Great rivers of whale pee make a remarkable contribution to Earth's cycling of nutrients, a new study reveals.
Scientists have spent a lot of time thinking about how the nutrients in whale feces—also known as whale pump —benefit species ...
Whale poo is responsible for moving tonnes of nutrients from deep water up to the surface. Now new research shows that whales also move vast quantities of nitrogen thousands of kilometres in their ...
“One big difference is that whales are often traveling thousands of miles across ocean basins–great whales undertake the ...
Now we can add whale urine to that list, according to a paper published in the journal Nature Communications. “Lots of people ...
The study focused on a handful of baleen species — namely, gray whales, humpback whales and right whales — which display ...
A new study reveals that baleen whales, including humpbacks and gray whales, enrich oceans when they take a whizz.
Whales are not just big, they’re a big deal for healthy oceans. When they poop, whales move tons of nutrients from deep water ...
Whale urine helps move nutrients thousands of miles across the ocean in a “conveyer belt,” according to a new study. Photo from Venti Views, UnSplash It turns out, whale pee is nothing to pooh ...
Whale pee and other bi-products play a vital role in ocean ecosystems. Find out how they transport nutrients across the seas.
Scientists have discovered that whales move nutrients thousands of miles -- in their urine -- from as far as Alaska to Hawaii. These tons of nitrogen support the health of tropical ecosystems and fish ...