Cetacea - significado y definición. Qué es Cetacea
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Qué (quién) es Cetacea - definición

INFRAORDER OF MAMMALS
Cetaceans; Cetacean; Catecean; Cetecean; Whales and dolphins; Cetecea; Cytaceans; Cetacian; Cetaceans in captivity; Cetacean species; Pod of whales; Pods of whales; Anatomy of cetaceans; Neoceti
  • Ulises the orca, 2009
  • Fossil of a ''Maiacetus'' (red, beige skull) with fetus (blue, red teeth) shortly before the end of gestation <ref name="Gingerich PD" />
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  • Constellation [[Cetus]]
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  • the incident]]
  • [[Biosonar]]
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  • "Destruction of Leviathan" engraving by [[Gustave Doré]], 1865
  • Dolphin anatomy
  • [[Dominoes]] made of baleen
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  • Humpback whale fluke
  • aquatic reptiles]]
  • Stranded sperm whale engraving, 1598
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  • Depiction of baleen whaling, 1840
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  • porpoising]]
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  • Sea World show featuring [[bottlenose dolphin]]s and [[false killer whale]]s
  • SeaWorld]] [[pilot whale]] with trainers
  • Taras]] riding a dolphin
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  • A whale as depicted by Conrad Gesner, 1587, in ''Historiae animalium''
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  • Bubble net feeding
  • Whales caught 2010–2014, by country
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Cetacea         
·noun ·pl An order of marine mammals, including the whales. Like ordinary mammals they breathe by means of lungs, and bring forth living young which they suckle for some time. The anterior limbs are changed to paddles; the tail flukes are horizontal. There are two living suborders:.
Cetacean         
·noun One of the Cetacea.
cetacean         
(cetaceans)
Cetaceans are animals such as whales, dolphins, and porpoises.
N-COUNT: usu pl

Wikipedia

Cetacea

Cetaceans (; from Latin cetus 'whale', from Ancient Greek κῆτος (kêtos) 'huge fish, sea monster') are an infraorder of aquatic mammals that includes whales, dolphins, and porpoises. Key characteristics are their fully aquatic lifestyle, streamlined body shape, often large size and exclusively carnivorous diet. They propel themselves through the water with powerful up-and-down movement of their tail which ends in a paddle-like fluke, using their flipper-shaped forelimbs to maneuver.

While the majority of cetaceans live in marine environments, a small number exclusively reside in brackish water or fresh water. Having a cosmopolitan distribution, they can be found in some rivers and all of Earth's oceans, and many species inhabit vast ranges where they migrate with the changing of the seasons.

Cetaceans are famous for their high intelligence and complex social behaviour as well as for the enormous size of some of the group's members, such as the blue whale which reaches a maximum confirmed length of 29.9 meters (98 feet) and a weight of 173 tonnes (190 short tons), making it the largest animal known ever to have existed.

There are approximately 89 living species split into two parvorders: Odontoceti or toothed whales (containing porpoises, dolphins, other predatory whales like the beluga and the sperm whale, and the poorly understood beaked whales) and the filter feeding Mysticeti or baleen whales (which includes species like the blue whale, the humpback whale and the bowhead whale). Despite their highly modified bodies and carnivorous lifestyle, genetic and fossil evidence places cetaceans as nested within even-toed ungulates, most closely related to hippopotamus within the clade Whippomorpha.

Cetaceans have been extensively hunted for their meat, blubber and oil by commercial operations. Although the International Whaling Commission has agreed on putting a halt to commercial whaling, whale hunting is still going on, either under IWC quotas to assist the subsistence of Arctic native people or in the name of scientific research, although a large spectrum of non-lethal methods are now available to study marine mammals in the wild. Cetaceans also face severe environmental hazards from underwater noise pollution, entanglement in abandoned ropes and nets, collisions with ships, plastic and heavy metals build-up, to accelerating climate change, but how much they are affected varies widely from species to species, from minimally in the case of the southern bottlenose whale to the baiji (or Chinese river dolphin) which is considered to be functionally extinct due to human activity.

Ejemplos de uso de Cetacea
1. Its report –– which WWF says is the first assessment of the situation by leading marine scientists –– points to the accidental catching of cetacea in fishing gear as one of the gravest global threats to marine mammals.
2. Air–breathing mammals, dolphins and other cetacea drown if they get trapped underwater by fishing gear –– becoming what the industry refers to as "bycatch". The report says nine dolphin and porpoise populations –– 10 species in total –– need immediate action if they are to survive the threat of commercial fishing nets.
3. "Many of the humpback–whale sightings involve mother and calf pairs," says Dylan Walker of Organisation Cetacea (ORCA), "which gives us even more optimism for the future." But despite this good news, not everything in the British wildlife garden is rosy.