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Canada-104770-GIFTS 회사 디렉토리
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- Marine Mammals - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Marine mammals play important ecological roles as both predator (many hunt for fish) and as prey, both for sharks and other, larger marine mammals Humans have also long hunted marine mammals for food and fur Although hunting pressures have declined, marine mammals still suffer from low numbers and inadvertent human activities such as certain
- Marine Mammal Acoustics - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Marine mammals are also very adept at imitating sounds Hoover, a harbor seal at the New England Aquarium, imitated human speech well enough to have a recognizable New England accent Logosi, a beluga whale at the Vancouver Aquarium, was able to imitate his own name
- Sea Life Is Accumulating Pathogens - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
An unprecedented survey of seabirds, marine mammals, and sharks on the U S East Coast has revealed that marine wildlife contains a wide variety of disease-causing microbes—including many that have developed resistance to antibiotics and several that can be transmitted to humans The newly published study provides no evidence that the…
- How Do Marine Mammals Avoid the Bends? – Woods Hole Oceanographic . . .
Deep-diving whales and other marine mammals can get the bends - the same painful and potentially life-threatening decompression sickness that strikes scuba divers who surface too quickly A new study offers a hypothesis of how marine mammals generally avoid getting the bends and how they can succumb under stressful conditions
- Stranded Marine Mammals Stir Tough Decisions
“Rehabilitation of stranded marine mammals elicits polarized attitudes,” the authors wrote “The challenge is to find the common ground and the greater good ” When success creates problems Decades ago, few stranded animals could be saved, and those that could were generally placed in zoos and aquariums and displayed for public education
- Study Examines How Diving Marine Mammals Manage Decompression
In April 2010, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution’s Marine Mammal Center (MMC) invited the world’s experts in human diving and marine-mammal diving physiology to convene for a three-day workshop to discuss the issue of how marine mammals manage gas under pressure Twenty-eight researchers discussed and debated the current state of
- Marine Mammals – Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Marine Mammals Ocean Life Marine Mammals Saving Tico A manatee’s odyssey and the role of currents in
- Groundbreaking research sheds light on how whales and dolphins use . . .
Topics: Marine Mammals Partnerships between researchers and local stranding organizations provide a unique opportunity to study marine mammals that would otherwise be difficult to access All response activities are conducted under a federal stranding agreement between IFAW and NMFS under the U S Marine Mammal Protection Act
- Seal Facts - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Narwhals and other marine mammals could be vulnerable to a new threat we’ve become all too familiar with: COVID-19 November 10, 2020 WHOI working to help save critically endangered North Atlantic right whales
- Right Whales - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
The North Atlantic right whale (NARW) (Eubalaena glacialis) is one of the most critically endangered whales in the world—approximately 340 of these majestic marine mammals remain, including less than 80 breeding females NARWs are predominantly found on the Continental Shelf of the East Coast of the United States and Canada, making them
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