I am unrealistically afraid of whales. And now I am unrealistically afraid of a rabid whale. It comes up for air and gets bit by a rapid bat, and there ya have it.
Can you imagine a whale or dolphin being afraid of water?
Is the virus in the saliva? So if a rabid dolphin had it and tried to bite another dolphin, the virus would just get washed away?
Whales are cute. You should go see the one in the Miami seaquarium (or any other seaquarium). Sweet.![]()
I'm not talking orcas or belugas. I'm talking BIG whales. The ones with mouths that a whole person can fit inside.
Do elephants scare you too?
I am unrealistically afraid of whales ..... I'm not talking orcas or belugas. I'm talking BIG whales. The ones with mouths that a whole person can fit inside.
Although resident Orcas have never been observed to eat other marine mammals, they are known to occasionally harass and kill porpoises and seals for no apparent reason.[1
Male Bottlenose Dolphins have been known to engage in infanticide. Dolphins have also been known to kill porpoises for reasons which are not fully understood, as porpoises generally do not share the same fish diet as dolphins and are therefore not competitors for food supplies
The only marine mammals that are physically capable of eating you are the sperm whale and the orca. The orca is actually a large dolphin, which is obvious if you look at one closely. We call the sperm whale a "whale" because of its size, but it is actually more closely related to the dolphins as well. Both the sperm whale and the orca have teeth and are predators. The sperm whale eats squid, sharks and fish. The orca eats seals and fish. Dolphins are better swimmers and too hard to catch and so are not usually worth the expenditure of energy. Theoretically either species could easily eat a human but as far as I know there are no verified cases. The beluga is also not a whale at all, it and the narwhal are in a little family all by themselves closely related to dolphins.I'm not talking orcas or belugas. I'm talking BIG whales. The ones with mouths that a whole person can fit inside.
They could. They open their mouths very wide and let a lot of water in, then close their mouths and force the water out through the baleen, trapping the krill and other small creatures inside their mouths.All the whales other than the sperm whale are more distant from the dolphins. They have baleen instead of teeth, which they use as filters to graze on krill. They couldn't eat you if they wanted to, and they don't want to. I'm not even sure they can open their mouths wide enough to let you in.
All seals are distantly related to dogs as well as to cats, bears and mustelids. All those families fall into the order Carnivora.One record of it in ringed seals. They bite on land, and are sort of related to dogs, so that is no real surprise.
Polar bears hunt seals and a polar bear could conceivably be bitten by a rabid fox.They could catch it from arctic foxes, or each other.
Whale skin is pretty thick. There aren't many animals that can bite through it. Orcas, the largest dolphins, hunt only baby whales. Great white sharks probably do it too, but does anyone know whether rabies can be transmitted to a cold-blooded gill-breather? And baleen whales have no teeth so they couldn't infect anyone else with their rabies by biting them. Only the Japanese people who kill them for meat.I always worry about rescued whales. What if they got bit, show no signs of infection and then are pushed back into the water.
Except for the sperm whales, I don't think any whale could swallow you, and he certainly wouldn't. Whales only come up for air three or four times an hour, so you would have drowned long before you could suffer any physical trauma. Now doesn't that make you feel better about all of this?And big whales may not chew me up and swallow me, but I would definately fit in their mouth.
And then realize that since it's never happened to anyone else, you will be in all the history books and people will remember your name for centuries.
I always worry about rescued whales. What if they got bit, show no signs of infection and then are pushed back into the water.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=7340100&dopt=Citation
One record of it in ringed seals. They bite on land, and are sort of related to dogs, so that is no real surprise. They could catch it from arctic foxes, or each other.
Remember that seals (phocids) are carnivores like their relatives: canids, felids, ursids (bears) and mustelids (weasels etc.). Carnivores are very adept at defending themselves. If one seal in a herd starts attacking the others because he has rabies, the others will gang up on him. A few of them will get bitten and die, but before long he will be killed and the herd will survive.So then do they just stay out of the water til they die? How does it not wipe out an entire herd?