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Tag attached to the body of a Right Whale.

Tag attached to the body of a Right Whale.
Tag attached to the body of a Right Whale.
Tag attached to the body of a Right Whale.
Tag attached to the body of a Right Whale.
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181911
Aruda, Amalia
Tag attached to the body of a Right Whale.
Still Image
04/18/2006
baumgartner-IMG_4675.jpg
Image of The Day caption:
WHOI biologist Mark Baumgartner attaches an archival suction-cup tag to a North Atlantic right whale while the NOAA Ship Delaware II stands ready to begin environmental sampling in proximity to the whale. The tagging and environmental sampling work is part of an ongoing collaborative study of right whale ecology in the southwestern Gulf of Maine by WHOI and the NOAA Northeast Fisheries Science Center. Learn more about right whale ecology and conservation at the next Science Made Public talk on July 19.
Image of The Day caption (repeat play):
A WHOI biologist attaches an archival suction-cup tag to a North Atlantic right whale in 2010 while the NOAA Ship Delaware II stands ready to begin environmental sampling nearby. The majority of the approximately 450 North Atlantic right on Earth disappear from human observation between late fall and early spring. At today's Science Made Public lecture, Nadine Lysiak will describe how researchers are using new techniques to determine the location of currently unknown right whale habitats and how recent research has improved conservation efforts of these endangered animals. The talk begins at 2:30 in the WHOI Ocean Science Exhibit Center auditorium.
Photo by Amalia Aruda under federal permit #1058-1733 issued to Mark Baumgartner
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Uploaded to promote Baumgartner's Science Made Public Talk. Any other use must be cleared through him.
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