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The Wonderful World of Marine Mammals. Sea Otters – eat mostly urchins, crustaceans and some fish Almost hunted to extinction, but conservation management.

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Presentation on theme: "The Wonderful World of Marine Mammals. Sea Otters – eat mostly urchins, crustaceans and some fish Almost hunted to extinction, but conservation management."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Wonderful World of Marine Mammals

2 Sea Otters – eat mostly urchins, crustaceans and some fish Almost hunted to extinction, but conservation management efforts restored population.

3 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

4 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

5  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

6 Fur seal Sea lions External ears Large flippers used for propulsion Eared Seals True Seals Ribbon seal Elephant seal

7 Walruses

8 Mantees and Dugongs  Kingdom – Animalia  Phylum – Chordata  Class – Mammalia  Order - Sirenia

9 Manatee – three species, can inhabit both marine and fresh water Dugong – completely marine, head bigger and flippers smaller than manatee

10  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

11 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

12 Cetacean behavior Spy hopping – “hey what’s going on up here?” A little to close

13 Breaching- establishing dominance or just having fun

14 Fluke up Flipper flapping – say it five times fast Tail flapping

15 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

16 Baleen plates

17 Baleen whale feeding

18 Blue whale – largest animal

19 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)

20 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

21 Narwhals

22 Killer Whales - orcas

23 Echolocation  Acts like sonar  Orientation clicks – give an animal a general idea of surroundings  Discrimination clicks – give precise picture of a particular object.

24 Whale songs


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