What Do You Know About Blue Whales?

Blue whales are the largest animals on Earth, feeding on krill and traveling vast ocean distances.

Written by

Blue Ocean Team

Published on

August 19, 2021
BlogArticles

Blue Whales: Giants of the Ocean

The blue whale is the world’s largest animal, weighing up to 200 tons. Its heart is the size of a Volkswagen Beetle, and its stomach can hold about one ton of krill. To survive, a blue whale consumes roughly four tons of krill per day. These whales are also the loudest animals on the planet, with calls reaching 188 decibels—louder than a jet engine. Their low-frequency whistles, audible over hundreds of kilometers, are likely used for communication and attracting mates.

Appearance and Coloring

  • Blue whales appear blue underwater, but their surface pigmentation is mottled blue-gray.
  • Their underbellies often appear yellowish due to millions of skin-dwelling bacteria.
  • They have a large, flat head and a long, tapering body ending in wide, triangular flukes.

Behavior and Vocalization

  • Blue whales are found in all oceans except the Arctic, usually swimming alone or in pairs.
  • They feed in polar seas during summer and migrate toward equatorial waters as seasons change.
  • They normally cruise at over 5 mph but can reach speeds over 20 mph when disturbed.
  • Blue whales produce groans, pulses, and moans; their calls can travel up to 1,000 miles under ideal conditions.

Longevity

Blue whales are long-lived animals, with lifespans averaging 80–90 years. The oldest recorded individual, determined from earplug layers, was approximately 110 years old.

Distribution and Habitat

  • Blue whales inhabit all oceans except the Arctic, migrating between summer feeding grounds and winter breeding sites.
  • They are most common where krill are abundant; distribution varies by food availability.
  • North Atlantic populations range from the southern hemisphere to the Greenland Sea, with sightings off eastern Canada and the U.S. East Coast.
  • East North Pacific whales spend winters near Mexico and Central America, feeding in summer along the U.S. West Coast, Gulf of Alaska, and central North Pacific.
  • Calving and nursing occur in the Gulf of California from December through March.

Conservation

  • Blue whales were heavily hunted for whale oil in the 1900s, with over 362,000 killed by the mid-1960s.
  • They received international protection in 1966, but populations have recovered only slightly since then.
  • Predators are rare but include sharks and killer whales; ship collisions also cause deaths annually.

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