4children

It broadens children's knowledge
Menu
  • Home
  • Physical Education
    • Dance
      • general meaning of dancing for us humans
        • Self-expression in dance
        • Communication and creativity in dance
      • The physical and mental advantages of dancing
        • The physical advantages of dancing
        • The mental advantages of dancing
      • The most popular dance styles
        • Ballet
        • Modern dance
        • Hip-hop
        • Latin dance
        • Jazz dance
      • Dancing as an occupation
        • Occupation as a dancer
        • Occupation as a choreographer
      • The history of dancing
        • The origins of dancing
        • The inventors of dancing
        • Dancing trends throughout time
      • Famous dancers
        • Famous ballet dancers: Anna Pavlova
        • Famous dancers: Mikhail Baryshnikov
      • How animals dance and why
        • Dancing in the world of animals: The dance of the honey bee
        • Dancing in the world of animals: The dance of the Victoria’s Riflebird
        • Dancing in the world of animals: The dance of the Thomson’s gazelle
        • Dancing in the world of animals: The dance of the humpback whale
        • Dancing in the world of animals: The dance of the Andean flamingos
      • Folk dances around the world
        • Greek folk dances
        • German folk dances
        • Estonian folk dances
        • Italian folk dances
        • Dutch folk dances
        • Australian folk dances
        • New Zealand dances
      • Big international dance competitions
      • Ceremonial and ritual dances
        • Ceremonial dances – The Rain dance
        • Ceremonial dances – The Ghost Dance
        • Ceremonial dances – The Buffalo dance
      • Can everybody dance?
      • Why children should dance
      • Chios Dance Festival
      • TikTok and the world of modern dance trends
        • TikTok dance trends
        • Most famous TikTok dancers
      • How dancing influenced the film industry
        • The influence of dance on the film industry
        • Iconic dance scenes in movies
      • Flash mob
    • Yard Games
      • Kindergarten
        • Tag Games
          • Capture the Flag
          • Freeze Tag
          • The Fox Goes Around
          • Chain Tag
          • Dragon and Princess
          • Hot Dog Tag
        • Skill Games
          • I’m Packing my Suitcase
          • I Spy
          • Egg and Spoon Race
          • Doggy, Doggy, where is your Bone
          • Hopscotch
        • International Games
          • ‘Mensch auf Erden’- Human on Earth
          • ‘Magissa, Magissa ti Mageireveis?’- Witch, Witch what are you Cooking?
          • ‘Fischer, Fischer’ -Ahoi Captain
          • Mila- Apples
          • ‘1,2,3 Escondite Inglés’ – Red Light, Green Light
          • ‘Landje Veroveren’- Conquer Land
        • Pantomime
          • Charade
          • King of 12 swords
          • 1,2,3… Come to Me
          • Follow the Leader
          • Why are you late?
        • Reaction and Orientation
          • 15,14
          • The Floor is Lava
          • Heads Up 7 Up
          • Fire, Water, Storm
          • Balloon Games
          • Cookie Games
      • Primary School
        • Ball Games
          • The Burning Ball
          • Country Ball
          • Zombie Ball
          • The Great Wall Of China
          • Dodge Ball
          • Piggy In The Middle
        • Running Games
          • The Smurfs
          • Sleepyhead
          • Octopus
          • Freedom
          • Dwarf, Giant, Fairy
          • Take It… Or Not
          • Paranoia
        • Circle Games
          • The Screaming Circle
          • The Battle Circle
          • Hah-Heh-Hoh
          • The Fateful Blinking Game
          • The Bomb
          • Catch The Jacket
          • Ninja
          • Rush Hour
          • I’m Sitting…
          • Electricity
          • The Gordian Knot
        • Chilled Games
          • Human Memory
          • Giant Fli-Fla-Flu
          • Evolution
          • Fruit Salad
          • Concentration
    • Volleyball
      • The origins of Volleyball
      • Volleyball rules
      • Positions of players
      • Sorts of plays
      • Why are teamsports important for children?
    • Judo
      • Warm-up
      • Stretching
      • Ukemi
      • Throwing Techniques
      • Grappling Techniques
      • History of Judo
    • Fitness
      • Fitness at home
      • Calisthenics
        • Basic bodyweight exercises
        • Handstand
        • Muscle Up
        • Human Flag
        • Front Lever
      • Running
        • 100 Meter Sprint
        • 200 Meter Sprint
        • 400 Meter Sprint
        • 800 Meters
        • 1500 Meters
        • 3000 Steeplechase
        • 5000 Meters
        • 10000 Meters
        • Relay Races
        • Half Marathon
        • Marathon
        • Hurdles Events
      • Jumping
        • High Jump
        • Long Jump
        • Triple Jump
        • Pole Vault
      • Throwing
        • Discus Throw
        • Javelin Throw
        • Shot Put
        • Hammer Throw
      • Decathlon and Heptathlon
      • HIIT Training
      • Training with weights
      • Fitness Challenges
    • Handball
      • History
      • Rules
      • Field, positioning and lineup
      • Plays
      • Historical games & players
      • Exercises
      • Injuries
      • Handballs
      • Teamwork and team spirit
      • Wheelchair handball
    • Soccer
      • History of soccer
        • History of soccer in Greece
        • History of soccer – Part 2
        • The History of Women’s Soccer
        • Historical Games in Soccer
        • Historical coaches
        • Historical Teams in Soccer
      • Rules of Soccer – The most important rules  
        • Rules of Soccer Part 2
        • Rules of Soccer Offside
      • Variations of soccer- Futsal
        • Tennis Ball
        • Beach Soccer
      • The Influence of Billionaires in Football
      • Do Soccer Academies Shape the Future of the Sport?
      • Soccer Rivalries
  • Arts
    • Music
      • History
        • History of Hip Hop
        • History of Rock music
        • Jazz Music
        • Reggae
