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Published byMarvin Wade Modified over 8 years ago
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The Wonderful World of Marine Mammals
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Sea Otters – eat mostly urchins, crustaceans and some fish Almost hunted to extinction, but conservation management efforts restored population.
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Pinnepeds – “featherfooted” All come to shore to give birth and molt Found in all oceans Eat fish and larger invertebrates Kingdom – Animalia Phylum – Chordata Class – Mammalia Order - Carnivora
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Diving in Pinnepeds Can stay under for over 45 minutes Exhale air in lungs to become less bouyant Metabolism and hr slow Blood is redistributed to vital organs(brain and heart) Record depth – female northern elephant seal – 4,125 feet
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Three families –Eared seals – seal lions and fur seals Use forelimbs to swim – true seals(phocids) – Use hind flippers for movement –Walruses Canine teeth have become tusks in males Found in arctic region Family is one large bull that presides over a harem
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Fur seal Sea lions External ears Large flippers used for propulsion Eared Seals True Seals Ribbon seal Elephant seal
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Walruses
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Mantees and Dugongs Kingdom – Animalia Phylum – Chordata Class – Mammalia Order - Sirenia
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Manatee – three species, can inhabit both marine and fresh water Dugong – completely marine, head bigger and flippers smaller than manatee
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Kingdom – Animalia Phylum – Chordata Class – Mammalia Order – cetacea –Whales, dolphins and propoises Nostrils have become a blowhole at top of head Streamlined body Blubber layer under skin(insulation and energy) No external ears – reduce resistance Forelimbs modified into flippers Counter current heat exchange system Tail is fluke – moves up and down Hair reduced Countershading
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Adaptations for diving Takes in breath and blows it out –makes less bouyant Cetaceans have extremely large lungs with large numbers of alveoli – take in more oxygen Lungs and rib cage can collapse Metabolism and hr decreases Blood shunted to vital organs Medulla oblongata( area responsible for controlling breathing) is less sensitive to CO 2 Contain large amounts of hemoglobin Have a large volume of blood compared to other mammals Muscles less sensitive to lactic acid
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Cetacean behavior Spy hopping – “hey what’s going on up here?” A little to close
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Breaching- establishing dominance or just having fun
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Fluke up Flipper flapping – say it five times fast Tail flapping
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Types of whales Toothed –Smaller and shorter –One type of tooth for catching and holding –Higher on food chain – higher trophic level –Echolocation for hunting –Ex. Killer whale, sperm whale, dolphin Baleen –Much larger and longer –Baleen – overlapping plates to filter prey made of keratin – protein that makes up hair and nails –Eat plankton, krill and small fish –Use bubble net to trap prey
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Baleen plates
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Baleen whale feeding
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Blue whale – largest animal
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Toothed Whales – dolphins, porpoises, killer whales, sperm whales and narwals Sperm whale – named for fluid I animals head used in oil, candles, waxes and lubricants Ambergris – a digestive by product – used in perfumes Spermaceti – fluid in head used in echolocation to catch prey(giant squid and cuttlefish)
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Dolphins and Porpoises – what’s the difference? Dolphins have a beak Porpoise head is rounded off with no beak This porpoise was harasses to death by a pod of dolphins
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Narwhals
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Killer Whales - orcas
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Echolocation Acts like sonar Orientation clicks – give an animal a general idea of surroundings Discrimination clicks – give precise picture of a particular object.
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Whale songs
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