Even apex predators can become prey. Here’s how orcas are flipping the script on the ocean’s most feared predator: the great ...
The killer whales ripped the liver out of a shark and passed it around—only the second time orcas have been seen engaging in ...
The ocean is full of mighty hunters. Two of the most feared are the shark and the orca (killer whale). Sharks are ancient, ...
Some orcas have developed a deadly taste for liver — specifically, the livers of great white sharks. According to NBC News, scientists in Mexico captured stunning new footage showing how killer whales ...
In Mexico’s Gulf of California, scientists captured rare footage of a group of orcas called Moctezuma’s pod hunting young great white sharks by flipping them upside down to paralyze them and extract ...
Scientists have spotted orcas hunting a nursery of juvenile sharks for the first time, flipping them upside down and feeding on their energy-rich livers, a discovery that hints at changing seasonal ...
Killer whales are not known for attacking people. The attacks and subsequent deaths that orcas have caused have taken place when killer whales have been taken into captivity and kept in small tanks, ...
Off the coast of Mexico, a pod of killer whales has developed a specialized hunting technique. They flip juvenile great white sharks upside down in a way that likely triggers a trance-like paralysis, ...
Apparently even whales enjoy horsing around. The reason orca whales have been attacking European ships recently isn’t due to targeted violence, but rather that the enormous mammals consider it a form ...