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   | CETACEA 
        
           
            |  Cetacea 
                is derived from the Greek word meaning whale. There are two suborders 
                of whales, the baleen whales (Mysticeti) and the toothed whales 
                (Odonticeti). The two subgroups have been distinct since the late 
                Eocene. Both are fully aquatic, have fusiform bodies and tails 
                flattened dorsoventrally as flukes. Posterior limbs are absent 
                externally, and the anterior limbs are enclosed in flippers. The 
                baleen in the Baleen whales filter out plankton in their buccal 
                cavities, water being filtered through the comblike baleen plates, 
                having been scooped up in huge mouthfuls. Toothed whales capture 
                fish or small marine mammals. Most toothed whales are relatively 
                small. All whales are sensitive to acoustic signals and the toothed 
                whales are unusual in their use of echolation to identify the 
                location and character of food, other objects, as well each other. 
                Most whales are highly social. They breath periodically through 
                their blowholes as they rise to the surface. The nasal, maxilla 
                and frontal bones of the skull are telescoped to permit the blowholes 
                to exit dorsally rostral to the cranium. The neck is very short 
                in all species. The pinnae are absent, the thick skin is virtually 
                hairless and is underlain by considerably thick layers of fat 
                (blubber). As fully marine, airbreathing mammals the Cetacea dwell 
                in all oceans of the planet earth. 
                 
                 
 SUBORDER 
                  ODONTOCETIFamily 
                  Delphinadae
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