Why do whales disrupt?

Although bione biologists have recently paid attention to endangered whales, they did not perform enough research, to know exactly why the whales were breaking. The violation occurs when the whale, especially the humpback whale, flips completely out of the water, circles in the air and lands loudly on the side. Tourists to inspect whaling may think that mammals who violate only to create photogenic moments are disrupted, but it probably has more in common with communication, comfort, defense or predatory behavior. Smack is likely to hear other whales for a very long distance. But what the whales are saying can only be guessed. Will they attract friends to abundant food sources? Tempting friends? Or only notification of their presence? Arnacles are diverted from the impact of landing. Scientists trying to watch individual whales based on their DNA have noticed this comfortable way of collecting genetic material. It is not known whether the whales deliberately disrupt the top layer of the skin, lice or barnacles, as well asLike people scratched by their nails, but it seems credible.

Maybe whales have recently developed their frequent violations in response to so many boats, ships, ships and people in the water. Since they have sufficient eyesight, they are assumed to jump out of the ocean to see and see a human vessel. This gives them time to prepare for a moving ship and also alerts the ship not to approach the area where whales are collected. This prevents both parties from being injured.

Two lesser known theories have to do with fast travel and prey fish. Aerodynamically, briefly leaving the water for air can help whale swim quickly over long distances. Breach may have energy efficient aspects. Secondly, the whales could deliberately land directly on the prey that they could otherwise be consumed without biting themselves. It is known that the strong impact knocks on the prey unconscious long enough for the whale to swallow it.

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