How to Use baleen whale in a Sentence
baleen whale
noun-
Their only food source would be the large baleen whales.
— Jamie Seidel, Fox News, 15 Aug. 2018 -
The biggest whales of all (blue, humpback and so on) are baleen whales.
— The Economist, 14 Dec. 2019 -
The minke whale is the smallest baleen whale in Alaska waters.
— Morgan Krakow, Anchorage Daily News, 24 July 2022 -
Much of how baleen whales hear, compared to toothed whales, is still a mystery.
— Sofia Quaglia, Discover Magazine, 27 Dec. 2023 -
There are 14 types of baleen whales, including the humpback, blue, and fin whales.
— Allison Futterman, Discover Magazine, 17 Jan. 2024 -
All are baleen whales, possessing a mouth full of comb-like plates, rather than teeth.
— Kathryn Miles, BostonGlobe.com, 11 Apr. 2018 -
Among marine mammals, baleen whales account for more than half of the biomass.
— Byelizabeth Pennisi, science.org, 27 Feb. 2023 -
The health of baleen whale populations supports the health of a host of other species.
— Kate Wong, Scientific American, 13 Mar. 2023 -
Known as the largest animals in the world, blue whales are members of the baleen whale family.
— Maura Fox, San Diego Union-Tribune, 9 May 2023 -
The peculiar grin of the baleen whale is turning out to be full of surprises.
— Jennifer S. Holland, Smithsonian, 1 Sep. 2017 -
However, even in this case, the larynx of a large baleen whale is pretty wide.
— Kyle Hill, Discover Magazine, 19 June 2013 -
There’s a Miocene era baleen whale skull on display that was found in the Calvert Cliffs in Maryland, for example.
— Rachael Lallensack, Smithsonian Magazine, 20 Aug. 2020 -
Yet the baleen whale is obviously a far cry from any mammal on land.
— Carl Zimmer, Discover Magazine, 16 Aug. 2011 -
Sea lions, Guadalupe fur seals and baleen whales died at higher rates than usual.
— oregonlive, 21 Jan. 2020 -
And the whale shark is a docile scoop feeder, honestly closer to a baleen whale than our mental image of a scary shark.
— Caroline Delbert, Popular Mechanics, 18 Aug. 2023 -
Most of the species that have benefited from the moratorium are baleen whales.
— The Economist, 26 Oct. 2017 -
The North Atlantic right whale is a baleen whale that uses a filter-feeder system to consume krill.
— Kyle Mizokami, Popular Mechanics, 15 Nov. 2018 -
For years, scientists have disagreed about which species of baleen whale came first, and how the toothless species were related.
— Author: Karen Weintraub, Anchorage Daily News, 7 Apr. 2018 -
Other filter-feeding baleen whales like blue, fin and minke whales produce much simpler songs that are more or less the same every year.
— Will Dunham, Anchorage Daily News, 4 Apr. 2018 -
Only one baleen whale species, a humpback, was observed grieving.
— Jason Daley, Smithsonian, 20 June 2018 -
In 19th-century Australia, a pod of killer whales was known to herd baleen whales into a bay near a whalers’ settlement, then slap their tails to alert the humans to ready the harpoons.
— Camille Bromley, WIRED, 29 Aug. 2023 -
The team was testing a hypothesis about baleen whale foraging that grew out of research on seabirds.
— Kate Wong, Scientific American, 13 Mar. 2023 -
In the popular 2003 animated film Finding Nemo, two fish gulped down by a baleen whale escape when the whale shoots them out on a jet of water.
— Claire Eamer, Smithsonian, 27 Mar. 2018 -
This image shows the similarity between the way the pouch beneath the pelican’s bill functions and the throat of a feeding baleen whale.
— Cecilia Rodriguez, Forbes, 1 Sep. 2021 -
And there is fossil evidence megalodons used this tactic to stun their favorite meal — baleen whales.
— Jamie Seidel, Fox News, 15 Aug. 2018 -
Many researchers are investigating the question of how baleen whales got so big.
— Jason Daley, Smithsonian, 10 Apr. 2018 -
The lion’s share of this category is made up of baleen whales such as the fin whale, which has a biomass of eight million metric tons—around 60 percent of the aquatic mammals.
— Jan Dönges, Scientific American, 8 Mar. 2023 -
Along with seals, seabirds and baleen whales, penguins gorge mainly on Antarctic krill, a shrimp-like crustacean that thrives on the kind of phytoplankton found under sea ice.
— Bill Weir, CNN, 26 Mar. 2023 -
Fourteen species of baleen whales are instrumental in moving carbon, nitrogen and iron through the ocean, a 2021 study in Nature found.
— Clare Mulroy, USA TODAY, 3 Apr. 2024 -
Air sacs also evolved in a way that may allow a baleen whale to recycle air while creating vocal sounds, according to researchers.
— Amarachi Orie, CNN, 22 Feb. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'baleen whale.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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