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Sei whale

The sei whale (/s/ SAY,[4] Norwegian: [sæɪ]; Balaenoptera borealis) is a baleen whale. It is one of ten rorqual species, and the third-largest member after the blue and fin whales. They can grow up to 19.5 m (64 ft) in length and weigh as much as 28 t (28 long tons; 31 short tons). Two subspecies are recognized: B. b. borealis and B. b. schlegelii. The whale's ventral surface has sporadic markings ranging from light grey to white, and its body is usually dark steel grey in colour. It is among the fastest of all cetaceans, and can reach speeds of up to 50 km/h (31 mph) over short distances. 

Sei whale[1]
Sei whale mother and calf
Size compared to an average human
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Balaenopteridae
Genus: Balaenoptera
Species:
B. borealis
Binomial name
Balaenoptera borealis
Lesson, 1828
Subspecies
  • B.b.borealis
  • B.b.schlegelii
Sei whale range
Synonyms
  • Balaena rostrata Rudolphi, 1822
  • Balaenoptera laticeps Gray, 1846
  • Sibbaldius schlegelii Flower, 1865
  • Rudolphius laticeps Gray, 1868

It inhabits most oceans and adjoining seas, and prefers deep offshore waters. It avoids polar and tropical waters and semi-enclosed bodies of water. The sei whale migrates annually from cool, subpolar waters in summer to temperate, subtropical waters in winter with a lifespan of 70 years. It is a filter feeder, with its diet consisting primarily of copepodskrill, and other zooplankton. It is typically solitary or can be found in groups numbering half a dozen. During the breeding period, a mating pair will remain together. Sei whale vocalizations usually lasts half a second, and occurs at 240–625 hertz.

Following large-scale commercial whaling during the late 19th and 20th centuries, when over 255,000 whales were killed, the sei whale is now internationally protected. It is listed as endangered by the IUCN Red List, despite increasing populations. The Northern Hemisphere population is listed under CITES Appendix II, which indicates they are not threatened with extinction, while the Southern Hemisphere population is listed under CITES Appendix I, indicating that they are threatened and are given the highest levels of protection.

Taxonomy edit

On 21 February 1819, Swedish-born German naturalist Karl Rudolphi initially identified a 9.8 m (32 ft) whale stranded near Grömitz, in Schleswig-Holstein, as Balaena rostrata (Balaenoptera acutorostrata).[5] In 1823, the French naturalist Georges Cuvier described Rudolphi's specimen under the name "rorqual du Nord".[6] In 1828, Rene Lesson translated this term into Balaenoptera borealis, basing his designation partly on Cuvier's description of Rudolphi's specimen and partly on a 16 m (52 ft) female that had stranded on the coast of France the previous year (this was later identified as a juvenile fin whale, Balaenoptera physalus).[7] In 1846, the English zoologist John Edward Gray, ignoring Lesson's designation, named Rudolphi's specimen Balaenoptera laticeps, which others followed.[8] In 1865, British zoologist William Henry Flower named a 14 m (46 ft) specimen that had been obtained from Pekalongan, on the north coast of Java, Sibbaldius (Balaenoptera) schlegelii—in 1946 the Russian scientist A.G. Tomilin synonymized S. schlegelii and B. borealis, creating the subspecies B. b. schlegelii and B. b. borealis.[9][10] In 1884–85, the Norwegian scientist G. A. Guldberg first identified the sejhval of Finnmark with B. borealis.[11]

Balaenopteridae

Minke whale

B. musculus (blue whale)

B. borealis (sei whale)

Eschrichtius robustus (gray whale)

B. physalus (fin whale)

Megaptera novaeangliae (humpback whale)

A phylogenetic tree of six baleen whale species[12]

Sei whales are rorquals (family Balaenopteridae), baleen whales that include the humpback whale, the blue whale, Bryde's whale, the fin whale, and the minke whale. Rorquals take their name from the Norwegian word røyrkval, meaning "furrow whale",[13] because family members have a series of longitudinal pleats or grooves on the anterior half of their ventral surface. Balaenopterids diverged from the other families of suborder Mysticeti, also called the whalebone whales, as long ago as the middle Miocene.[14] Little is known about when members of the various families in the Mysticeti, including the Balaenopteridae, diverged from each other.[15] Whole genome sequencing suggests that sei and blue whales are closely related, with gray whales as a sister group. This study also found significant gene flow between minke whales and the ancestors of the blue and sei whale.[12]

