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2011
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August(85)
- Adaptation
- Basking Shark
- Types of Marine Mammals
- Guess the Creature, Part 2
- Sea Turtles
- 10 Facts About Seals
- How Do Sharks Sleep
- Baleen
- Why Lobsters Turn Red
- Open Ocean - Pelagic Zone
- Guess the Creature, Part 2
- Phylum
- Baleen vs. Toothed Whales
- Guess the Creature
- How Fast Can a Shark Swim
- 10 Facts About Seahorses
- What is the Biggest Fish?
- Ways to Help Marine Life
- Types of Cetaceans
- Whale Shark
- Gulf of Mexico Marine Life
- Guess the Creature
- Biggest Ocean Animal
- How to Tell Whales Apart
- Do Whales Have Hair
- Are Whales Fish
- 9 Facts About Lobsters
- Protist
- How To Sex a Lobster
- Shark Week is Here
- 10 Facts About Sharks
- Rorqual
- Guess the Creature Answer
- Intertidal Zone
- Starfish Facts
- Class Gastropoda
- Photo-Identification Research
- Green Sea Urchin (Strongylocentrotus drobachiensis)
- Cetaceans
- Baleen
- Common Periwinkle (Littorina littorea)
- Types of Sirenians
- Omnivore
- Dorsal Fin Collapse
- Marine Conservation
- 10 Facts About Seahorses
- How Do Sharks Sleep
- Kemp's Ridley Sea Turtle
- Get a Marine Internship
- Humpback Whale
- Dorsal Fin
- Humpback Whales Exhaling, or Spouting
- BP Oil Spill in Gulf of Mexico
- Fish Anatomy
- Facts About Sawfish
- Madreporite
- Delphinidae
- Do Whales Sleep?
- Cephalopods
- 10 Facts About Sharks
- 10 Facts About Scallops
- Acadian Hermit Crab (Pagurus acadianus)
- Olive Ridley Sea Turtles
- Brief History of Cod Fishing
- Bowhead Whale
- Placoid Scales
- Whale Watching Tips Roundup
- American Lobster
- Brown Algae
- Brittle Stars and Basket Stars
- Chordata
- Lobster Information
- 10 Facts About Seals
- Shark Attack Tips
- Ocean Acidification
- Great Pacific Garbage Patch
- Human Uses For Algae
- Spider Crab
- Rorqual
- Chinese Mitten Crab
- Ectothermic
- Notochord
- Seals and Sea Lions
- Elasmobranch
- Biggest Ocean Animal
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August(85)
Followers
Blog Archive
- August 2011 (85)
Baleen
Baleen is a strong, yet flexible material made out of keratin, a protein that is the same material that makes up our hair and fingernails. It is used by whales to filter their prey from the sea water.
Whales in the Suborder Mysticeti have several hundred plates of baleen hanging from their upper jaw. Like our fingernails, the baleen grows continuously. The baleen plates are about a quarter-inch apart and are smooth on the outer edge but have a hairy fringe on the inner edge. The fringe on the plates overlaps and creates a mesh-like strainer inside the whale's mouth. The whale uses this strainer to trap its prey (usually small schooling fish, crustaceans or plankton) while it filters out the sea water, which it cannot drink in large quantities.
Some baleen whales, like the humpback whale, feed by gulping large amounts of prey and water and then using their tongue to force the water out in between the baleen plates. Other whales, like right whales, are skim feeders, and move slowly through the water with their mouths open as the water flows in the front of the mouth and out in between the baleen. Along the way, tiny plankton are trapped by the right whale's fine baleen hairs.
Baleen is historically important as it was sought by whalers, who called it whalebone, even though it is not made of bone at all. The baleen was used in many things such as in corsets, buggy whips, and umbrella ribs.
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