Cetaceans Essays

  • Cetacean Intelligence Essay

    984 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cetaceans are thought to be some of the most intelligent species on this planet. Popular culture has embraced the idea of cetacean intelligence with shows such as the 1960s hit TV series Flipper, where a dolphin is used to help fight crime. In his comedic science fiction novels, the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, author Douglas Adams suggests that dolphins are the second most intelligent creatures on Earth, behind mice and above humans. Although most scientists would probably argue that humans

  • Overview of the Whaling of the Makah People

    1441 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Makah’s Whaling The Makah people indigenous to the Pacific Northwest have a very close and long standing cultural bond to the ocean. This cultural bond is displayed in various forms such as their artwork, history, and lore. One key aspect of their culture has come scrutiny within the past twenty years—whaling. Since 1855, the Makah people have legally held the right to whale in designated waters around their reservation. In the 1920’s, the Makah decided to halt whaling due to a dwindling population

  • The Conservation of Whales and Dolphins

    1219 Words  | 3 Pages

    format. The compilations discuss many global issues revolving around the cetacean species, such as the protection and conservation of these water mammals and the various ways that they are endangered or harmed. This book also contains information about numerous international organizations and departments that regulate and maintain whaling laws and marine-life policies. An accredited author, often holding a degree in marine or cetacean biology or the head of one of the departments or organizations mentioned

  • Rasta's Necklace Symbolism

    700 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nukkin Ya goes into complicated messages about teenage years, and sometimes feeling different among others at school. Symbols revolve around messages of belonging and self-knowledge. The main symbols are a Rasta neckless, a ketch a beached whale and the tides. These symbols support the messages about, having to move on and feeling like an outsider. , The Rasta’s necklace has an important place in the novel, due to how it symbolises belonging and moving on. The necklace

  • The Destruction of the Minke Whale in Mobe Dick by Herman Melville

    1196 Words  | 3 Pages

    Captain Ahab was a fictional character that participated in whale hunting in a book called Moby Dick. Moby Dick was the name of the great white whale that Captain Ahab was pursing to hunt. “The Minke Whale also known as the baleen whale is the smallest of the rorqual species, and the females are normally larger than the males,” Sea Shepherd1, but due to commercial whaling they are facing extinction. Minke Whale Hunting is a problem in Antarctic Ocean which is also known as the Southern Ocean, They

  • Whale Behavior Essay

    685 Words  | 2 Pages

    Whale Behaviors: Mysterious and Unknown Whales are perhaps by far the most mysterious creatures of the deep blue. It is not that we do not know much about the whales; rather, it is the reasons behind the ways that they act and communicate that we do not yet understand. Their ways of life have been researched in the past and present. Many speculations have been made as to why they do what they do, but the speculations themselves have speculations. Everyone has their own opinion but an opinion is not

  • Should Whaling Be Banned Essay

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    Japan’s has been hunting whales illicitly for many years. They get away with this because very few countries are willing to stand up to them. Also the methods japan use to kill the whales are inhumane. The environmental impact is another reason that the whaling should be banned. Finally the law needs to be changed to better protect the whales and dolphins. To conclude Japan’s whaling should be abolished before it bring harm to our earth. Japan has a very cruel method to kill the whales. Whaling

  • Why Whaling Should Be Banned

    1076 Words  | 3 Pages

    1. - Do you agree with the Norwegian and Japanese position on permitting the hunting of non-endangered species of whales as a cultural exemption? I can agree with it as long as they fish non-endangered species to continue whaling for the cultural reason. However, endangered species such as Finback Whale, which is still hunted by Iceland, have to be protected and excluded from the permission. I mentioned the cultural reason, but the custom of whaling and eating its meat has come to fade out in

  • The Pros And Cons Of Whaling

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    The definition of whaling is the practice or industry of hunting and killing whales for their oil, meat, or whalebone. The act of hunting and killing whales is starting to affect the opinions of a portion of the citizens in the countries where whaling is practiced where others support whaling because of the huge role it plays in the history and culture of their country. Whaling was once considered a business for countries including Canada, the Faroe Islands, Greenland, Iceland, Indonesia, Japan,

  • The Evolution of Whales

    1202 Words  | 3 Pages

    and Egypt have revealed, “…these early cetaceans had mobile elbows and external hind limbs with articulated knees. However, they were fully aquatic, except for Ambulocetus, which was amphibious-much like sea lions” (Walking with Whales). Scientists had some idea to the evolutionary process of whales. “It has always been clear that aquatic cetaceans must have evolved from terrestrial mammals and returned to the water, and the forelimbs of recent cetaceans still have the same general pattern as

