General Info:
There are three distinct
populations of whales seen off Costa Rica’s Pacific shores. These
whales do not intermix with one another. The three populations (one
from the north Pacific, one from the north Atlantic and one from the
Southern hemisphere) follow distinct migration paths annually from
their cold water, summer feeding grounds to warmer waters during winter
months for breeding.
Whales that feed along the California coast north to Alaska migrate south to Costa Rica and Mexico. Humpback whales (megaptera novaeangliae)
migrate in groups of three to four, but may be found in groups up to
twelve at their breeding grounds. Humpback whales regularly breach and
slap the water with their fins, making a ton of noise that is believed
to be part of their communication with one another, as the sound
travels long distances under water.
Behavior:
Humpback
whales are well known for their singing. Songs may last up to 20
minutes and are often repeated for several hours, usually during the
winter breeding season. All male whales sing the same song, despite
great distances between groups in the population. The song changes
slightly from year to year and as the song changes, all males sing the
new version.
While singing, male whales float “suspended
in the water, head down and relatively motionless” (The Marine Mammal
Center, Humpback Whales). They have a wide-ranging ability to sing in
many octaves, some with frequencies beyond the ability of human
hearing.
Physical Characteristics:
Humpback
whales are unique in that they have wart-like round bumps on their head
forward of the blowhole and on the edges of their flippers. Their tale
flukes have unique patterns much like fingerprints that may be used to
identify individuals. Humpback whales were named so because of the
hump shape on their dorsal fin. They have noticeably long flippers.
These
enormous beauties are between 49 and 52 feet long, weighing between
35-50 tons, with the females are usually larger than the males. They
filter feed using baleen plates consuming tons of fish including
mackerel, cod, sardines and other schooling fish. Humpbacks are also
known for using “bubble-nets” to catch their prey. One or more
individuals blows a ring of bubbles from its blow- hole, encircling a
school of fish. As the bubbles rise, the humpbacks swim up through the
bubble net's center and feed on the prey trapped inside.
Mating:
Females
reproduce every two years or more, producing one young that then nurses
for eight to eleven months. Pregnancies last for 12 months. Humpback
whales are endangered, with less than 10% of their original population
remaining.
Other whale species may also be encountered including, sei whales, fin whales, Bryde's whales and Cuvier's beaked whales.
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