Two subspecies have been identified—the northern sei whale (B. b. borealis) and southern sei whale (B. b. schlegelii).[16]

Etymology edit

The origin of sei is derived from pollock in Norwegian.[17] The specific name is the Latin word borealis, meaning northern. The genus name Balaenoptera, is Latin for whale.[18][19] In the Pacific, the whale has been called the Japan finner; "finner" was a common term used to refer to rorquals. In Japanese, the whale was called iwashi kujira, or sardine whale, a name originally applied to Bryde's whales by early Japanese whalers. Later, as modern whaling shifted to Sanriku—where both species occur—it was confused for the sei whale. Now the term only applies to the latter species.[20][21] It has also been referred to as the lesser fin whale because it somewhat resembles the fin whale.[22]

Description edit

 
A sei whale showing distinctive upright dorsal fin

The sei whale's body is typically a dark steel grey with irregular light grey to white markings on the ventral surface, or towards the front of the lower body. The whale has a relatively short series of 32–60 pleats or grooves along its ventral surface that extend halfway between the pectoral fins and umbilicus (in other species it usually extends to or past the umbilicus), restricting the expansion of the buccal cavity during feeding compared to other species.[23] The rostrum is pointed and the pectoral fins are relatively short, only 9–10% of body length, and pointed at the tips.[17] Sei whales have a solitary ridge extending from the tip of the rostrum to the paired blowholes that are a distinctive characteristic of baleen whales.[24]

Its skin is often marked by pits or wounds, which after healing become white scars. These are now known to be caused by cookie-cutter sharks (Isistius brasiliensis).[25] It has a tall, sickle-shaped dorsal fin that ranges in height from 38–90 cm (15–35 in) and averages 53–56 cm (21–22 in), about two-thirds of the way back from the tip of the rostrum.[26] Dorsal fin shape, pigmentation pattern, and scarring have been used to a limited extent in photo-identification studies.[27] The tail is thick and the fluke, or lobe, is relatively small in relation to the size of the whale's body.[17]

 
Close-up view of baleen plates, used to strain food from the water

Adults have 300–380 ashy-black baleen plates on each side of the mouth, up to 80 cm (31 in) long. Each plate is made of fingernail-like keratin, which is bordered by a fringe of very fine, short, curly, wool-like white bristles.[28] The sei's very fine baleen bristles, about 0.1 mm (0.0039 in), are the most reliable characteristic that distinguishes it from other rorquals.[29]

The sei whale looks very similar to other large rorquals, especially to its smaller relative the Bryde's whale. Exceptional individuals may resemble a fin whale, which leads to confusion. They are usually differentiated from the fin whale by the colour of their head. Contrary to the fin whale's smooth rostrum, the sei whale's rostrum is curved.[30]

Size edit

 
Painting of a sei whale.
 
Sei whale skeleton

The sei whale is the third-largest balaenopterid, after the blue whale and the fin whale.[31] Adults usually weigh between 15–20 t (15–20 long tons; 17–22 short tons).[32] They exhibit sexual dimorphism, with females outweighing and being longer than their male counterparts.[30] At birth, a calf typically measures 4.4–4.5 m (14–15 ft) in length.[33]

In the Northern Hemisphere, males reach up to 17.1 m (56 ft) and females up to 18.6 m (61 ft),[34] while in the Southern Hemisphere males reach a maximum of 18.6 m (61 ft) and females of 19.5 m (64 ft). The authenticity of an alleged 22 m (72 ft) female caught 80 km (50 mi) northwest of St. Kilda in July 1911 is doubted.[35][36][37] Five specimens taken off Iceland exceeded 14.6 m (48 ft) in length.[37][38] The longest measured during JARPN II cruises in the North Pacific were a 16.32 m (53.5 ft) female and a 15 m (49 ft) male.[39][40]

In the North Pacific, adult males average 13.7 m (45 ft) and adult females 15 m (49 ft). In the North Atlantic, the average length of an adult male is 14 m (46 ft) and of an adult female is 14.5 m (48 ft). In the Southern Hemisphere, they average 14.5 m (48 ft) and 15 m (49 ft), in males and females, respectively.[32][41]

