blue whale vs Cluster Fescue

Balaenoptera musculus compared with Festuca paradoxa

Key Differences

  • blue whale is Vulnerable while Cluster Fescue is Extinct.

Taxonomic Classification

Rank blue whale Cluster Fescue
Kingdom Animalia (Animals) Plantae (Plants)
Phylum Chordata (Chordates) Magnoliophyta (Flowering Plants)
Class Mammalia (Mammals) Liliopsida (Monocots)
Order Cetacea (Whales & Dolphins) Poales (Grasses)
Family Balaenopteridae (Rorquals) Poaceae (Grass Family)
Genus Balaenoptera (Rorquals) Festuca
Species Balaenoptera musculus Festuca paradoxa

Conservation Status

blue whale

VU — Vulnerable

Population: ~15.0K

Trend: Increasing ↑

Cluster Fescue

EX — Extinct

Physical Characteristics

Attribute blue whale Cluster Fescue
Diet Carnivore
Average Lifespan 90 years
Average Length 30.0 m
Average Weight 150.0 t

Habitat & Geographic Range

blue whale

Habitat

Found across multiple habitat types including tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests, and tropical and subtropical grasslands and savannas, among 11 distinct biome types. Populations are also found in montane and highland environments at higher elevations.

Range

Widely distributed across Asia (Taiwan), Europe (4 countries), and South America (Colombia, Ecuador). Currently classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, this species faces significant conservation challenges across its range.

Cluster Fescue

Habitat

Typically found in grasslands, wetlands, forests, and cultivated landscapes.

Range

Found in United States.

blue whale

The largest animal ever known to have lived on Earth, blue whales can reach 33 meters and 200 tonnes — their hearts alone weigh as much as a small car. Found in all oceans, they migrate between polar feeding grounds and tropical breeding areas. Filter feeders consuming up to 4 tonnes of krill daily. Endangered, with global populations estimated at 10,000–25,000 after near-extinction from 20th-century whaling.

Cluster Fescue

Cluster fescue, known scientifically as Festuca paradoxa, is a perennial bunchgrass in the family Poaceae that holds the tragic distinction of being Extinct. Endemic to the central and eastern United States, this grass once inhabited moist, shaded woodland edges, floodplain forests, and riverbank communities where it formed discrete clumps characteristic of caespitose fescues. Festuca paradoxa was a slender, cool-season grass reaching approximately 60–120 centimeters in height, with flat or loosely rolled leaf blades and an open panicle inflorescence. It was associated with rich bottomland soils where periodic flooding maintained the open canopy conditions it required. The species declined catastrophically due to the widespread destruction of floodplain woodlands across its range through agricultural conversion, wetland drainage, and urban development over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Invasive species competition and altered hydrological regimes further compressed suitable habitat. The genus Festuca contains hundreds of species distributed globally in temperate and montane regions, but F. paradoxa occupied a narrow ecological niche that proved impossible to sustain amid large-scale landscape transformation. Its extinction represents a permanent loss from North American grassland diversity, and no living populations are known to persist anywhere in its former range.

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