Pygmy Killer Whale | ||||||||||||||
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Feresa attenuata |
The Pygmy Killer Whale (Feresa attenuata) is a small, rarely-seen cetacean. It derives its common name from the fact that it shares some physical characteristics with the Killer Whale. In fact 'Killer' may be a more apt epithet in the case of the Pygmy Killer Whale than its larger genetic cousin. When a number of Pymgy Killers were brought into capitivity in Hawaii and South Africa they were extremely aggressive - even killing one another. A third herd captured in Japan did not display such aggression however.
Until the early 1950s the Pygmy Killer Whale was only known from two skulls kept at the British Museum. The first description was recorded by John Gray in 1874. In 1954 Japanese cetologist Muneasto Yamada published accounts of a "rare porpoise" discovered by whale hunters working from Honshu in 1952. He wrote that the individuals he examined had skulls matching those in the Museum but that also the body had similar features to the Killer Whale, and proposed the common name Lesser (or Pygmy) Killer Whale.
The specific scientific name attentuata is the Latin for 'tapering' and refers to the gradual narrowing from the head to the tail fin of the dolphin.
Physical description
The Pygmy Killer is of average size amongst dolphins (a little larger and heavier than a grown man) and may easily be confused at sea with other species, in particular the Melon-headed Whale. The body is robust and dark-coloured. The cape is particularly dark in tone. The head is rounded with no beak. The sides are lighter and the belly is often white. Several individuals have been seen with a white lining around the mouth and chin. The dorsal fin is tall and slightly falcate.
The Pygmy is an unco-operative animal. It is usually difficult to approach. Some spy-hopping, breaching and other active behaviour has been recorded but it is not an acrobatic animal.
The dolphin always moves in groups, usually about 10 to 30 number but occasionally substantially longer. They have been observed attacking, killing and eating other cetacean species such as the Common Dolphin.
Further information on maturation on longevity is unavailable due to a paucity of data. Data from strandings, which seem to be common in the species, indicates a diet of cephalopods and small fish.
Population and distribution
The species appears to be naturally rare. The only population estimate is of 38,900 individuals in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean (see reference [4]). However the species has a wide distribution in tropical and sub-tropical waters world-wide. Sightings are reported regularly off Hawaii and Japan. Accidental fishing catches suggest a year-round present in the Indian Ocean near Sri Lanka and the Lesser Antilles. In the Atlantic individuals have been observed as far north as Florida on the west coast and Senegal on the east. The species is purely oceanic.