We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

A fin whale passing by in still water.

A fin whale passing by in still water.
A fin whale passing by in still water.
A fin whale passing by in still water.
A fin whale passing by in still water.
Comments (0)
348339
Linder, Christopher L.
A fin whale passing by in still water.
Still Image
05/08/2009
graphics/PD5_dailys/cl_20090508102533-2.jpg
This morning before breakfast, we left the ice and were greeted by a fin whale. These baleen whales can grow longer than 78 feet. The water was clear and flat as glass all day, which made even far-off mammals easy to spot. A pair of humpbacks showed their flukes several hundred yards in front of the ship. Steller sea lions popped their heads above water. Some minke whales showed a bit of back. Dozens of harbor porpoises swam in the distance.
Image of The Day caption:
During the International Polar year (2007-2009), biologist Carin Ashjian led a cruise to Bering Sea with a research team studying how climate change is affecting the Arctic s ocean ecosystem, from tiny plankton to whales. The cruise, part of a multi-institution resesarch effort about the Bering Sea, was on the Web as a Polar Discovery expedition, featuring daily dispatches and photographs from the six-week trip. Photographer Chris Linder captured this picture of a fin whale at the sea surface one calm early morning.
Photo by Chris Linder
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections