GENERAL INFORMATION
The Southern Right Whale is a marine mammal, it has a 15 meters length. The females are bigger than the males. It has a mouth with “cornea beards”. With the “cornea beards” the right whale filters the water, retaining the little organism that it eats. Southern Right whales are skimmers, filter feeders that swim slowly with their mouth open, constantly eating. On occasion, they are also bottom feeders, eating benthic prey from the mud on the ocean floor. The fine baleen hairs can filter out very tiny prey including copepods, steropods, euphasiids and mysids (tiny crustaceans).
The Southern Right Whales are baleen whales with bow-shaped lower jaw and a head that is up to one-quarter of the body length. The head is hairier than most whales; up to 300 hairs are found on the tip of the lower jaw and 100 are on the upper jaw. There are also callosities (a series of horny growths) behind the blowhole, on the chin, above the eyes, on the lower lip, and on the rostrum (the beak-like upper jaw).
Nowadays, this specie has more than 1.800 different individuals, which have inhabited the Peninsula de Valdés. Every year, in the autumn ending, arrives to the Pensinsula de Valdés (San José gulf and Nuevo gulf) a big community of Southern Right Whales. In this period, that community is looking for not much deep water to give birth to the litters . Between October and December, the right whale gives up the “litter zone”, and moves to its feeding summer areas. This areas are located in deep ocean waters. The main food of the right whale is the “krill”.
|