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North Atlantic right whale

The North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis) is a baleen whale, one of three right whale species belonging to the genus Eubalaena,[1] all of which were formerly classified as a single species. Because of their docile nature, their slow surface-skimming feeding behaviors, their tendencies to stay close to the coast, and their high blubber content (which makes them float when they are killed, and which produces high yields of whale oil), right whales were once a preferred target for whalers. At present, they are among the most endangered whales in the world,[6] and they are protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act and Marine Mammal Protection Act and Canada's Species at Risk Act. There are around 356[7] individuals in existence in the western North Atlantic Ocean—they migrate between feeding grounds in the Labrador Sea and their winter calving areas off Georgia and Florida, an ocean area with heavy shipping traffic. In the eastern North Atlantic, on the other hand—with a total population reaching into the low teens at most—scientists believe that they may already be functionally extinct.[6] Vessel strikes and entanglement in fixed fishing gear, which together account for nearly half of all North Atlantic right whale mortality since 1970,[8] are their two greatest threats to recovery.[9][10]

List of Georgia state symbols

List of South Carolina state symbols

(Right whale is the State Marine Animal)

List of mammals of Massachusetts

List of mammals of Georgia (U.S. state)

List of marine mammal species

List of cetaceans

Moira Brown

North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium

North Atlantic Right Whale Research at the New England Aquarium

Digital North Atlantic Right Whale Catalog by New England Aquarium

North Atlantic Right Whale species information at the Smithsonian Ocean Portal

PBS NOVA: Saving the Right Whale (2023; 54 min.)

NOAA – National Marine Fisheries Service – North Atlantic Right Whale

Hear right whale audio (U. of R.I., Office of Marine Programs)

Watch video of northern right whales

Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies – Whale Rescue / Disentanglement

has acoustic autobuoys in between the lanes of the Traffic Separation Scheme approaching Boston.

Right Whale Listening Network

Smithsonian Institution – North American Mammals: Eubalaena glacialis

Voices in the Sea – Sounds of the North Atlantic Right Whale

The MORSE project – North Atlantic right whale: recent summer records outside main grounds

. The Guardian, October 30, 2020.

Humans pushing North Atlantic right whale to extinction faster than believed

. The Guardian, December 1, 2022.

Animal activists say Senate omnibus bill condemns right whale to extinction