In the North Pacific, males weigh an average of 15 t (15 long tons; 17 short tons) and females 18.5 t (18.2 long tons; 20.4 short tons). North Atlantic sei whale males average 15.5 t (15.3 long tons; 17.1 short tons) and females 17 t (17 long tons; 19 short tons). Southern Hemisphere whales average 17–18.5 t (16.7–18.2 long tons; 18.7–20.4 short tons) in body weight.[32][41]

Life history edit

Surface behaviours edit

Very little is known about the sei whale social structure. They have been documented traveling alone or in pods of up to six individuals; larger groups may assemble at particularly abundant feeding grounds.[42][27] During the southern Gulf of Maine influx in mid-1986, groups of at least three sei whales were observed "milling" on four occasions – i.e. moving in random directions, rolling, and remaining at the surface for over 10 minutes. One whale would always leave the group during or immediately after such socializing bouts.[27] The sei whale is among the fastest cetaceans. The American naturalist Roy Chapman Andrews compared the sei whale to the cheetah, because it can swim at great speeds "for a few hundred yards", but it "soon tires if the chase is long" and "does not have the strength and staying power of its larger relatives".[43] It can reach speeds of up to 50 km/h (31 mph) over short distances.[28] However, it is not a remarkable diver, reaching relatively shallow depths for 5 to 15 minutes. Between dives, the whale surfaces for a few minutes, remaining visible in clear, calm waters, with blows occurring at intervals of about 60 seconds (range: 45–90 sec.). When about to dive, the sei whale usually just sinks below the surface; only the dorsal fin and blowholes protrude. The whale is generally less active on water surfaces than other whale species; they rarely exhibit lobtail behaviour.[30]

Feeding edit

 
Krill, shrimp-like marine invertebrate animals, are one of the sei whale's primary foods.

This rorqual is a filter feeder, using its baleen plates to obtain its food by opening its mouth, engulfing or skimming large amounts of the water containing the food, then straining the water out through the baleen, trapping any food items inside its mouth.[44]

The sei whale feeds near the surface of the ocean, swimming on its side through swarms of prey to obtain its average of about 900 kg (2,000 lb) of food each day.[28] For an animal of its size, its preferred prey lies low within the food chain; this includes zooplankton and small fish. The whale's diet preferences has been determined from stomach analyses, direct observation of feeding behavior,[45][46] and analyzing fecal matter collected near them, which appears as a dilute brown cloud. The feces are collected in nets and DNA is separated, individually identified, and matched with known species.[47] The whale competes for food against different baleen whales.[48]

In the North Atlantic, it feeds primarily on calanoid copepods, specifically Calanus finmarchicus, with a secondary preference for euphausiids, in particular Meganyctiphanes norvegica and Thysanoessa inermis.[49][50] In the North Pacific, it feeds on similar zooplankton, including the copepod species Neocalanus cristatus, N. plumchrus, and Calanus pacificus, and euphausiid species Euphausia pacifica, E. similis, Thysanoessa inermis, T. longipes, T. gregaria and T. spinifera. In addition, it eats larger organisms, such as the Japanese flying squid, Todarodes pacificus pacificus,[51] and small fish, including anchovies (Engraulis japonicus and E. mordax), sardines (Sardinops sagax), Pacific saury (Cololabis saira), mackerel (Scomber japonicus and S. australasicus), jack mackerel (Trachurus symmetricus) and juvenile rockfish (Sebastes jordani).[49][52] Off central California, they mainly feed on anchovies between June and August, and on krill (Euphausia pacifica) during September and October.[53] In the Southern Hemisphere, prey species include the copepods Neocalanus tonsus, Calanus simillimus, and Drepanopus pectinatus, as well as the euphausiids Euphausia superba and Euphausia vallentini[49] and the pelagic amphipod Themisto gaudichaudii.[54]

Parasites and epibiotics edit

Ectoparasites and epibiotics are rare on sei whales. Species of the parasitic copepod Pennella were only found on 8% of sei whales caught off California and 4% of those taken off South Georgia and South Africa. The pseudo-stalked barnacle Xenobalanus globicipitis was found on 9% of individuals caught off California; it was also found on a sei whale taken off South Africa. The acorn barnacle Coronula reginae and the stalked barnacle Conchoderma virgatum were each only found on 0.4% of whales caught off California. Remora australis were rarely found on sei whales off California (only 0.8%). They often bear scars from the bites of cookiecutter sharks, with 100% of individuals sampled off California, South Africa, and South Georgia having them; these scars have also been found on sei whales captured off Finnmark. Diatom (Cocconeis ceticola) films on sei whales are rare, having been found on sei whales taken off California and South Georgia.[26][53][55]