        • The Beatles
        • Queen
      • Music and body
        • Music and Memory
        • Express emotions trough music
        • National Anthems
    • CINEMA
      • Let’s Experiment with Cinema
        • The first experimental movies and how to create one at home
        • Basic vocabulary for aspiring film makers
        • One day on a movie set: habits and custom of filming on set
        • The importance of the soundtrack: let’s play with it!
        • Basic guide of video editing: how to use CapCut
      • The cinematic storytelling
        • Silent Cinema: a different way to tell stories
        • Silent Cinema genres
        • From the Silent Cinema to the Sound Cinema: the issues of a great change
        • The new genres of Sound Cinema
        • The Cartoon Era
    • Music
      • About Instruments
      • Music Symbols Part 1
      • Music Symbols Part 2
      • Music Symbols Part 3
      • Music in Movies
      • Basic Music Theory
        • Musical Notes
        • Scales
        • The Rest
        • Chords
        • Cadences
      • How to compose a song
        • How to use the circle of fifths
        • Going on a Songwriting Adventure
      • Tips and Tricks for learning the clarinet
      • A beginners guide to the guitar
        • The start of loving classical music
          -Your lie in April-
      • Singing
        • Getting started with singing
          • Reasons to learn singing
          • How to connect through singing
            • The science behind singing
            • Traditional singing
            • Joining a choir
        • Different styles of singing
          • Classical singing
            • History and characteristics of classical singing
            • Reasons to learn classical singing
            • How to get started with classical singing
          • Jazz singing
            • History and characteristics of jazz singing
            • Reasons to learn jazz singing
            • How to get started with jazz singing
          • Pop singing
            • History and characteristics of pop singing
            • Reasons to learn pop singing
            • How to get started with pop singing
          • Other genres
            • Musical Theatre
            • Hip-Hop
  • Healthy Nutrition
    • Healthy food
      • Breakfast
        • Homemade granola
        • Oatmeal breakfast cookies
        • Tofu scramble
      • Lunch
        • Chickpea wraps
        • Crispy Buffalo Tofu Wrap
        • Moroccan couscous salad
      • Snacks
        • Banana bread
        • Chia pudding
        • Roasted chickpeas
      • Dinner
        • Homemade tofu
        • Buddha bowl
        • Vegan barbecue jackfruit tacos
      • Diseases
        • Intolerance and allergy
        • Diabetes
        • Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
        • Foodborne illness
        • Water intoxication
      • Superfoods
      • Seasonal eating
        • Winter
        • Spring
        • Summer
        • Autumn
      • Healthy diet
        • Vegan
        • Vegetarian
        • Pescatarian
        • Keto
        • Intermittent fasting
        • Mediterranean diet
        • DASH diet
      • Clean eating
        • Portion sizes
        • Fast food
        • Antibiotics
        • Supplements
      • Eating disorders
        • Anorexia nervosa
        • Bulimia
        • Orthorexia
        • Binge eating disorder
        • Pica
      • Myths
    • Nutrients
      • Protein
      • Dairy
      • Grains
      • Fruits and Vegetables
      • Saturated fats
      • Salt
      • Added Sugars
      • Nutrient Deficiency
        • Deficiency Of Calcium
        • Deficiency Of Iodine
        • Deficiency Of Iron
        • Deficiency Of Magnesium
        • Deficiency Of Vitamin B12 
    • Daily Guidelines
      • Introduction to healthy habits
    • Recipes
      • Wraps
      • Sweet Snacks
      • Savory Dips
      • Sweet Dips
  • Educational Stories
    • Elementary School
      • Moral Stories
        • The Lion and the Mouse
        • The Boy Who Cried Wolf
      • Fairy Tales
        • Goldilocks and the Three Bears
        • Cinderella
      • Comedy
        • Let’s be friends
        • The Trouble with Trouble
    • Middle School
      • Moral Stories
        • The Gift of the Magi
        • The Treasure in the Forest
      • Fairy Tales
        • The Sprightly Tailor
        • Hans My Hedgehog
      • Comedy
        • The Rat that ate Iron
        • The Lazy Loppin’ Goat
    • High School
      • Tragedy Stories
        • Home Burial
        • The Open Boat
        • Araby
      • Moral Stories
        • The King and His Hawk
        • The Chicken Who Wouldn’t Eat Gravel
        • The Ephemera: Emblem of Human Life
      • Fairy Tales
        • The Little Match Girl
        • The Selfish Giant
      • Comedy
        • Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town
        • Joy
  • Environment
    • Climate change
      • Greenhouse gases
        • Carbon dioxide
        • Methane
        • Nitrous oxide
        • Water (vapor)
        • Ozone
        • Hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFC) and hydrofluorocarbons (HFC)
      • Human caused climate change
        • Powering buildings
        • Transportation
        • Deforestation
        • Consuming too much
        • Generating power
      • Nature caused climate change
        • Ocean currents
        • Volcanic activity
        • Movement of Crustal Plates
        • Variations in Solar activity
        • Changes in the Earth’s Orbit
      • How Climate change affects wildlife: Impacted species and places
        • Whales
        • Tiger
        • The sea turtles
        • Phyto-and zooplankton
        • Polar bear
        • Humans
        • Giant panda
        • Eastern Himalayas
        • Dolphins
        • Arctic
        • The Coral Triangle
        • Elephants
        • Amazon rainforest
      • What can we do to stop or slow down climate change? Solutions
        • Transportation
        • Save energy at home
        • Reduce food waste
        • Reduce, reuse, and recycle
        • Electric vehicles
        • Eat more vegetables

