Blue Whales Croon A New Tune : NPR Blue whales are updating their playlist, according to new research on the huge mammals. It's not quite West Side Story, but male blue whales use songs to warn away other males and attract females. It's a pulsing sound, more like a large piece of machinery than the Jets and the Sharks. But that song has been changing. By pdboyerin Public bookmarkswith blueoceanographyservice_learningsongswhales
Prehistoric Whale Ate Other Whales For Breakfast : NPR Rarely do scientists get to publish a research paper that begins with the words "The Giant Bite." On Wednesday, fossil hunters from Europe did just that. They've discovered one of the biggest predators that ever lived: a whale — one that devoured other whales and probably anything else it had an appetite for. The scientists call the creature Leviathan melvillei. "Leviathan" means sea monster, and "melvillei" refers, of course, to Herman Melville, who wrote the greatest of whale stories, Moby-Dick. Paleontologist Olivier Lambert says he's read that book — several times. By pdboyerin Public bookmarkswith fossilgiantleviathanoceanographypredatorsresearchservice_learningwhales