Due to their diverse diet, endoparasites are frequent and abundant in sei whales. The harpacticoid copepod Balaenophilus unisetus infests the baleen of sei whales caught off California, South Georgia, South Africa, and Finnmark. The ciliate protozoan Haematophagus was commonly found in the baleen of sei whales taken off South Georgia (nearly 85%). They often carry heavy infestations of acanthocephalans (e.g. Bolbosoma turbinella, which was found in 40% of sei whales sampled off California; it was also found in individuals off South Georgia and Finnmark) and cestodes (e.g. Tetrabothrius affinis, found in sei whales off California and South Georgia) in the intestine, nematodes in the kidneys (Crassicauda sp., California) and stomach (Anisakis simplex, nearly 60% of whales taken off California), and flukes (Lecithodesmus spinosus, found in 38% of individuals caught off California) in the liver.[26][53][55]

Reproduction edit

Mating occurs in temperate, subtropical seas during the winter. Gestation is estimated to vary around 1034 months,[56] 1114 months,[57] or one year.[58] During the breeding period, a mating pair will remain together.[59]

A newborn is weaned from its mother at 6–9 months of age, when it is 8–9 m (26–30 ft) long,[34] so weaning takes place at the summer or autumn feeding grounds. Females reproduce every 2–3 years,[56] usually to a single calf.[28] In the Northern Hemisphere, males are usually 12.8–12.9 m (42–42 ft) and females 13.3–13.5 m (44–44 ft) at sexual maturity, while in the Southern Hemisphere, males average 13.6 m (45 ft) and females 14 m (46 ft).[41] The average age of sexual maturity of both sexes is 8–10 years.[56] The whales can reach ages up to 70 years.[59]

Vocalizations edit

The sei whale makes long, loud, low-frequency sounds. Relatively little is known about specific calls, but in 2003, observers noted sei whale calls in addition to sounds that could be described as "growls" or "whooshes" off the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula.[60] Many calls consisted of multiple parts at different frequencies. This combination distinguishes their calls from those of other whales. Most calls last about a second, and occur in the 37-98 hertz range, well within the range of human hearing. The maximum volume of the vocal sequences is reported as 156 decibels relative to 1 micropascal (μPa) at a reference distance of one metre.[60] An observer situated one metre from a vocalizing whale would perceive a volume roughly equivalent to the volume of a jackhammer operating two meters away.[61]

In November 2002, scientists recorded calls in the presence of sei whales off Maui. All the calls were downswept tonal calls, all but two ranging from a mean high frequency of 39.1 Hz down to 21 Hz of 1.3 second duration – the two higher frequency downswept calls ranged from an average of 100.3 Hz to 44.6 Hz over 1 second of duration. These calls closely resembled and coincided with a peak in "20- to 35-Hz irregular repetition interval" downswept pulses described from seafloor recordings off Oahu, which had previously been attributed to fin whales.[62] Between 2005 and 2007, low frequency downswept vocalizations were recorded in the Great South Channel, east of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, which were associated with the presence of sei whales. These calls averaged 82.3 Hz down to 34 Hz over about 1.4 seconds in duration. This call has also been reported from recordings in the Gulf of Maine, New England shelf waters, the mid-Atlantic Bight, and in Davis Strait. It likely functions as a contact call.[63]

BBC News quoted Roddy Morrison, a former whaler active in South Georgia, as saying, "When we killed the sei whales, they used to make a noise, like a crying noise. They seemed so friendly, and they'd come round and they'd make a noise, and when you hit them, they cried really. I didn't think it was really nice to do that. Everybody talked about it at the time I suppose, but it was money. At the end of the day that's what counted at the time. That's what we were there for."[64]

Range and migration edit

 
Beached sei whale carcass

Sei whales live in all oceans, although rarely in polar or tropical waters.[30] The difficulty of differentiating them at sea from their close relatives, Bryde's whales and in some cases from fin whales, creates confusion about their range and population, especially in warmer waters where Bryde's whales are most common.[65][66]

In the North Atlantic, its range extends from southern Europe or northwestern Africa to Norway, and from the southern United States to Greenland.[67] The southernmost confirmed records are strandings along the northern Gulf of Mexico and in the Greater Antilles.[29] It rarely enters the Mediterranean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, which are both considered to be small waterbodies. Sei whales are pelagic and are typically found in basins in oceans or open seas.[30]

