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Wild orcas on more than 30 occasions in four oceans have attempted to share their prey with people, potentially to develop ...
In a new sign of toolmaking in marine mammals, orcas in the Pacific Northwest were recorded rubbing stalks of kelp against ...
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Live Science on MSNOrcas filmed making out in the wild for first timeFootage captures a pair of orcas nibbling each other's tongues in the Kvænangen fjords in northern Norway. Scientists think ...
A pod of humpback whales encountered a group of killer whales during feeding time off the coast of California. On June 24, a ...
The Canadian Press on MSN4h
‘These weren’t mistakes’: Orcas documented sharing their food with humansJared Towers was in his research vessel on two separate occasions watching killer whales off the coast of Vancouver Island ...
Here & Now ‘s Peter O’Dowd speaks with orca expert Michael Weiss about his research on how orcas in the Salish Sea use kelp ...
Like a proud cat leaving a bird on its owner's doorstep, orcas—also called killer whales—may sometimes offer to share their ...
Researchers focused on the Salish Sea have made an intriguing discovery about Orcas. These whales, which have continually ...
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New Scientist on MSNOrcas scrub each other clean with bits of kelpDrone footage has captured killer whales breaking off stalks of kelp and rubbing the pieces on other orcas, a rare case of ...
For the first time, orcas have been seen making and using tools out of seaweed. The reason? Most likely as a form of social ...
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