Whale Moms Teach Young Where to Eat

For a month after birth, Southern right whale mothers and their calves rest and nurse. Then, like the pair shown here off Argentina, they start to swim faster and farther as they prepare for a long migration in the South Atlantic to reach their feeding areas. A University of Utah study found mother whales teach their calves where to eat, raising concern about whether the whales can adapt as global warming disrupts feeding grounds.
(Image credit: John Atkinson, Ocean Alliance)

Whales are capable of many smart tasks, so it's little surprise that mother right whales teach babies where to go in the vast ocean to find food.

But this discovery, to be published in the Feb. 15 issue of the journal Molecular Ecology, reveals just how tight mother and offspring are.

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