Login | Register
The Engineer's Place for News and Discussion®


Animal Science

The Animal Science Blog is the place for conversation and discussion about scientific and technological topics related to pets, livestock, and other animals. See how cutting-edge advances help - or hinder - species around the world. The blog's owner, SavvyExacta, is a lifelong animal enthusiast with more than 20 years of experience with horses. Pets Speckles (a beagle) and Freckles (an English setter) are frequent topics on the blog.

Previous in Blog: Dogs Recognize Family Members   Next in Blog: Travel Accessories for Pets
Close

Comments Format:






Close

Subscribe to Discussion:

CR4 allows you to "subscribe" to a discussion
so that you can be notified of new comments to
the discussion via email.

Close

Rating Vote:







Mystic Aquarium's Beluga Whales

Posted June 11, 2012 12:00 AM by SavvyExacta
Pathfinder Tags: beluga whales Mystic Aquarium

When my family visited Mystic Seaport (read about it on the TechnoTourist blog), we also stopped by the Mystic Aquarium, where whales are protected rather than hunted. In addition to housing the typical species of fish, sting rays, sharks, penguins, and sea lions, Mystic Aquarium is also home to several beluga whales.

Beluga Whales

Male belugas usually weigh 1,600-2,500 pounds and average 14-16 feet long. Belugas prefer cold water; in the wild, they live in the Arctic Ocean and nearby subarctic regions of the Northern Hemisphere. They are born gray and lighten to white as they age.

Belugas are easy to differentiate from other whales; a bulging "melon" is located above the upper jaw and they have no dorsal fins. To help navigate arctic ice, belugas can swim backwards and have flexible necks that allow them to bump holes in the ice.

Juno was born in 2002 and is the aquarium's youngest beluga. He's on loan from SeaWorld Orlando and was the most interactive with his human visitors, and of course, he enjoys mariachi bands.

Mystic's Beluga Habitat

Four beluga whales live outdoors in a one-acre habitat called Arctic Coast that holds over 750,000 gallons of water. A 2007 study was conducted by students from the University of Connecticut to determine if disturbing background noise was caused by the pool's architecture, pumps, motors, and structural material.

This study was important because dolphins and whales rely on sounds to find food and each other and stay safe from predators. This is especially true for belugas, who are known as "canaries of the sea" because of their huge variety of vocalizations. Hydrophones (underwater microphones) have been used in conjunction with behavioral observations to help researchers determine what some of the vocalizations mean.

It is thought that vocal monitoring could increase understanding of stress. One such case is the population of belugas that live in the St. Lawrence Seaway. Noise pollution from shipping and whale watching, in addition to chemical pollution, may be causing the whales to lose their hearing and causing additional stress on the popluation.

If you really love belugas and the arctic you can spend $6,900 to spend a week observing them at the Arctic Watch Wilderness Lodge at Cunningham Inlet this summer. Or, you could watch a live feed of the belugas at the Vancouver Aquarium (courtesy of explore.org).

In addition to animals, the Mystic Aquarium is also home to the Institute for Exploration, which contains a pretty cool exhibit about the RMS Titanic as explored by the ship E/V Nautilus.

View a photo gallery of the beluga whales and Mystic Aquarium's other animals on CR4's Facebook page.

Resources:

Bioacoustics Laboratory Sound Assessment of Beluga Whale Holding Pool, Mystic Aquarium, Mystic, CT

Mystic Aquarium

URI - Beluga Whales

Wikipedia - Mystic Aquarium & Institute for Exploration

Reply

Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.

Previous in Blog: Dogs Recognize Family Members   Next in Blog: Travel Accessories for Pets