The narwhals may be mistaking the recording equipment for cod they love to feed on, say scientists. The post Narwhals caught on camera colliding with deep ocean monitors appeared first on Talker.
The narwhal-beluga hybrid skull. Mikkel Høegh Post/Natural History Museum Of Denmark In the 1980s, a subsistence hunter caught three unusual-looking whales in Greenland’s Disko Bay. They had flippers ...
A species of whale, never before recorded in Ireland, washed up in Co Donegal last weekend, marking a “significant event” linked to climate change. The body of a female narwhal was retrieved by the ...
Chaos theory improves understanding of Arctic narwhal behavior, with the aim of helping efforts to protect this vulnerable species. Researchers have used the mathematical equations of chaos theory to ...
The body of a narwhal, a species of toothed whale normally found in Arctic waters, has washed up off the coast of the Republic of Ireland. The female narwhal was discovered by a family walking on ...
WWF is supporting a new project to track narwhals, Arctic whales best known for the long tusk that projects forward from their faces. Canada - WWF is supporting a new project to track narwhals, Arctic ...
Skull was donated by an Inuit hunter in 1990. This is an Inside Science story. (Inside Science) -- A mysterious whale skull came from the first and only known hybrid of a beluga and a narwhal, a new ...
One of the most recognizable animals of the sea, the narwhal, is even more unique than their looks would suggest, according to a new study of their genetics released this week. It found that the ...
But, years after revisiting the anomaly, a group of Danish researchers decided it was a hybrid whale all along. The unique skull, they say, was the result of a forbidden romance between a narwhal ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. GrrlScientist writes about evolution, ecology, behavior and health. Following up on this, a study was recently published that ...
Humans aren't the only species that can catch the deadly coronavirus. Wildlife, particularly one species of whale in the Arctic, could also be susceptible to COVID-19, a team of researchers suggests.