Orcas claims to drown in a rare training session taken from the camera

The orcas are called “killers-rooms” (even if they are technically dolphins) for a good reason. These are the best predators in the ocean, tracking everything, from large white sharks to blue whales–The largest animal in the world. But orcas are not born killers. It is a skill that they learn from their elders and, as new evidence suggest, train on each other.
ParentingA new series in five parts of the BBC Wildlife told by David Particulargh, includes the first known images of Orcas learning to drown their prey, as reported for the first time by Times. The training session is led by a matriarch and consists of an orca, pretending to be prey so that the others can surround it and train to push its blowing hole underwater.
“Specialized submarine cardanals and towing cameras were used to bring cameras alongside orcs underwater. This technology allowed the crew to travel at the same speed as the Orca hunting pack and provided new information on their behavior,” said a spokesperson for the BBC to Times. “The hunting behavior for practice seems to show the members of an Orca family immersing the head of an individual to prevent them from breathing – the technique used by the killers to drive out large whales. This hunting behavior has never been filmed before. ”
The images were captured near Bremer Bay of Australia-Western, the same region where, in April, horrified tourists saw 60 orcas devouring a in the end of blue whale. After the training session, the series shows the Orcs using their skills while chasing a blue whale caught by surprise. Blue whales can hold their breath for a place between 10 and 30 minutes.
The orcas that form their young How to Hunt are only one of the many parental moments presented in the Wildlife series, which was filmed over three years on six continents and 23 countries.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bshgayx-nsq
“I think that has all the sensations – it’s a great behavior, it’s a great emotion, it has a lot of humor, it has relatable parental dilems. And he has a sign of the head and a nod to “ helicopter parenting ” and `Snowplow ” – All these different terms that we have blindly on the type of parent you are,” Jeff Wilson said the director, the BBC. The images of the series required an “observational and non-invasive approach,” he added. “We are very proud of what we have put on the screen.”
The program was broadcast on BBC One on August 3 and is available on BBC Iplayer. We do not yet know when the American release will take place, but I am sure that those of you in the United States cannot wait. After all, who would not want to hear the fascinating voice of attention declare: “Success for all parents may have the greatest consequences. It ensures the future of life on our planet. ”
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