How deep can whales go?

Just curious. Can whales, like, go to the bottom of the ocean, or would the pressure get them first?

From [url=http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/whales/species/Spermwhale.shtml

This guy says Guinness reports a 1.9-mile dive by a sperm whale.

There are, of course, many different species of whale, all with different abilities, but I wouldn’t doubt Q.E.D. was right and sperm whales were the depth champs.

Now, as for how deep whale shit is, you’re on your own.

Did anyone else, upon reading the title of this thread, think “Take it all, bitch!”?

Interestingly, when people use the term ‘hold their breath’ when talking about whales, it doesn’t mean the same thing as it would with humans. Whales exhale fully before diving to great depths.

No, just you, Johnny. :stuck_out_tongue:

This is why whales don’t get the bends. However, scientists say that noise just might give both whales and dolphins the bends, cause beachings, etc. :frowning:

Thanks for that info. I will have to look into that. Interesting.

Thanks for the input. My girlfriend just saw The Core (I didn’t) and complained that whales were seen waaaaaaaaaaay further into the ocean than she expected. I don’t know if anyone’s numbers match what she saw, but this will at least help her sleep at night.

Hmm. How do they store oxygen?

Senor - It’s called the Mammalian Dive Reflex, all mammals have it including humans. [ever hear of a child being ‘revived’ after falling through the ice.?] Basically, when they dive, the blood centralizes in their heart and only feeds their brain. Minimal blood flow to the limbs. How do they swim then, you ask? it is a reflexive motion, up and down motion of their tail…
BTW - I worked at a large east coast aquarium though college, we worked with dolphins, beluga’s seals, sea lions… Great experience, and some of the trivia just stays with ya…

Everything else in that film was wrong, I see no reason to assume they got the bit about whales right :smiley:

Unfortunately, yes…

Q. Did you know a whale’s penis is bigger than a man’s?
A. Well, duh.
Q. No, bigger than a man is.

(Sorry, sorry. BTW I never checked to see if this is true.)

Yep---- it reads like a cross between thePlayboy Advisor and the Memoirs of Jacques Cousteau. :smiley:

Typically a great-whale penis is on the order of six feet long, with a circumference in proportion, according to one of those Guinness ripoffs that were around 20 or so years ago. (I refuse to Google “whale penis” for a cite! ;))

Well, someone has to:

From this page.

I don’t know about you, but I sure feel inadequate right now. :eek:

They’re prehensile too.

Should’ve been Beluga whales; from the Russian for white apparently.

Another thing about whales’ usage of oxygen is that they exchange gases more efficiently than we do (using more of the oxygen they breathe in with each breath and expelling more CO[sub]2[/sub]. They also saturate their tissues with oxygen somewhat when they dive.

It’s twue! It’s twue!

Well, QED, the next time your date calls you a “pig” after getting hot and heavy with you – consider it a compliment! :slight_smile:

“Q. Did you know a whale’s penis is bigger than a man’s?”

Even a barnacle’s penis is bigger than a mans penis.