangliae
- (Cousteau 84). The common English name is the hump-back whale.
- The hump-back whale lives in both the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans. Since we
- live in the Pacific IÆll be discussing the hump-backs of the North Pacific. They migrate
- from North to South. In the months of July through September they gather in the
- Aleutian Islands, Bering Sea or the Chukchi Sea. They head south for the winter. They
- go to one of three areas: (1) Between the Bonin Islands, the Marianas Islands, the
- Ryukyu Islands and Taiwan; (2) The Hawaiian Islands, and (3) Along the coast of
- Mexico (Tinker 291).
- One of the reasons these whales go North is for feeding. They have a short food
- chain compared to most mammals. Phytoplankton turns sunlight into energy and this
- energy is consumed by zooplankton. The zooplankton and phytoplankton are eaten by
- small fish. The whale in turn eats the fish. The chain is complete when waste products or
- dead whales decompose. They have a very short time frame in which they eat compared
- to the twelve months out of the year. They have not been seen feeding in Hawaii. It
- seems that they only feed during the summer months up north. During the fasting periods,
- in Hawaii, they survive on their blubber. They mix their diet with copepods, euphausiids
- (krill), and small fish, primarily herring and capelin. They are considered filter feeders,
- using baleen plates to filter out their food. They take huge amounts of water into their
- mouth using a gulping method and then when they push the water out, they put their
- tongue up so the water must pass through the baleens. The food becomes trapped and
- falls toward the rear of the mouth. The two gulping methods hump-back whales use are
- lunge feeding and bubble net feeding. Lunge feeding is used when food is abundant. The
- whale simply swims through the prey with itÆs mouth open engulfing the prey. They can
- do this vertically, laterally or inverted. This is done toward the surface of the ocean.
- Bubble net feeding is used when the prey is less abundant. The whale dives below the
- prey and discharges bubbles from itÆs blowhole. As the bubbles ascend they form a net
- that disorients the prey. Then the whale swims upward and fills his mouth with the net of
- fish and bubbles (Kaufman 55). Hump-backs have ventral grooves in their throat that
- expand allowing an enormous amount of water to be gulped. Hump-backs consume
- nearly a ton of food in a dayÆs time during their feeding season.
- The hump-back whaleÆs stomach consists of three chambers and the duodenal
- ampulla much like a cows. The three stomachs are separate from each other. They have
- small and large intestines, a rectum, caecum and an anus. These organs are very similar
- and work much the same as in most mammals. The digestive glands of a whale are
- somewhat different. They do not have salivary glands that are functional. The liver is
- bilobed and the gall bladder is absent. The pancreas however resembles that of most other
- mammals (Tinker 63).
- Mammals, which live in the sea, have a continued problem of dehydration. Hump-
- backs get water from the food they eat and during their fasting periods they get it from
- their blubber. However, the salinity in the whales bodily fluids is much higher than land
- mammals but it is still lower than the seawater. This creates a problem. They are in
- danger of losing too much water. In order to maintain a proper balance the whale passes
- large quantities of highly concentrated urine. The kidneys are specialized to do this. The
- feces also permit discharge of salt. However, few studies have been done on hump-backÆs
- feces or urine (Kaufman 31).
- As humans we can breathe either from our mouth or nose. This is not the case of
- the hump-back whale. The whale can neither inhale or exhale through their mouth. The
- nasal openings of a whale are known as the blowhole. There are two paired openings at
- the top of the head. The holes are closed and made water tight by two plugs
- (Tinker 65-68).
- If you weighed ten elephants that would be the average weight of one hump-back
- whale. The male and female whale alike weigh between thirty and fifty tons. This weight
- will vary depending on the season. While fasting in Hawaii the weight will be much less.
- The calves are born in January and early February as a result from the previous years
- mating. They are born at approximately fourteen feet long and end up as long as sixty-
- two and a half feet with an average of fifty feet. The calf, a young hump-back, will drink
- one-hundred pounds of milk each day. This milk is very rich compared to domestic
- animals. The calf will begin to nurse soon after birth from two nipples located on either
- side of the vaginal slit. (Coustea 86). After birth they grow very fast. By March they
- more than double their weight and are ready to begin their migration north. They will
- wean in about five to seven months from birth.
