Ahab whale

The US Navy Hawaiian naval center each year consumes millions of dollars to train animal troops, which are some marine animals. Ahab whale is an army in it.

Picture 1 of Ahab whale

(Photo: wmni.net)

Not trained, Ahab whales are fierce, brave, wise, greedy, brutal, the most evil beast in the ocean. They have sharp teeth, a threat of dolphins, sea leopards, sea lions, and sea elephants, even attacking blue whales. Because of such violence, it is often called a tiger

Ahab whale is a large mammal at sea, it is smooth, has a thick layer of fat under the skin to retain heat. The back has a fins in the water, the limbs degenerate, the extremities turn into the posterior fins that have lost him.

The Ahab whale breathes through the lungs, often floating to the surface to change the air, so the nose is located at the top of the head, the nostrils are pointing upwards and there is a free-opening valve at will. When floating on the water, the valve opened to breathe, while the nostrils spewed a fog like fog. A lot of people think that this is a water column, in fact it is just a heat, when exposed to air, forms a column of water.

Ahab whales like to live in a herd, according to polygamy. A flock of whales will have a tall, healthy male worthy of many females. The flock of winter whales is due to the fighting ability of males, the strong ones take more wives than the weak. A herd has 3-5 children, with a flock of 30-40 children. They can almost mate throughout the year, each litter lays 1 child, the whale is breastfed for about 1 year, then goes to find its own.

Ahab whales are training for them to better serve humans because their sounds will scare away other aggressive fish. The United States has successfully trained Ahab whales so they can pick up the remains of the seabed. Some people also want to train them to protect seafood breeding grounds. Ahab whales are distributed in the world's oceans.