blue whale vs Cocoa Woodcreeper
Balaenoptera musculus compared with Xiphorhynchus susurrans
Key Differences
- blue whale is Vulnerable while Cocoa Woodcreeper is Least Concern.
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | blue whale | Cocoa Woodcreeper |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom same | Animalia (животные) | Animalia (животные) |
| Phylum same | Chordata (хордовые) | Chordata (хордовые) |
| Class | Mammalia (млекопитающие) | Aves (птицы) |
| Order | Cetacea (Whales & Dolphins) | Passeriformes (воробьинообразные) |
| Family | Balaenopteridae (Rorquals) | Furnariidae |
| Genus | Balaenoptera (Rorquals) | Xiphorhynchus |
| Species | Balaenoptera musculus | Xiphorhynchus susurrans |
Evolutionary Relationship
blue whale and Cocoa Woodcreeper share a common ancestor at the Phylum level: Chordata. (хордовые)
Conservation Status
blue whale
VU — VulnerablePopulation: ~15.0K
Trend: Increasing ↑
Cocoa Woodcreeper
LC — Least ConcernPhysical Characteristics
| Attribute | blue whale | Cocoa Woodcreeper |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | Carnivore | — |
| Average Lifespan | 90 years | — |
| Average Length | 30.0 m | — |
| Average Weight | 150.0 t | — |
Habitat & Geographic Range
blue whale
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.
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.
Cocoa Woodcreeper
Typically found in various aerial, terrestrial, and aquatic environments.
Distributed across Colombia, Norway, and Venezuela.
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.
Cocoa Woodcreeper
The cocoa woodcreeper (Xiphorhynchus susurrans) is a medium-sized, streaked woodcreeper in the family Furnariidae, native to the tropical forests, cacao plantations, and wooded areas of Central America and the northern Caribbean coast of South America, including Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad, and the Central American isthmus from Honduras to Panama. Like other woodcreepers, it is a bark-gleaning insectivore, hitching upward along tree trunks and large branches with the support of stiff, spine-tipped tail feathers, systematically probing bark crevices, mosses, and epiphytes for insects, spiders, centipedes, and small lizards. The species' streaked brown plumage provides excellent camouflage against bark. It often joins mixed-species foraging flocks, particularly those following army ant swarms that flush invertebrates from leaf litter and bark. The cocoa woodcreeper inhabits both intact forest and shaded agricultural habitats — including the cocoa plantations from which it takes its name — showing some tolerance for modified land use where mature trees are retained. It has no natural presence in Norway; such country records are data artifacts. The species is classified as Least Concern by the IUCN, with wide distribution and generally stable populations across its Caribbean and Central American range, though local declines may occur where forest cover is lost to intensive agriculture or urban development. Taxonomy of the Xiphorhynchus woodcreepers has been extensively revised with molecular phylogenetic data in recent decades.
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