megaptera novaeangliae การใช้
- Coastal migratory connections of humpback whales, Megaptera novaeangliae borowski, 1781, in southern chile.
- The main animal of interest in this area is the Humpback Whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ).
- Humpback whales ( Megaptera novaeangliae ) are regular visitors in January to April and use the Kerama Islands as their breeding ground.
- A group was documented attacking and killing an ailing humpback whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) in 2006 near Hawaii.
- The area is cited as one of two known breeding grounds for the humpback whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) of the Northern Hemisphere.
- There are two main species of whales ( Southern Right Whale ( " Eubalaena australis " ), and the Humpback Whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ).
- Both the koala ( " Phascolarctos cinereus " ) and humpback whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) are flagship species in Australia, receiving a great deal of conservation attention from the public.
- Sightings of the humpback whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ), followed by southern rights ( " Eubalaena australis " ), are common between April and October, when the whales are migrating.
- The most common cetacean species to move through the waters of the greater Hans Lollik area include bottlenose dolphins ( "'Tursiops truncatus " ) and humpback whales ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ).
- The refuge also comprises a 40-hectare marine area, also migrating humpback whales ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) between June and October and one of the largest well-preserved coral reefs in Panama.
- Humphrey the Whale, a humpback whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ), entered San Francisco Bay twice on errant migrations, and was successfully rescued and redirected each time in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
- Marine mammals are not frequently seen in Barbadian waters; some species however, particularly bottlenose dolphins ( " Tursiops truncatus " ) and humpback whales ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ), are occasionally seen offshore.
- In 1781 he described scientifically the Humpback whale ( Megaptera novaeangliae ) under the name Balaena novaeangliae [ 1 ] in Gemeinn鼁zige Naturgeschichte des Thierreichs . " Gottlieb August Lange, Berlin . " 1, pages 1 21 ( 1781)
- The Cape Byron Marine Park is also a part-time home to the Humpback whale " ( Megaptera novaeangliae ) " which use the Cape Byron Marine Park on their migratory journey from the Southern Ocean to their tropical breeding grounds.
- The area has received worldwide recognition as a crucial breeding and calving area for the Breeding Group D population of Humpback Whales ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) at approximately 22, 000 individuals, the world's largest Humpback Whale population.
- The refuge also comprises a 40-hectare marine area including migrating humpback whales ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) between June and October and one of the largest well-preserved coral reefs in Panama, ideal for snorkeling and scuba diving.
- Heron Island is also a major nesting site for marine life includes the inhabitants of the coral reef, and around early October, cetaceans ( e . g . humpback whales, " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) pass Heron Island on their migration to their summer quarters in subantarctic waters.
- These mammals include humpback whales ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ), who are commonly encountered in the area as they migrate north to their breeding grounds in June and July, and then again between September and November when they return south, Southern right whales ( " Eubalaena australis " ) and Blue whales ( " Balaenoptera musculus " ).
- However, DNA analysis by studies, such as the one by Takeshi Sasaki ( of the Tokyo Institute of Technology ) and colleagues, indicates certain rorquals, such as the humpback whale, " Megaptera novaeangliae ", and the fin whale, " Balaenoptera physalus ", are more closely related to the gray whale than they are to some other rorquals, such as the minke whale, " Balaenoptera acutorostrata ".
- In August 2015 "'BDMLR "'was contact by the Centre for Coastal Studies in Provincetown, Maine in the US to assist as part of the global response network for large whale disentanglement as member of the Atlantic Large Whale Disentanglement Network ( "'ALWDN "') to a Humpback whale ( " Megaptera novaeangliae " ) in Iceland that was entangled in fisheries debris at the time suspected and later confirmed to be monofilament netting panels and lead weighted line from a Gill net array.
- ตัวอย่างการใช้เพิ่มเติม: 1 2