Everything about The Baleen Whale totally explained
The
baleen whales, also called
whalebone whales or
great whales, form the
Mysticeti, one of two suborders of the
Cetacea (whales, dolphins, and porpoises).
Baleen whales are characterized by having
baleen plates for filtering food from water, rather than having
teeth. This distinguishes them from the other suborder of cetaceans, the
toothed whales or Odontoceti. Living Mysticeti species have teeth only during the
embryonal phase. Fossil Mysticeti had teeth before baleen evolved.
The suborder contains four
families and fourteen
species. A list of species can be found below and at the
Cetacea article. The scientific name derives from the
Greek word
mystax, which means "moustache".
Anatomy
Baleen whales are generally larger than toothed whales, and females are larger than males. This group includes the largest living animal species, the
Blue Whale.
Baleen whales have two
blowholes, causing a V-shaped blow.
Ecology and life history
Behavioral ecology
Breaching
In spite of their enormous
mass, baleen whales are able to leap completely out of the water. Particularly known for their acrobatics are the
Humpback Whales, but other baleen whales also break through the water surface with their body or beat it loudly with their
fins. The reason for these habits isn't known for certain. Some believe that the male Baleen Whales try to show off to the females, to increase their mating success.
Importance to humans
From the 11th to the late 20th centuries, baleen whales were hunted commercially for their
oil and baleen. Their oil can be made into
margarine and cooking oils. Baleen was used to stiffen
corsets, as
parasol ribs, and to crease paper.
Evolutionary history
Early baleen whales first appeared as far back as Early
Oligocene, or perhaps the latest
Eocene (39-29 million years ago). Early baleen whales probably didn't have extensive, if any, baleen, but did possess teeth inherited from their ancestors. The
Oligocene species
Aetiocetus cotylalveus is considered the evolutionary link between
toothed and
baleen whales. It was discovered by renowned fossil collector
Douglas Emlong in 1964 near
Seal Rock State Recreation Site,
Oregon in a
sandstone formation . In the early 1990s, the species
Janjucetus hunderi was discovered in
Victoria,
Australia by a surfer and was described in 2006 by E. M. G. Fitzgerald.
Janjucetus was a baleen whale with sharp teeth that hunted
fish and
squid as well as larger prey, potentially including
sharks and
dolphin-like cetaceans. These fossils hint that early baleen whales were predatory and eventually evolved into the gentler, toothless whales known today. The first baleened, toothless baleen whales probably appeared in the Early or Middle
Miocene, from a toothed ancestor that adapted initially to eat small fishes or other creatures and eventually to feed solely by filtering.
Early forms of Baleen Whales may have also been able to echolocate.
Taxonomic classification
Further Information
Get more info on 'Baleen Whale'.
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