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Balaena Eubalaena †Balaenella †Balaenula †Balaenotus †Idiocetus †Mesoteras †Morenocetus †Protobalaena
Balaenidae is a family of whales of the suborder mysticete that contains two living genera. Historically, it is known as the right whale family, as it was thought to contain only species of right whales. Through most of the 20th Century, however, that became a much-debated (and unresolved) topic amongst the scientific community.[2] Finally, in the early 2000s, science reached a definitive conclusion: the bowhead whale, once commonly known as the Greenland right whale, was not in fact a right whale.[3] The family of Balaenids, therefore, comprises the right whales (genus Eubalaena), and in a genus all to its own, the very closely related bowhead whale (genus Balaena).[4][5]
Balaenids are large whales, with an average adult length of 15 to 17 metres (45–50 feet), and weighing 50-80 tonnes. Their principle distinguishing feature is their narrow, arched, upper jaw, which gives the animals a deeply curved jawline. This shape allows for especially long baleen plates. The animals utilise these by floating at or near the surface, and straining food from the water, which they then scrape off the baleen with their tongues - a feeding method that contrasts with those of the rorquals and the gray whale. Their diet consists of small crustaceans, primarily copepods, although some species also eat a significant amount of krill.[6]
Balaenids are also robustly built by comparison with the rorquals, and lack the grooves along the throat that are distinctive of those animals. They have exceptionally large heads in comparison with their bodies, reaching 40% of the total length in the case of the Bowhead Whale. They have short, broad, flippers, and lack a dorsal fin.
All species are at least somewhat migratory, moving into warmer waters during the winter, during which they both mate and give birth. Gestation lasts 10–11 months, results in the birth of a single young, and typically occurs once every three years.[6]
Cnidaria, Sponge, Bacteria, Fungus, Biological classification
Animal, Gray whale, Humpback whale, Whale, Fish
Alaska, Arctic, Greenland, Balaenidae, Animal
Canada, Animal, Cetacea, Hokkaido, Israel
Neogene, Bowhead whale, Balaenidae, Devonian, Permian
Patagonia, Balaenidae, Southern right whale, Bowhead whale, Animal
Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Federal Register, Bonin Islands, Animal, Cetacea
Portugal, Netherlands, Cetacea, YouTube, Cornwall
Theria, Primates, Cetacea, Nycteridae, Megadermatidae