Top Stories
Rockets hit southern Beirut
Four people were wounded when two rockets exploded in the
Shiite-majority Hezbollah heartland of south Beirut, hours after Hezbollah's Hassan Nasrallah pledged to back Syria's President Assad.
- Sydney's lederhosen out for football final
- Live betting odds to be banned: PM
- Suspected Maoist rebels kill 28 in India
- The indigenous history of our railways
- Police cautious on stabbed soldier links
- Sorry Day marked across country
- Laughter's the medicine - but what's it for?
- Three more arrests over London murder
- 12 dead in clash with Philippine militants
-
-
The indigenous history of Australia's railways
26 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Aussie Germans rise early for football clash
26 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 24 May part 1
24 May 13 | 14:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 24 May part 2
24 May 13 | 11:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 24 May part 3
24 May 13 | 3:00
-
-
Syrian refugees building new lives
24 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
The disturbing pattern of Islamist terror
24 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
NSW Police warn of 3D gun dangers
24 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Insight: Fat Fighters - Dorothy and Jenny on accepting their bodies
24 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Living Black: S18 Ep12 preview
24 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Insight: Fat Fighters - Kate on drastic ways to lose weight
24 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
International photo exhibit launches in Sydney
24 May 13 | 2:14
-
-
Obama addresses counter-terrorism
24 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Analysis: Brutal London 'terror' attack
23 May 13 | 6:00
-
-
Robbie Deans extended interview
20 May 13 | 5:00
-
-
Syria refugees face Lebanon sanitation issues
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Lebanon provides schooling for Syria refugees
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Denmark claims Eurovision Contest
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Do companies have the right to patent human genes?
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Budget analysis: Shane Oliver extended interview
15 May 13 | 7:00
-
-
What the budget means for the economy
14 May 13 | 2:14
-
-
Budget summary: Karen Middleton reports
14 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Behind the scenes of the federal budget
14 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
Photography exhibition chronicles Indigenous culture
13 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Rooftop beekeeping on the rise in Australia
13 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
NDIS : Rosemary King extended interview
13 May 13 | 3:00
-
-
Indigenous thriller opens SSF: Aaron Pedersen Interview
09 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
In Conversation: High Speed Rail
09 May 13 | 4:00
-
-
Indigenous thriller opens SSF: Hugo Weaving Interview
09 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
SA makes historical appeal reforms
06 May 13 | 2:00
Radio News Bulletin
- Latest Bulletin
Fri 24th May 2013 2:39PM - Featured Stories
Wed 30th Nov -0001 12:00AM - National strategy to cut Indigenous suicide
Fri 24th May 2013 12:00AM - New ASIO assessments review needed
Fri 24th May 2013 12:00AM - How does betting affect kids' view of sport?
Fri 24th May 2013 12:00AM
Blogs
More Blogs-
-
Hate Crime Murder on a busy New York Street.
22 May 2013, 11:14 AM
-
-
End of parity: Experts say A$ heading south
17 May 2013, 18:13 PM
-
-
The winning costs of Eurovision 2013
14 May 2013, 17:40 PM
- At-a-glance: Same-sex marriage around the world
- Video of US plane crash in Afghanistan believed to be authentic
- Analysis: 'Illegals' and the erosion of empathy
- Xenophon warns of Malaysia election fraud
- Malaysian elections expose serious divides
- India sex crime laws not tough enough: UN
- Labor to take disability tax rise to poll
- Family's plea: Aussie facing Saudi terrorism charges
- Is Tony Abbott wrong to talk of 'illegals'?
- Will Malaysians vote for change?
- At-a-glance: Same-sex marriage around the world
- Is Tony Abbott wrong to talk of 'illegals'?
- Comment: Why are we debating 'blackface' in 2013?
- Murrawarri people take sovereignty campaign to UN
- Polio survivor: I wish there had been a vaccine
- Comment: Wait, there are riots in Sweden?
- The rise of Greece's Golden Dawn party
- Made in Bangladesh 'a label of concern'
- Analysis: 'Illegals' and the erosion of empathy
- How young is too young to change sex?
Promote Advertisement
Killer whales migrate to exfoliate
These fearsome predators traverse the sea at top speed, slowing as they reach warmer climates to exfoliate. (AAP)
Women aren't the only ones that go to extreme lengths to get silky smooth skin. A new study has found that some killer whales migrate thousands of kilometres to exfoliate.
A new study for the first time shows that some killer whales wander nearly 10,000 kilometres from Antarctica's Southern Ocean into tropical waters - but not to feed or breed.
Rather, these fearsome predators at the apex of the marine food chain traverse the sea at top speed, slowing as they reach warmer climes to exfoliate, the study speculates.
They are driven, in other words, by the urge or need to make their skin all shiny and new.
Despite our intense fascination with seal-chomping orcas, next to nothing was known about their long-haul movements, or whether they migrate at all.
To find out more, John Durban and Robert Pitman of the US National Marine Fisheries Service fitted a dozen so-called "type B" killer whales off the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula with satellite transmitters.
In January 2009, the scientists used bolt-shooting crossbows to attached tags to the five-tonne mammals' dorsal fins from a distance of five to 15 metres.
'Type B' orcas inhabit the inshore waters of Antarctica near pack ice, the better to feed on seals and penguins. Type A killer whales prefer open water and a diet of minke whales, and the smaller, fish-eating type C is most common in the eastern Antarctic.
Half the satellite tags stopped working after three weeks, but the remaining six revealed a remarkable and unexpected wanderlust over the following two years.
"Our tagged whales followed the most direct path to the nearest warm waters north of the subtropical convergence, with a gradual slowing of swim speed in progressively warmer water," the authors note.
The whales made a beeline, cruising at up to 10 km/hr, across the southwest Atlantic east of the Falkland Islands to the subtropical waters off the coasts of Uruguay and southern Brazil.
The study, published in the British Royal Society's journal Biology Letters, provides the first direct evidence of long-distance migration by killer whales.
But why they do it remains something of a mystery.
The speed and duration of the voyages, undertaken individually, did not leave enough time for prolonged foraging, and would have been too demanding for a new-born calf.
"Remarkably, one whale returned to Antarctica after completing a 9,400 kilometre trip in just 42 days," the study said.
The varied departure dates, between early February and late April, also suggested these expeditions were not annual migrations for feeding or breeding.
Which is where skin comes into the picture.
Durban and Pitman suspect that killer whales move into warmer waters in order to shed a layer, along with an encrustation of single-celled algae called diatoms, without freezing to death.
Orcas are the smallest cetaceans, a group including whales and dolphins, which live for extended periods in subzero Antarctic waters. Replacing and repairing outer skin in waters where the surface temperature is minus 1.9 degree Celsius, may be dangerous, even lethal.
Surface temperatures at the killer whales' tropical destinations, by contrast, were a balmy 20.9 to 24.2 C.
"We hypothesise that these migrations were thermally motivated," the authors conclude.
Killer whales (Orcinus orca) are the most widely distributed cetacean and perhaps mammal species in the world.
VideoNEW
Podcasts
Blogs