In the North Pacific, it ranges from 20°N to 23°N latitude in the winter, and from 35°N to 50°N latitude in the summer.[68] Approximately 75% of the North Pacific population lives east of the International Date Line.[69] As of February 2017, the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service estimated that the eastern North Pacific population stood at 374 whales.[70] Two whales tagged in deep waters off California were later recaptured off Washington and British Columbia, revealing a possible link between these areas,[71] but the lack of other tag recovery data makes these two cases inconclusive. Occurrences within the Gulf of California have been fewer.[72] In Sea of Japan and Sea of Okhotsk, whales are not common, although whales were more commonly seen than today in southern part of Sea of Japan. There had been a sighting in Golden Horn Bay,[73] and whales were much more abundant in the triangle area around Kunashir Island in whaling days, making the area well known as sei – ground.[74] There had been sightings of the species off the Sea of Japan during cetacean surveys.[75]

Sei whales have been recorded from northern Indian Ocean as well such as around Sri Lanka and Indian coasts.[76] In the Southern Hemisphere, summer distribution based upon historic catch data is between 40°S and 50°S latitude in the South Atlantic and southern Indian Oceans and 45°S and 60°S in the South Pacific, while winter distribution is poorly known, with former winter whaling grounds being located off northeastern Brazil (7°S) and Peru (6°S).[2] The majority of the "sei" whales caught off Angola and Congo, as well as other nearby areas in equatorial West Africa, are thought to have been predominantly misidentified Bryde's whales. For example, Ruud (1952) found that 42 of the "sei whale" caught off Gabon in 1952 were actually Bryde's whales, based on examination of their baleen plates. The only confirmed historical record is the capture of a 14 m (46 ft) female, which was brought to the Cap Lopez whaling station in Gabon in September 1950. During cetacean sighting surveys off Angola between 2003 and 2006, only a single confirmed sighting of two individuals was made in August 2004, compared to 19 sightings of Bryde's whales.[77] Sei whales are commonly distributed along west to southern Latin America, including the entire Chilean coast down to the Beagle Channel.[78][79] The Falkland Islands appear to be a regionally important area for the sei whale, as a small population exists in coastal waters off the eastern Falkland archipelago. For reasons unknown, the whales prefer to stay inland here, even venturing into large bays.[80]

Migration edit

In general, the sei whale migrates annually from cool and subpolar waters in summer to temperate and subtropical waters for winter, where food is more abundant.[30] In the northwest Atlantic, sightings and catch records suggest the whales move north along the shelf edge to arrive in the areas of Georges Bank, Northeast Channel, and Browns Bank by mid- to late- June. They are present off the south coast of Newfoundland in August and September, and a southbound migration begins moving west and south along the Nova Scotian shelf from mid-September to mid-November. Whales in the Labrador Sea as early as the first week of June may move farther northward and arrive at waters southwest of Greenland later in the summer.[81] In the northeast Atlantic, the sei whale winters as far south as West Africa such as off Bay of Arguin, off coastal Western Sahara and follows the continental slope northward in spring. Large females lead the northward migration and reach the Denmark Strait earlier and more reliably than other sexes and classes, arriving in mid-July and remaining through mid-September. In some years, males and younger females remain at lower latitudes during the summer.[37]

Despite knowing some general migration patterns, exact routes are incompletely known and scientists cannot readily predict exactly where groups will appear from one year to the next.[82][37] A 1985 study suggested a correlation between appearances west of Greenland and the incursion of relatively warm waters from the Irminger Current into that area.[83] Some evidence from tagging data indicates individuals return off the coast of Iceland on an annual basis.[84] An individual satellite-tagged off Faial, in the Azores, traveled more than 4,000 km (2,500 mi) to the Labrador Sea via the Charlie-Gibbs Fracture Zone (CGFZ) between April and June 2005. It appeared to "hitch a ride" on prevailing currents, with erratic movements indicative of feeding behavior in five areas, in particular the CGFZ, an area of known high sei whale abundance as well as high copepod concentrations.[85] Seven whales tagged off Faial and Pico from May to June in 2008 and 2009 made their way to the Labrador Sea, while an eighth individual tagged in September 2009 headed southeast – its signal was lost between Madeira and the Canary Islands.[86]

Whaling edit

The development of explosive harpoons and steam-powered whaling ships in the late nineteenth century brought previously unobtainable large whales within the reach of commercial whalers. Initially, the sei whale's speed and elusiveness partially protected them,[87] and later the comparatively small yield of oil and meat. Once stocks of more profitable right whales, blue whales, fin whales, and humpback whales became depleted, sei whales were hunted in earnest, particularly from 1950 to 1980.[31]

North Atlantic edit

 
A sei whale (foreground) caught off Finnmark.

