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Qué (quién) es balaenoptera$530216$ - definición

SPECIES OF MAMMAL
Omura's Whale; Balaenoptera omurai
  • Feeding off [[Nosy Be]], Madagascar
  • Photograph showing a small rorqual taken by villagers of Lamakera between 1915 and 1944. This is thought to likely be an Omura's whale (see text).
  • Distribution in western Pacific Ocean
  • breaching off [[Nosy Be]], [[Madagascar]]
  • Skull of Omura's whale in [[National Museum of Natural Science]]

Northern fin whale         
SUBSPECIES OF WHALE
Balaenoptera physalus physalus
The northern fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus physalus) is a subspecies of fin whale that lives in the North Atlantic Ocean and North Pacific Ocean. It has been proposed that the northern Pacific population represents a separate subspecies, B.
blue whale         
  •  The small [[dorsal fin]] of this blue whale is just visible on the far left.
  •  A blue whale calf with its mother
  • Aerial view of adult blue whale
  • Researchers examine a dead blue whale killed by collision with a ship
  • blow hole]] of a blue whale
  • A blue whale with its [[bow wave]], showing the blowhole
  • Dead blue whale on [[flensing]] platform
SPECIES OF MARINE MAMMAL, LARGEST KNOWN ANIMAL IN THE WORLD
Balaenoptera musculus; Blue Whales; Baleanoptera musculus; Sulphur-bottom whale; Blue whales; Blue wale; Sibbald's rorqual; Bluewhale; The great blue whale; Blue Whale conservation; Blue whale conservation; The Blue Whale; Balaenoptera musculus intermedia; Blue Whale; Balaenoptera musculus musculus; Sibbaldus musculus; User talk:Sriharsh1234/sandbox2; Blue rorqual; Vocalizations of blue whales; Blue rorqual whale
¦ noun a mottled bluish-grey rorqual which is the largest living animal and reaches lengths of up to 27 m (90 ft). [Balaenoptera musculus.]
Blue whale         
  •  The small [[dorsal fin]] of this blue whale is just visible on the far left.
  •  A blue whale calf with its mother
  • Aerial view of adult blue whale
  • Researchers examine a dead blue whale killed by collision with a ship
  • blow hole]] of a blue whale
  • A blue whale with its [[bow wave]], showing the blowhole
  • Dead blue whale on [[flensing]] platform
SPECIES OF MARINE MAMMAL, LARGEST KNOWN ANIMAL IN THE WORLD
Balaenoptera musculus; Blue Whales; Baleanoptera musculus; Sulphur-bottom whale; Blue whales; Blue wale; Sibbald's rorqual; Bluewhale; The great blue whale; Blue Whale conservation; Blue whale conservation; The Blue Whale; Balaenoptera musculus intermedia; Blue Whale; Balaenoptera musculus musculus; Sibbaldus musculus; User talk:Sriharsh1234/sandbox2; Blue rorqual; Vocalizations of blue whales; Blue rorqual whale

The blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) is a marine mammal and a baleen whale. Reaching a maximum confirmed length of 29.9 meters (98 ft) and weighing up to 199 tonnes (196 long tons; 219 short tons), it is the largest animal known to have ever existed. The blue whale's long and slender body can be of various shades of greyish-blue dorsally and somewhat lighter underneath. Four subspecies are recognized: B. m. musculus in the North Atlantic and North Pacific, B. m. intermedia in the Southern Ocean, B. m. brevicauda (the pygmy blue whale) in the Indian Ocean and South Pacific Ocean, B. m. indica in the Northern Indian Ocean. There is also a population in the waters off Chile that may constitute a fifth subspecies.

In general, blue whale populations migrate between their summer feeding areas near the poles and their winter breeding grounds near the tropics. There is also evidence of year-round residencies, and partial or age/sex-based migration. Blue whales are filter feeders; their diet consists almost exclusively of krill. They are generally solitary or gather in small groups, and have no well-defined social structure other than mother-calf bonds. The fundamental frequency for blue whale vocalizations ranges from 8 to 25 Hz and the production of vocalizations may vary by region, season, behavior, and time of day. Orcas are their only natural predators.

The blue whale was once abundant in nearly all the Earth's oceans until the end of the 19th century. It was hunted almost to the point of extinction by whalers until the International Whaling Commission banned all blue whale hunting in 1966. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has listed blue whales as Endangered as of 2018. It continues to face numerous man-made threats such as ship strikes, pollution, ocean noise and climate change.

Wikipedia

Omura's whale

Omura's whale or the dwarf fin whale (Balaenoptera omurai) is a species of rorqual about which very little is known. Before its formal description, it was referred to as a small, dwarf or pygmy form of Bryde's whale by various sources. The common name and specific epithet commemorate Japanese cetologist Hideo Omura.

The scientific description of this whale was made in Nature in 2003 by three Japanese scientists. They determined the existence of the species by analysing the morphology and mitochondrial DNA of nine individuals – eight caught by Japanese research vessels in the late 1970s in the Indo-Pacific and an adult female collected in 1998 from Tsunoshima, an island in the Sea of Japan. Later, abundant genetic evidence confirmed Omura's whale as a valid species and revealed it to be an early offshoot from the rorqual lineage, diverging much earlier than Bryde's and sei whales. It is perhaps more closely related to its larger relative, the blue whale.

In the third edition of Mammal Species of the World, the "species" is relegated to being a synonym of Balaenoptera edeni. However, the authors note that this is subject to a revision of the genus. The database ITIS lists this as a valid taxon, noting a caveat on the disputed systematics of this species, Balaenoptera edeni and Balaenoptera brydei.