Beluga Whale, Powell Inlet, Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut, Canada
Polar Haiku
Sleek creamy bodies
Gliding below the surface
Beluga Magic
Taken on September 7, 2018 (uploaded 7/29/19)
September 7, 2018 - Evening of Day 12 of Quark's Northwest Passage Voyage
The evening's activities, sights, and sounds on FLICKR:
flic.kr/p/2gKQ4Vz
Powell Inlet, length 12 miles, lies off the southern coast of Devon Island in the eastern high Arctic. It is situated between Maxwell Bay and Croker Bay, north of Lancaster Sound and Barrow Strait.
www.oceana.ca/en/marine-life/marine-life-canada
BELUGA WHALE (Delphinapterus leucas)
Beluga whales are easy to spot, thanks to their white color, large size and bulging forehead. At birth these pale whales aren’t white at all – they’re slate grey, and it can take up to eight years to develop their distinct white colour. They are unique among whales because they have very flexible necks and can move their head in almost any direction, separately from their body. They are also known as “sea canaries” because they are a chatty species. They are able to create such a wide variety of sounds due to the tissue in their large, bulbous forehead, called a melon, which is used to create and amplify sounds in the marine environment. The noises belugas make are both to communicate with their pod as well as to navigate. Belugas use echolocation to navigate in the dark waters of the Arctic Ocean.
Beluga whales have rounded front, or pectoral, fins and they lack a dorsal fin, unlike most other whale and dolphin species. They have a very prominent, bulging forehead and a short, blunt snout. They grow to be three to four metres long, weighing anywhere from 250 to 1,000 kilograms. Male belugas are larger than females.