Whales

Whales, with a scientific name of Cetacea, are a widespread and diverse group of entirely aquatic placental marine mammals. There are two groups of whales: baleen (Mysticeti) whales and toothed (Odontoceti) whales. There are four families of Mysticetes: the rorquals, right whales, the pygmy right whale, and the grey whale. Within the Odontocetes are belugas and narwhals, the sperm whale, the dwarf and pygmy sperm whale, and the beaked whales.
Whales are offshore animals. They feed, mate, give birth, suckle, and raise their offspring at sea. The smallest whales measure 2.6 meters and weigh approximately 135 kilograms. The biggest one is the blue whale, which can weigh 190 tons and is 29.9 meters long. That is also, knowingly, the largest animal that has ever lived. Baleen whales don’t have teeth. They have something called baleen. It is a fringe-like structure that allows them to discharge a huge amount of water from their mouth while they keep inside the krill and plankton they feed on. Their heads are massive—around 40% of their body mass—and since they have throat folds that allow them to expand their moths, they are able to swallow a huge amount of water at a time. Toothed whales have conic teeth, which are perfect for catching fish, seals, and squid. They also have super good hearing, and they can hear above and below the surface of the water. Since whales evolved from land-living animals, they have to come to the surface to breathe air. Whales have modified nostrils or blowholes on top of their heads. Through them, they breathe. Whales are warm-blooded. Under the skin, they have a layer of fat or blubber. Whales are also known for the sound they make underwater, especially the humpback whales. Whales prefer colder water, and they migrate closer to the equator to give birth.

