La Orca | El Depredador Supremo Que Caza Tiburones Blancos

The orca is not a whale. It is the world's largest dolphin and the most dominant predator in all the oceans, without exception, capable of hunting everything from seals to 100-ton blue whales using pack tactics so sophisticated that they include creating waves to knock prey off ice floes and specifically targeting great white sharks to extract and eat only their oil-rich livers. This video examines the biomechanics of a streamlined body that can reach speeds of 35 miles per hour in the water, a brain with emotional processing areas more developed than those in humans, and an echolocation system so precise it can detect an individual salmon from 300 feet away in completely murky water. We analyze why different orca populations have developed unique dialects of vocalizations that are culturally passed down through generations, how menopause in older females serves a critical social function by making them leaders who share knowledge without competing reproductively, and what documented attacks on great white sharks reveal about an intelligence that can identify and exploit specific anatomical weaknesses. By debunking the "killer whale" myth, we discover the most intelligent predator in the ocean that has never killed a human in the wild.