NARWHALS - translation to αραβικά
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NARWHALS - translation to αραβικά

MEDIUM-SIZED TOOTHED WHALE THAT LIVES YEAR-ROUND IN THE ARCTIC
Narwhale; Monodon; Monodon monoceros; Narwahl; Unicorn Whale; Narwall; Narwale; Narwhals; Norwhal whales; Norwhal whale; Sea unicorn; Arctic unicorn; Monodontinae; Unicorn of the Sea; Narhwal; Narwhal tusk; Cultural depictions of narwhals
  • A [[polar bear]] scavenging a narwhal carcass
  • Beluga and narwhal catches
  • The head of an Inuit lance made from a narwhal tusk with a [[meteorite]] iron blade (British Museum)
  • Image of narwhal from ''[[Brehms Tierleben]]'' (1864–1869)
  • This narwhal skull has rare double [[tusk]]s. Usually, the canine tooth only on the left side of the upper jaw becomes a tusk. Rarely, males develop two tusks. This specimen, however, was of a female (Zoologisches Museum, Hamburg; collected in 1684)
  • Male narwhal captured and satellite tagged
  • Somerset Island]]
  • beluga]] (upper image), its closest related species
  • Complete skeleton at the [[Zoological Museum of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences]]

NARWHALS         

ألاسم

كَرْكَدَّنُ البَحْر

NARWHAL         

ألاسم

كَرْكَدَّنُ البَحْر

narwhal         
كركدن بحر ، حريش بحر

Ορισμός

narwhal
n.
[Written also Narwhale, Narwal, and Narval.] Sea-unicorn, unicorn-fish, unicorn-whale (Monodon monoceros).

Βικιπαίδεια

Narwhal

The narwhal, also known as a narwhale (Monodon monoceros), is a medium-sized toothed whale that possesses a large "tusk" from a protruding canine tooth. It lives year-round in the Arctic waters around Greenland, Canada and Russia. It is one of two living species of whale in the family Monodontidae, along with the beluga whale, and the only species in the genus Monodon. The narwhal males are distinguished by a long, straight, helical tusk, which is an elongated upper left canine. The narwhal was one of many species described by Carl Linnaeus in his publication Systema Naturae in 1758.

Like the beluga, narwhals are medium-sized whales. For both sexes, excluding the male's tusk, the total body size can range from 3.95 to 5.5 m (13.0 to 18.0 ft); the males are slightly larger than the females. The average weight of an adult narwhal is 800 to 1,600 kg (1,760 to 3,530 lb). At around 11 to 13 years old, the males become sexually mature; females become sexually mature at about 5 to 8 years old. Narwhals do not have a dorsal fin and their neck vertebrae are jointed like those of most other mammals, not fused as in dolphins and most whales.

Found primarily in Canadian Arctic and Greenlandic and Russian waters, the narwhal is a uniquely specialised Arctic predator. In winter, it feeds on benthic prey, mostly flatfish, under dense pack ice. During the summer, narwhals eat mostly Arctic cod and Greenland halibut, with other fish such as polar cod making up the remainder of their diet. Each year, they migrate from bays into the ocean as summer comes. In the winter, the male narwhals occasionally dive up to 1,500 m (4,920 ft) in depth, with dives lasting up to 25 minutes. Narwhals, like most toothed whales, communicate with "clicks", "whistles" and "knocks".

Narwhals can live up to 50 years and are often killed by suffocation after being trapped due to the formation of sea ice. Other causes of death, specifically among young whales, are starvation and predation by orcas. As previous estimates of the world narwhal population were below 50,000, narwhals are categorised by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as "nearly threatened". More recent estimates list higher populations (upwards of 170,000), thus lowering the status to "least concern". Narwhals have been harvested for hundreds of years by Inuit in northern Canada and Greenland for meat and ivory and a regulated subsistence hunt continues.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για NARWHALS
1. It will, on the other hand, allow a delightfully huge number of mentions of crochet, narwhals and flensing knives.