News
A new study links toxic algae found in bowhead whales to ocean warming - a growing threat to Arctic food webs.
Harmful algae blooms have been rapidly producing in a place previously too cold to host the toxin: the Arctic.
Rising toxins found in bowhead whales harvested for subsistence use by Alaska Natives on the North Slope show that ocean ...
A marine biologist captured video of the moment a bowhead whale cracked through a layer of ice in West Greenland to take a ...
Analysis of bowhead whale poop shows that more toxins from typically warm-water toxic algae species are entering Arctic food ...
Rising toxins found in bowhead whales, harvested for subsistence purposes by Alaska Native communities, reveal ...
A die-off of fur seals last year at St. Paul is the first compelling case of fatal saxitoxin poisoning in marine mammals, ...
Bowhead whales were known to live up to 200 years, and a new study finds that southern right whales may live up to age 150 if they aren’t being hunted ...
Researchers have long suspected that bowhead whales keep in touch from far away. New evidence of synchronized diving between two whales 100 kilometers apart supports the theory.
New research examining 11,700 years of bowhead whale persistence throughout the Arctic projects that sea ice loss due to climate change will cause their habitat to severely contract by up to 75 ...
Bowhead Whales Could Be Diving In Sync With Their Long-Distance Pals “The possibility of acoustically connected whales, which seem to be diving alone but are actually together, is mind bending." ...
Rising toxins found in bowhead whales, harvested for subsistence purposes by Alaska Native communities, reveal that ocean ...
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