- . Whales are not monogamous. Males have been seen romping and playing with
- females and it is thought that sometime during this romping and playing mating occurs. It
- has never been determined when. Over eleven to twelve months later, back in the same
- waters, the female gives birth. Usually they do not have calves each year, however, it is
- possible. The birth of twins has never been recorded however it is possible. Sexual
- maturity is as early as four years old for both sexes. They live for about thirty years but
- studies have shown they can live much longer. Using a ôwax plugö system, much like the
- system of the rings of a tree, one whale was thought to have been fifty-eight years old
- before it died. (Balcom 15-19).The reproductive organs are located internally. The males
- penis is withdrawn into a slit. An erection of the penis is accomplished by a pair of
- muscles, much like that of cattle and horses. The females ovaries produce single celled
- eggs. When the egg is mature it is discharged into the fallopian tubes, a process known as
- ovulation. At this time if mating occurs and the egg is fertilized with sperm from the male
- the birth of a baby whale is on the way. (Kaufman 31-33).
- Most mammals usually have five sense organs. The whale only has three. Touch,
- which is located in the skin, is the sense that can feel pain, heat, cold and vibration. They
- also have feelers called vibrissae. These feelers are very similar to whiskers on a domestic
- cat. The vibrissae are located in rows on the end of the lower jaw, on the sides of the
- lower jaw and on top of the head. Sight is the sense that allows the whale to see. The
- shape of the whales eyeball tend to make them far-sighted below the surface and near
- sighted above the surface. Since the eyes are located on either side of the head it makes it
- impossible for their visual fields to overlap, therefore, they do not have depth perception.
- Their auditory sense, or hearing, is very important because in the ocean the visibility is
- poor. Good hearing is used to help locate food, hear the approach of enemies, and
- communicate with each other. Their ears are gone and only a slit appears midway
- between the eye and the base of the flipper. The sense of smell and taste are not present
- like in most mammals (Tinker 81-85).
- Due to the size of these enormous animals they have few predators. Man is their
- worst enemy. However, they do have confrontations with other whales. Some of the
- defenses used are, filling their mouth with water or air so to bluff the invader into thinking
- they are bigger than they are. As a second line of defense they will use the head and fins
- as weapons. They also use their huge body as a defense mechanism by positioning
- themselves between the invader, like a boat, and mother and calf. (Kaufman 93-115). A
- more subtle defense is countershading , where the top of the whale is dark which makes it
- harder to see from above looking down and the bottom is light so looking up it is hard to
- see against the lighter surface of the ocean.
- Hump-backs produce a wide range of sounds. Often these sounds are long and
- complex that are repeated for hours. The first sounds were recorded here in Hawaii in
- 1952 by O.W. Schreiber on the basis of recordings collected at the U.S. Navy Sound
- Fixing and Ranging Station. One whale sung a song for fourteen hours without stopping.
- Since singing is done primarily during the mating season it is thought to serve a
- reproductive function. It has been shown that only the males sing this song. It may also
- attract females, scare away other males, or maintain the distance between singers. Males
- and females alike make other sounds which are associated with feeding and socially active
- groups (Kaufman 73-77).
- The whales pectoral fins is not used for propulsion but to balance and steer. The
- tail or fluke is used to move this massive mammal through the water. The muscle caudal
- peduncle move the fluke in an up and down direction which propels the whale through
- the water (Tinker 55).
-
-
- <Pectoral Fin
-
- Flukes >
- The worldwide population of humpbacks is estimated between ten thousand and
- fifteen thousand animals. This count is down from over one hundred and fifty thousand
- last century. (Dietz 39). Man has hunted the whale close to extinction. The good news is
- that we have bans against killing whales in most waters. Hopefully we did this in time to
- save them from extinction. It would be a true shame if my grandchildren could not enjoy
- these wonderful creatures.
- Budd 1
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