Researchers say the discovery of the oldest known recordings of whale sounds could open up a new understanding of how the huge animals communicate.
Biological matter left behind in the water allows us to follow these animals without ever setting eyes on them.
Researchers on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, recently discovered the oldest known recordings of whale sounds and believe the discovery could help scientists understand how the animals communicate.
As if soaring above the brilliant blue ocean isn’t spectacular enough, the New England Aquarium’s aerial survey team recently ...
Word and photos of Vancouver’s mystery orcas reached marine biologist Emma Luck in Alaska. A year earlier, she had been alerted to a trio of mystery orcas in Turnagain Arm near Anchorage. Orcas are ...
A daring decision to move 147 elite horses from Qatar to Belgium, amidst escalating conflicts in the Gulf region.
The Baie-Comeau LNG project proposed for the shores of the St. Lawrence River could be Canada’s third largest liquefied ...
In the deep waters of the eastern Arabian Sea, bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) are changing the way they communicate ...
MONTPELIER — The public is invited to a free presentation about the northern lights and community of Churchill, Manitoba, at ...
Narwhal whales live in social groups called pods and live in the Arctic ocean and males have a tusk. Image by Corey Ford via Depositphotos. In the frigid waters of the Arctic, a mystical creature that ...
Researchers from Mystic Aquarium are heading to the icy tundras of Canada to study beluga breath. That’s the white-plume mixture of water cells, proteins and lung fluid that whales exhale when they ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Mystic Aquarium scientist Laura Thompson collecting a breath sample from a wild beluga in the Churchill River in Manitoba, Canada.
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