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Oceanus evolvere
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Title: Oceanus evolvere View count: 60915 Rating: 4.86 (80 ratings) Description: ❛My Auntie❜ is a whale we encountered for the first time during our 1994 research expedition. She is an older female who has been sighted seven times over twelve years with three different calves. She is with young males and is demonstrating typical courting behavior. She returned with a calf the next year. Tail slapping is a normal interaction between a female and the males accompanying her in what is known as a "competitive group". The Oceania Project's 19th Whale Research Expedition August 2008: http://oceania.org.au/expedition/expedition.html DVDs & Downloads: http://oceania.org.au/iwhales/portal/home.php?cat=297 Help protect Humpback Whales: http://www.stopwhaling.com.au Your community can adopt a Humpback Whale: http://www.stopwhaling.com.au/site/c.ouI0KeMXIvF/b.3263881/k.7A44/Adopt_a_Whale.htm To celebrate the annual return of the Humpback Whales, sixty Australian communities are participating in the Humpback Icon Project. Each of these communities has adopted a known individual Humpback Whale from The Oceania Project's Fluke Catalogue: http://www.stopwhaling.com.au/site/c.ouI0KeMXIvF/b.3263879/k.590F/Humpback_Icon_Project.htm Established in 1988 by Trish & Wally Franklin, The Oceania Project is an independent, non-profit research organization dedicated to the conservation and protection of whales, dolphins and the oceans. The first phase of a long-term study of the Australian Humpback Whales has been the major work of The Oceania Project. This research continues to be made possible by individuals who participate in The Oceania Project's Internship Program. To date, more than 1,300 interns have joined the annual whale research expeditions. --------------------------------------- Tags: cetacea, dolphin, oceania, research, whale, Author: iWhales |