In the North Atlantic between 1885 and 1984, 14,295 sei whales were taken.[69] They were hunted in large numbers off the coasts of Norway and Scotland beginning in the late 19th and early 20th centuries,[82] and in 1885 alone more than 700 were caught off Finnmark.[88] Their meat was a popular Norwegian food. The meat's value made the hunting of this difficult-to-catch species profitable in the early twentieth century.[89]

In Iceland, a total of 2,574 whales were taken from the Hvalfjörður whaling station between 1948 and 1985. Since the late 1960s to early 1970s, the sei whale has been second only to the fin whale as the preferred target of Icelandic whalers, with meat in greater demand than whale oil, the prior target.[87]

Small numbers were taken off the Iberian Peninsula, beginning in the 1920s by Spanish whalers,[90] off the Nova Scotian shelf in the late 1960s and early 1970s by Canadian whalers,[81] and off the coast of West Greenland from the 1920s to the 1950s by Norwegian and Danish whalers.[83]

North Pacific edit

In the North Pacific, the total reported catch by commercial whalers was 72,215 between 1910 and 1975;[69] the majority were taken after 1947.[91] Shore stations in Japan and Korea processed 300–600 each year between 1911 and 1955. In 1959, the Japanese catch peaked at 1,340. Heavy exploitation in the North Pacific began in the early 1960s, with catches averaging 3,643 per year from 1963 to 1974 (total 43,719; annual range 1,280–6,053).[92] In 1971, after a decade of high catches, it became scarce in Japanese waters, ending commercial whaling in the country by 1975.[49][93]

Off the coast of North America, sei whales were hunted off British Columbia from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s, when the number of whales captured dropped to around 14 per year.[31] More than 2,000 were caught in British Columbian waters between 1962 and 1967.[94] Between 1957 and 1971, California shore stations processed 386 whales.[53] Commercial Sei whaling ended in the eastern North Pacific in 1971.[95]

Southern Hemisphere edit

A total of 152,233 were taken in the Southern Hemisphere between 1910 and 1979.[69] Whaling in southern oceans originally targeted humpback whales. By 1913, this species became rare, and the catch of fin and blue whales began to increase. As these species likewise became scarce, sei whale catches increased rapidly in the late 1950s and early 1960s.[49] The catch peaked in 1964–65 at over 20,000 sei whales, but by 1976, this number had dropped to below 2,000 and commercial whaling for the species ended in 1977.[31]

Post-protection whaling edit

Since the moratorium on commercial whaling, some sei whales have been taken by Icelandic and Japanese whalers under the IWC's scientific research programme. Iceland carried out four years of scientific whaling between 1986 and 1989, killing up to 40 sei whales a year.[96][97] The research is conducted by the Institute of Cetacean Research (ICR) in Tokyo, a privately funded, nonprofit institution. The main focus of the research is to examine what they eat and to assess the competition between whales and fisheries.[98][99] In a span of 15 years, around 1,453 whales were killed in the North Pacific between 2002 and 2017.[100]

Conservation groups, such as the World Wildlife Fund, dispute the value of this research, claiming that sei whales feed primarily on squid and plankton which are not hunted by humans, and only rarely on fish.[101] At the 2001 meeting of the IWC Scientific Committee, 32 scientists submitted a document expressing their belief that the Japanese program lacked scientific rigor and would not meet minimum standards of academic review.[102]

In 2010, a Los Angeles exclusive sushi restaurant confirmed to be serving sei whale meat was closed by its owners after a covert investigation and protests lead to prosecution by authorities for handling an endangered/protected species. [103]

Conservation status edit

 
Member states of the International Whaling Commission (in blue)

The sei whale is listed by the IUCN Red List as endangered, and with an increasing population trend, as of 2018.[2] The sei whale did not have meaningful international protection until 1970, when the International Whaling Commission first set catch quotas for the North Pacific for individual species. Before quotas, there were no legal limits.[104] Complete protection from commercial whaling in the North Pacific came in 1976.[95]

