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Whales Spring to Life on Ocean Floor


A humpback whale leaps out of the water near Lahaina on the island of Maui in Hawaii.
A humpback whale leaps out of the water near Lahaina on the island of Maui in Hawaii.
Whales Give Life Long After They Die
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Their calls can be haunting. Their size can take your breath away. And their worlds are dark and quiet.

Whales!

There are many different species of these huge, warm-blooded, air breathing mammals that live in the sea. There is the blue whale and the killer whale, humpback and orca, just to name a few.

According to several science websites, whales live a long time. There are many different species of whales and each has a different lifespan. The average lifespan, however, is about 50 years.

The Bowhead whale gets its name from its high arched lower jaw that looks like an archer’s bow. (Loke Film and Adam Schmedes/Cell Reports 2015)
The Bowhead whale gets its name from its high arched lower jaw that looks like an archer’s bow. (Loke Film and Adam Schmedes/Cell Reports 2015)

In the wild whales live for a long time. Bowhead whales spend their lives in the cold Arctic waters. They may be the world’s oldest mammals, living possibly more than 200 years!

As they lived, these giants of the sea die big. Before gases develop in the body, or carcass, of a dead whale it sinks to the ocean floor. This is called a “whale fall” and it supplies room and board, in other words food and shelter, to thousands of ocean creatures for many decades.

Scientists have only recently discovered just how many species live in a whale fall. This is mostly because whale falls are difficult to find in the ocean. It is like trying to find a needle in a haystack, as we like to say.

Artist recreation of ocean-bottom ecosystem that grows on whale falls. (Credit: Michael Rothman)
Artist recreation of ocean-bottom ecosystem that grows on whale falls. (Credit: Michael Rothman)

The first stage

The smell of the dead whale brings the first stage of feeders – the traveling, or mobile, scavengers. A wide variety of fish and sharks come from miles and miles to scavenge the dead whale’s soft flesh or tissue. This phase can last as short as several months to as long as two years.

As you can imagine, these first stage scavengers are messy eaters. Their feeding frenzies leave a thick layer of pieces of the whale, what scientists call biomaterial, on the sea floor. This is when the dinner bell rings for the second stage scavengers.

The second stage

During the second stage of decomposition strange creatures appear. Shrimp-like creatures, crustaceans such as crabs and mollusks eat the small pieces of whale tissue that have dropped to the ocean floor.

Hairy worms are also part of this stage. They feed on the whale bones making the whale carcass look like a carpet – a moving, living carpet. This phase can last up to two years.

The third stage

The third and final stage is the longest. It can last for decades. The flesh of the whale has long been eaten. But even the bones support life.

As the whale bones decay, they produce sulfide, a type of gas. This gas supports a rich variety of life. Worms, mussels and several types of clams live off the gas that the whale bones give off.

Researchers found more than 30,000 animals totaling more than 200 species on one, single whale skeleton. Scientists who have studied the life of a whale fall found that the community of life and rare species of this final stage is larger than any known community on the deep seafloor.

I’m Anna Matteo.

Let us know what you think about this piece on Whale Falls in the Comments section or on our Facebook page. Or try using some of the scientific terms you learned in this story.

Enjoy this video made by Sweet Fern Productions showing the stages of a whale fall.

Anna Matteo wrote this story for VOA Learning English. Kathleen Struck was the editor.

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Words in This Story

carcass – n. the body of a dead animal

room and board – n. a place to stay with meals provided and included in the price

decay – v. to be slowly destroyed by natural processes : to be slowly broken down by the natural processes that destroy a dead plant or body

a needle in a haystack idiomatic expression : something that is impossible or extremely difficult to find especially because the area you have to search is too large

scavenger – n. an organism (as a vulture or hyena) that usually feeds on dead or decaying matter

feeding frenzy – n. a state of wild activity in which the animals in a group are all trying to eat something

crustacean – n. biology : a type of animal (such as a crab or lobster) that has several pairs of legs and a body made up of sections that are covered in a hard outer shell

mollusk – n. biology : any one of a large group of animals (such as snails and clams) that have a soft body without a backbone and that usually live in a shell

decompose – v. to cause something (such as dead plants and the bodies of dead animals) to be slowly destroyed and broken down by natural processes, chemicals, etc.

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