| GRAY WHALE Eschrichtius robustus |


SKIN, SHAPE AND FINS
The gray whale's
skin is usually gray with some blotchy white spots and has many parasites,
including hundreds of pounds of barnacles and whale lice. There are little or no
parasites on its right side because of the way it scrapes along the ocean bottom
to feed.
Gray whales have 2-4 throat grooves, about 5 feet (1.4 m) long
each. These grooves allow their throat to expand during the huge intake of water
during filter feeding. The gray whale has two broad flippers, no dorsal fin, and
a series of small ridges along the its back near the flukes (tail).
DIET AND BALEEN
Gray whales (like all baleen whales) are seasonal feeders and carnivores. They
are bottom feeders (benthic feeders). They sieve through the mud on the bottom
of the ocean floor of the arctic with their baleen. They filters out small
crustaceans (1/2 inch (1.2 cm) long shrimp-like crustaceans called amphipods,
krill, copepods, etc.), plankton, and mollusks (including squid and fish) from
the ocean sediment. They usually feed on their right side, sucking up mouthfuls
of mud filled with organic matter. Their baleen filters out the nourishing
organic material (mostly amphipods), and the whale spits out the mud. The tongue
loosens the amphipods (and other tiny food) from the baleen plates and the whale
swallows the food. During
migration and while in the warm breeding waters (about 3-5 months), gray whales
eat very little. They live off their thick layer of blubber (fat).
The baleen plates in the gray whale's jaws have about 160 pairs of short, smooth baleen plates. The largest plates are about 15 inches long and 10 inches wide. The baleen bristles are thicker than those of the other baleen whales and are gray with yellowish bristles. The huge, narrow, pink tongue of the gray whale is used to dislodge the food from the baleen, and weighs about 1-1.5 tons (0.9-1.36 tonnes).
SOCIAL GROUPS
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Gray whales congregated in small pods of about 3 whales, but the
pod may have as many as 16 members. Large groups (up to hundreds of whales) form
in feeding waters, but these are loose, temporary associations. They do not form
long-term bonds.
SWIMMING, DIVING, AND
BREACHING
Gray whales are very agile swimmers. Gray whales can
dive for up to 30 minutes and go 500 feet (155 m) deep. They can swim in even
relatively shallow water without running aground.
They also breach, jumping partially out of the water and falling back
at an angle, splashing and making a loud noise. This may help clean off some of
the encrustations of parasites (barnacles and whale lice) or in communicating
with other gray whales.
Spyhopping is another gray whale activity in which the whale pokes its
head up to 10 feet (3 m) out of the water, turning around slowly, to take a look
around.
SPOUTING-BREATHING
Gray whales breathe air at the surface of the water through 2 blowholes located
near the top of the head. At rest, gray whales spout (breathe) 2-3 times per
minute. Between deep dives they take deep breaths for about 3-5 minutes. The
spout of the gray whale is a noisy stream that rises 10-13 feet (3-4 m) above
the water. It can be heard half a mile away.
PREDATORS AND PARASITES
Killer whales (orcas)
, the
large sharks
, and humans are the gray whales' only natural predators.
Orcas hunt gray whales off the pacific northwest coast near Oregon, USA. Skin
parasites (including barnacles and whale lice) attach themselves to the head
area, back, and blowhole area also.
VOCALIZATION
Gray whales emit grunts, clicks, and
whistling sounds. These sounds and those produced by breaching may be used in
communication with other gray whales.
SLEEP
Gray whales sleep with their
blowholes just exposed on the surface of the water. During their extended
migration they swim day and night, not sleeping.
HABITAT
Gray whales live at the surface
of the ocean near the coastline but dive to the bottom to feed.
SPEED
Gray whales normally
swim 2-6 mph (3.2-9.8 kph), but can go up to 10-11 mph (16-17.5 kph) in bursts
when in danger. Feeding speeds are slower, about 1-2.5 mph (1.6-4 kph). Their
long migration of about 10,000 miles (16000 km) usually takes about 2-3 months.
MIGRATION
Gray whales make an extraordinarily long migration from the
Arctic ocean (northwest of Alaska in the Chukchi Sea) to the Baja peninsula off
Mexico, and back each year. They travel about 12,500 miles (20,110 km) each
year, staying near the coast. They feed in the cold arctic waters and calve and
mate in the warm, protected tropical lagoons of the pacific ocean off Baja,
Mexico.
REPRODUCTION
Gray
whale breeding occurs mostly in the winter to early spring while near the
surface and in warm waters. The gestation period is about 13.5 months and the
calf is born head first (unusual for cetaceans) and near the surface of the
warm, shallow waters. The newborn instinctively swims to the surface within 10
seconds for its first breath; it is helped by its mother, using her flippers.
Within 30 minutes of its birth the baby whale can swim. The newborn calf is
about 15 feet long and weighs about 1-1.5 ton. Twins are extremely rare (about
1% of births); there is almost always one calf. The baby is nurtured with its
mother's fatty milk (53% fat) and is weaned in about 7-8 months. The mother and
calf may stay together for about a year. Calves drink 50-80 pounds of milk each
day. Gray whales reach maturity at 8 years. Growth stops at age 40 years old.
Mature females give birth every other year in the warm lagoons off Baja, Mexico.
LIFE SPAN
Gray whales have a life
expectancy of 50-60 years.
POPULATION COUNT
It is estimated that
there are about 15,000-22,000 gray whales world-wide. Gray whales are a
protected species.