Quotas on sei whales in the North Atlantic began in 1977. Southern Hemisphere stocks were protected in 1979. Facing mounting evidence that several whale species were threatened with extinction, the IWC established a complete moratorium on commercial whaling beginning in 1986.[30] In the late 1970s, some "pirate" whaling took place in the eastern North Atlantic.[105] There is no direct evidence of illegal whaling in the North Pacific, despite the acknowledged misreporting of whaling data by the Soviet Union.[106]

Northern Hemisphere populations are listed in CITES Appendix II, indicating they are not immediately threatened with extinction, but may become so if they are not listed. Populations in the Southern Hemisphere are listed in CITES Appendix I, indicating they are threatened with extinction if trade is not halted.[28] The sei whale is listed on both Appendix I and Appendix II of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS). It is listed on Appendix I as this species has been categorized as being in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant proportion of their range and CMS parties strive towards strictly protecting these animals, and also on Appendix II.[107] The species is listed as endangered by the U.S. government National Marine Fisheries Service under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.[31]

Population estimates edit

As of 2018, the global population is estimated to be 50,000 mature individuals, with an increasing population trend. In the North Atlantic, 12,000 whales were estimated. As of 1983, around 10,000 whales were estimated in the Southern Hemisphere, and by 2011, approximately 35,000 individuals inhabited the North Pacific.[2]

Sei whales were said to have been scarce in the 1960s and early 1970s off northern Norway. One possible explanation for this disappearance is that the whales were overexploited.[108] The drastic reduction in northeastern Atlantic copepod stocks during the late 1960s may be another culprit. Surveys in the Denmark Strait found 1,290 whales in 1987, and 1,590 whales in 1989.[109] Nova Scotia's 1977 population estimates were between 1,393 and 2,248, with a minimum of 870.[81]

A 1977 study estimated Pacific Ocean totals of 9,110, based upon catch and CPUE data.[92] Japanese interests claim this figure is outdated, and in 2002 claimed the western North Pacific population was over 28,000,[99] a figure not accepted by the scientific community.[101] In western Canadian waters, researchers with Fisheries and Oceans Canada observed five seis together in the summer of 2017, the first such sighting in over 50 years.[110] In California waters, there was only one confirmed and five possible sightings by 1991 to 1993 aerial and ship surveys,[111][112] and there were no confirmed sightings off Oregon coasts such as Maumee Bay and Washington. Prior to commercial whaling, the North Pacific hosted an estimated 42,000. By the end of whaling, the population was down to between 7,260 and 12,620.[92] In the Southern Hemisphere, population estimates range between 9,800 and 12,000, based upon catch history and CPUE.[113] The IWC estimated 9,718 whales based upon survey data between 1978 and 1988.[114] Prior to commercial whaling, there were an estimated 65,000.[113]

Mass death events for sei whales have been recorded for many years and evidence suggests endemic poisoning (red tide) may have caused mass deaths in prehistoric times. In June 2015, scientists flying over southern Chile counted 337 dead sei whales, in what is regarded as the largest mass beaching ever documented.[115] The cause is not yet known; however, toxic algae blooms caused by unprecedented warming in the Pacific Ocean, known as the Blob, may be implicated.[116]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • National Audubon Society Guide to Marine Mammals of the World, Reeves, Stewart, Clapham and Powell, 2002, ISBN 0-375-41141-0
  • Eds. C. Michael Hogan and C.J.Cleveland. Sei whale. Encyclopedia of Earth, National Council for Science and Environment; content partner Encyclopedia of Life
  • Whales & Dolphins Guide to the Biology and Behaviour of Cetaceans, Maurizio Wurtz and Nadia Repetto. ISBN 1-84037-043-2
  • Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals, editors Perrin, Wursig and Thewissen, ISBN 0-12-551340-2
  • Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises, Carwardine (1995, reprinted 2000), ISBN 978-0-7513-2781-6
  • Oudejans, M. G.; Visser, F. (2010). "First confirmed record of a living sei whale (Balaenoptera borealis (Lesson, 1828)) in Irish coastal waters". Ir. Nat. J. 31: 46–48.