  • Emotion and Cognition in Our Oceans' Mammals

    1204 Words  | 3 Pages

    the jailed cetaceans. With symptoms that mimic those of humans suffering from post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (Bradshaw, 2010), there is no denying that these underwater inmates are sick. But instead of setting the innocent free, the people in positions of power, the ones who really have the ability to make a change in public opinion about cetaceans in captivity, are choosing profit over “vitality” (Clark, 2014). But not all cetaceans live lives of torment and torture. Cetaceans in the wild

  • Whales Evolution Essay

    1110 Words  | 3 Pages

    earth (Mueller, Aug. 2010). Every living organism has evolved at one point or another. Whales have evolved from a land animal into an animal that lives only in the ocean. Whales are believed to have come from land ancestors. The traditional theory of Cetacean evolution was that whales were related to Mesonychids, and extinct order of carnivorous animals (hoofed animals), which resembled wolves with hooves and

  • Early Odontocetic Environmental Analysis

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    River dolphins have been an elusive group of cetaceans, taxonomically and biologically, since the time of their first noted observation in the wild. They are proven to have oceanic ancestors which invaded the riverine systems on at least three independent events and hence develop ecological extreme specialization to adapt to the freshwater environment. Although this hypothesis has been challenged, invasion of the freshwater systems might have insured their survival against either competitive exclusion

  • Taiji, Japan: Unveiling the Dolphin Massacre

    1948 Words  | 4 Pages

    Taiji Dolphin Massacre Will there ever be a limit as to how many and which type of animals can be killed for consumption by humans? Many will be surprised at the variety of exotic foods that exist around the world such as giraffe, camel, worms, scorpions, and other insects. Dolphin and whale meat is widely enjoyed in Japan especially in the small town of Taiji, Japan where a big secret has been kept for a very long time. There are many changes that can be and need to be made in this big world of

  • Dolphin Essay

    879 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Bottlenose dolphin is an interesting type of dolphin because of its unique features. The Bottlenose dolphin, or Tursiops, lives in shallow parts of the ocean like the continental shelf near the beach. Bottlenose dolphins are one type of dolphins that live in the ocean because there are tons of different types of dolphins. The bottlenose dolphins live in the pacific ocean and arctic ocean because they have warm blubber to keep them warm in the north. All though bottlenose dolphins live in mostly

  • Bottlenose Dolphin Research Paper

    677 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bottlenose dolphins are the most common and well known type of dolphin. The name bottlenose describes this species of dolphin as they have a short, stubby beak (bottle-like shape). A bottlenose dolphin is a cetacean, which means it is a marine mammal. They are also one of the most-commonly studied cetacean because they live near coasts and adjust well to captivity. It’s Genus and Species names are; Tursiops Truncatus. A bottlenose dolphin’s pectoral flippers are used to steer and stop. The lobes of the

  • Why Kill the Dolphins?

    1189 Words  | 3 Pages

    Why Kill the Dolphins? Dolphins make up the largest and most diverse family of cetaceans. The family contains 26 recognized species of which 13 tend to have long well defined beaks and streamlined robust bodies. Many vary in size, shape, colors, beaks and flippers, as humans have various characteristics. One of the most common dolphins that are found in southern California is the bottlenose dolphin (Kelly). The bottlenose dolphin is mainly found in coastal waters between 45 degrees north and

  • The Dolphin Slaughter in Taiji

    1148 Words  | 3 Pages

    Continue [Internet]. 2014 Jan 29: Sea Shepherd; [cited 2014 Feb 3]. Available from: http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/2014/01/29/taijis-dolphin-hunts-continue-1549 4. History of Taiji's Cetacean Kill [Internet]. Sea Shepherd; [cited 2014 Feb 3]. Available from: http://www.seashepherd.org/cove-guardians/cetacean-kill.html

  • The Bottlenose Dolphin

    1874 Words  | 4 Pages

    Have you ever wondered how the Tursiops Truncatus dolphin got its name? It got its name because it's nose, which is short and stubby. The Tursiops Truncatus' coloring is different from other dolphins. Their physical appearance is intriguing and distinctive. They have fascinating family life and eating habits. You can even see bottlenose dolphins in many places in the U.S.A. Their main home is the Pacific Ocean, but they also live in many other places. The coloring of the bottlenose dolphin

  • Welfare Of Animals In Captivity Essay

    2177 Words  | 5 Pages

    How does captivity effect the welfare of Whales and Dolphins? It is often debated on whether or not marine mammals should be in held in captivity. Some say the captivity of these animals is great for educating the public while others say it is destroying the physical and mental health of these creatures. Kelly A. Waples and Nicholas J. Gales have put together an academic journal discussing the health effects captivity has on dolphins. Waples is a member of the Marine Mammal Research Group and attended