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Icky intestines.


Biologist and wildlife photographer Todd Pusser got quite an eyeful eye·ful  
n.
1. A complete view.

2. One that is pleasing to the sight, especially an attractive person.

3.
 when he motored up in his boat to this marine "crime scene." In California's Monterey Bay last spring, Pusser snapped a photo of a killer whale killer whale or grampus, a large, rapacious marine mammal, Orcinus orca, of the dolphin family. Male killer whales may reach a length of 30 ft (9 m) and females half that length. , or Orcinus orca Orcinus orca

see killer whale.
 (OR-sin-uhs OR-kuh), gliding along next to the intestines from its recent kill--a gray-whale calf (young).

Does Pusser's snapshot represent typical orca behavior? For some orcas, the answer is yes. Scientists have identified three orca groups in the North Pacific Ocean: residents, offshores, and roaming transients. The residents and offshore orcas keep to well-defined home ranges and feed mainly on fish. "Transients specialize in feeding on marine mammals marine mammals

mammals inhabiting the sea; generally taken to include the cetaceans (whales, porpoise, dolphin), the sirenians (sea-cows, including manatees and dugong) and the pinnipeds (the carnivores of the group, seals, sealions, walruses).
 (warm-blooded animals with a backbone, whose young feed on milk) such as sea lions, dolphins, and whales," says Pusser. "They rarely, if ever, eat fish."

Usually, the 8 meter (26 foot)-long female orcas are the hunters. And to successfully battle a 6 m (20 ft)-long gray-whale calf, the female transients must team up. "The adult females take turns ramming the gray-whale calf and leaping onto its back, trying to drown it," explains Pusser. This battle can take hours before the calf succumbs. Then, it's mealtime.

"[The orcas] appear to first rip out Verb 1. rip out - burst out with a violent or profane utterance; "ripped out a vicious oath"; "ripped out with an oath"
burst out - give sudden release to an expression; "We burst out laughing"; "'I hate you,' she burst out"
 the lower jaw and throat of the gray-whale calf and eat the tongue," he says. Then, the orcas dine on the calf's blubber, or a thick layer of fat. "The killer whales will grab the blubber with their teeth and pull backward, peeling the blubber from the carcass carcass, carcase

1. the body of an animal killed for meat. The head, the legs below the knees and hocks, the tail, the skin and most of the viscera are removed. The kidneys are left in and in most instances the body is split down the middle through the sternum and the vertebral
 much like we might peel a banana," Pusser explains.

And do they eat the gray whale's slimy intestines? After Pusser took the photograph, a pair of killer whales pulled the floating intestines beneath the water's surface. He says: "I have to assume that they ate the intestines underwater, though we will never know for sure."
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Title Annotation:Gross out; killer whale
Author:Bryner, Jeanna
Publication:Science World
Date:Mar 28, 2005
Words:303
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