A male humpback whale swam 8,106 miles (13,046 km) from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean, mingling with other whale populations and potentially having sex with them along the way.
A young male humpback whale has been spotted fraternizing with females in two different groups located on opposite sides of ...
It has been reported that a male humpback whale which was earlier sighted in 2013 around the Pacific Ocean coast in Colombia, recently appeared near Zanzibar in the Indian Ocean, having swam ...
While humpback whales conduct some of the longest migrations of any animal in the world, this particular whale’s trip is ...
This humpback whale was first photographed in 2013 off Colombia’s Pacific coast in Tribugá Bay. At the time, it was swimming ...
But in 2022, the whale was unexpectedly detected in the Indian Ocean near Zanzibar, off the coast of East Africa. The typical migration route for humpback whales can exceed 8,000 kilometers (4,971 ...
It was again photographed in August 2022 off Fumba in the Zanzibar Channel, southwest Indian Ocean. “This represents the longest recorded great-circle distance between sightings on two breeding ...
A male humpback whale crossed at least three oceans in search of sex, a new study shows. The whale's journey is the longest great-circle distance between two sightings ever recorded for the ...