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ELA 3: Whale Migration 10 Views
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Description:
Whale whale whale, what do we have here...a video about whale migration? Nice. We've been feeling a little overwhalemed with intrigue on the subject lately.
Transcript
- 00:05
[Dino and Coop singing]
- 00:13
Why do whales migrate?
- 00:15
Is it out of boredom?
- 00:16
Do they have a timeshare somewhere? [Whale floating in the ocean]
- 00:18
Actually, there are a few reasons—none of which involve resort condos. [Whale in a swimming pool]
Full Transcript
- 00:22
Water temperature, ocean depth, climate change, and the biggest reason…food. [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 00:27
Different types of whales have different migration patterns.
- 00:30
We’re going to focus on two particular kinds of whales for now—the blue whale and the
- 00:33
humpback whale.
- 00:34
The blue whale travels to warmer waters in the winter time to give birth to its babies, [Thermometer at the top]
- 00:38
and to the colder waters in the summer time for food. [Thermometer shows the temperature getting lower]
- 00:41
It’s a real bummer when it gets the two mixed up. [Snowman appears]
- 00:44
The blue whale travels thousands of miles to go from the tropical waters of the Southern
- 00:47
Hemisphere to the cold waters of the Arctic… or the Antarctic. [Migration routes shown by arrows]
- 00:51
aka Penguin Central.
- 00:52
It usually stays in the colder waters for 3 or 4 months, feeding on krill.
- 00:57
If it’s lucky, it’ll make a real, uh…krilling. [Whale eating the krill]
- 01:00
When it comes time to migrate back, the older whales tend to migrate first, with the younger [Whale with a beard and glasses]
- 01:04
whales coming later.
- 01:05
Sorta the equivalent of elderly humans getting up at the crack of dawn, and the younger humans [Old guy outside at sunrise]
- 01:09
sleeping in until 3 pm.
- 01:11
During migration, blue whales eat… nothing.
- 01:14
Nada.
- 01:15
They depend solely on the food they have stored up in their bodies.
- 01:18
The females give birth in warm waters because baby whales only have a thin layer of blubber, [Baby whale]
- 01:22
or fat, to keep them warm.
- 01:24
And there usually aren’t any swaddling experts on hand… [Vet holding on to a baby whale in a blanket]
- 01:27
Humpback whales also spend the winter in warmer waters and the summer in colder waters.
- 01:32
They make these journeys every year from the Northern to the Southern Hemisphere, or vice versa. [Whale travelling through the ocean on a globe]
- 01:36
Just imagine how many frequent swimmer miles they must have saved up. [Whale checking frequent swimmer miles on a computer]
- 01:39
Humpback whales swim very slowly during migration—
- 01:42
only about one mile per hour.
- 01:44
They swim slowly because they’re socializing along the way. [Speed camera shows 1mph]
- 01:47
You can’t hurry good company and even better conversation… [Two whales swimming together and chatting]
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