Whales are big and mythical animals, but unfortunately, almost half of the species are endangered or vulnerable. Around 300,000 whales and dolphins are killed every year because of fisheries by catch, shipping, climate change, loss of food, diseases, and habitat loss. The most dangered species of whale is the North Atlantic whale, with only 400 left. The others range from 10 000 to 90 000 individuals.
In the past, it was hard to tell the threat to the whales, the reason being that there wasn’t just enough knowledge about these mammals. Nowadays, there are around 1.3 million whales. The number used to be 4 to 5 million. One of the reason why whales are endangered is the commercial whaling. In most of country’s it is strictly forbidden. The other reason is that the world’s busiest shipping lanes are similar to the areas where whales feed, birth, nurse, or travel between feeding and breeding areas. Clashes with ships, by-catch, and pollution injure and kill the whales. There’s also noise pollution. It disturbs whale communication or can even damage their hearing.
Internationally, the sale of whale products is forbidden, but there are still three countries that allow it: Iceland, Norway, and Japan. Because of this, over 1000 whales are killed every year.
Global warming is also affecting whales through warming oceans and habitat loss. Most likely, the number of plankton (both phyto and zoo) will change because climate change affects the seawater temperature, winds, and ocean currents. That can mean that blue and humpback whales, which feed on plankton, have to migrate more, and therefore they don’t have enough time to search food. Because of climate change, the North Atlantic whales are endangered, and their reproductive rates are also low.

Scientists have discovered that great whales, for example, baleen whales and sperm whales, can capture a large amount of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. One whale is able to capture more CO2 than thousands of trees could.
As already said, the biggest whales feed on plankton. Phytoplankton captures CO2 from the atmosphere, and it also produces 50% of the oxygen. By producing the oxygen, they have to capture CO2, and they capture around 37 billion metric tons every year. Scientists have noticed that wherever whales are, phytoplankton is also there. They have discovered that the waste of whales contains iron and nitrogen, and these are needed for phytoplankton to grow. Whales also bring minerals to the surface of the ocean by their vertical movement. This is called the ‘whale pump’.
Whales also absorb carbon in their bodies. Some whales can live around one hundred years. When they die, their body sinks to the bottom of the ocean. That means that the carbon in their body is also settled at the bottom of the ocean. When land animals die, the carbon from their bodies is released back into the atmosphere. It can take up to 1000 years before the carbon from a whale’s body reaches the surface. This phenomenon is known as ‘blue carbon’.

In conclusion, whales are on top of the food chain. They have an important role to play in the overall health of the marine environment. Whales are important for fixing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. On average, each bigger whale fixes around 33 tons of CO2, contributing to the fight against climate change. At the same time, trees absorb only 56 kg of CO2. So maybe protecting the whales will help us fight climate change.

https://pixabay.com/photos/whales-humpback-maui-lahaina-4858366/

Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whale
https://www.worldwildlife.org/species/whale
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/facts/whale-facts
https://iwc.int/management-and-conservation/environment/climate-change
https://www.worldwildlife.org/stories/what-makes-whales-fin-tastic-climate-champions
https://savethewhales.org/threatened-and-endagered/
https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/fandd/issues/2019/12/natures-solution-to-climate-change-chami

Contact Form

2 + 4 =

Testimonials

  • Aliquam et varius orci, ut ornare justo. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque augue metus, blandit vel nibh sed, sollicitudin placerat quam. Quisque id scelerisque nibh. Phasellus in orci et felis tristique finibus non quis erat. Quisque nec congue nunc, sagittis aliquet orci. Quisque pulvinar feugiat sodales. Nam fermentum tempus odio sed euismod Quisque pulvinar feugiat sodales.

    Eficitur Sodale
    Web Developer
  • Aliquam et varius orci, Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque augue metus, blandit vel nibh sed, sollicitudin placerat quam. Quisque id scelerisque nibh. Phasellus in orci et felis tristique finibus non quis erat. Quisque nec congue nunc, sagittis aliquet orci. Quisque pulvinar feugiat sodales. Nam fermentum tempus odio sed euismod Quisque pulvinar feugiat sodales.

    Eficitur Sodale
    Web Developer
European Solidarity Corps
Under the auspices of the European Solidarity Corps (ESC)European Solidarity Corps
Experimental


Experimental - Technology Education Sports (T.E.S.) targets the development, the transmission of new technologies and their "engagement" to the Educational System of Greece and the Culture, as well as taking advantage of the possibilities, on educational, cultural and youth subjects, that the Internet can provide.
© 2022 Experimental . All Rights Reserved. Inspired and based on the project of Jannis Trociewitz "Mythological & Historical Webpage for the Youth of Europe"