External links edit

  • US National Marine Fisheries Service Sei Whale web page
  • ARKive –
  • World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) – species profile for the Sei Whale
  • Official website of the Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area
  • Voices in the Sea – Sounds of the Sei Whale

whale, whale, norwegian, sæɪ, balaenoptera, borealis, baleen, whale, rorqual, species, third, largest, member, after, blue, whales, they, grow, length, weigh, much, long, tons, short, tons, subspecies, recognized, borealis, schlegelii, whale, ventral, surface,. The sei whale s eɪ SAY 4 Norwegian saeɪ Balaenoptera borealis is a baleen whale It is one of ten rorqual species and the third largest member after the blue and fin whales They can grow up to 19 5 m 64 ft in length and weigh as much as 28 t 28 long tons 31 short tons Two subspecies are recognized B b borealis and B b schlegelii The whale s ventral surface has sporadic markings ranging from light grey to white and its body is usually dark steel grey in colour It is among the fastest of all cetaceans and can reach speeds of up to 50 km h 31 mph over short distances Sei whale 1 Sei whale mother and calfSize compared to an average humanConservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix I CITES 3 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaInfraorder CetaceaFamily BalaenopteridaeGenus BalaenopteraSpecies B borealisBinomial nameBalaenoptera borealisLesson 1828SubspeciesB b borealis B b schlegeliiSei whale rangeSynonymsBalaena rostrata Rudolphi 1822 Balaenoptera laticeps Gray 1846 Sibbaldius schlegelii Flower 1865 Rudolphius laticeps Gray 1868It inhabits most oceans and adjoining seas and prefers deep offshore waters It avoids polar and tropical waters and semi enclosed bodies of water The sei whale migrates annually from cool subpolar waters in summer to temperate subtropical waters in winter with a lifespan of 70 years It is a filter feeder with its diet consisting primarily of copepods krill and other zooplankton It is typically solitary or can be found in groups numbering half a dozen During the breeding period a mating pair will remain together Sei whale vocalizations usually lasts half a second and occurs at 240 625 hertz Following large scale commercial whaling during the late 19th and 20th centuries when over 255 000 whales were killed the sei whale is now internationally protected It is listed as endangered by the IUCN Red List despite increasing populations The Northern Hemisphere population is listed under CITES Appendix II which indicates they are not threatened with extinction while the Southern Hemisphere population is listed under CITES Appendix I indicating that they are threatened and are given the highest levels of protection Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Etymology 2 Description 2 1 Size 3 Life history 3 1 Surface behaviours 3 2 Feeding 3 3 Parasites and epibiotics 3 4 Reproduction 3 5 Vocalizations 4 Range and migration 4 1 Migration 5 Whaling 5 1 North Atlantic 5 2 North Pacific 5 3 Southern Hemisphere 5 4 Post protection whaling 6 Conservation status 6 1 Population estimates 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTaxonomy editOn 21 February 1819 Swedish born German naturalist Karl Rudolphi initially identified a 9 8 m 32 ft whale stranded near Gromitz in Schleswig Holstein as Balaena rostrata Balaenoptera acutorostrata 5 In 1823 the French naturalist Georges Cuvier described Rudolphi s specimen under the name rorqual du Nord 6 In 1828 Rene Lesson translated this term into Balaenoptera borealis basing his designation partly on Cuvier s description of Rudolphi s specimen and partly on a 16 m 52 ft female that had stranded on the coast of France the previous year this was later identified as a juvenile fin whale Balaenoptera physalus 7 In 1846 the English zoologist John Edward Gray ignoring Lesson s designation named Rudolphi s specimen Balaenoptera laticeps which others followed 8 In 1865 British zoologist William Henry Flower named a 14 m 46 ft specimen that had been obtained from Pekalongan on the north coast of Java Sibbaldius Balaenoptera schlegelii in 1946 the Russian scientist A G Tomilin synonymized S schlegelii and B borealis creating the subspecies B b schlegelii and B b borealis 9 10 In 1884 85 the Norwegian scientist G A Guldberg first identified the sejhval of Finnmark with B borealis 11 Balaenopteridae Minke whaleB musculus blue whale B borealis sei whale Eschrichtius robustus gray whale B physalus fin whale Megaptera novaeangliae humpback whale A phylogenetic tree of six baleen whale species 12 Sei whales are rorquals family Balaenopteridae baleen whales that include the humpback whale the blue whale Bryde s whale the fin whale and the minke whale Rorquals take their name from the Norwegian word royrkval meaning furrow whale 13 because family members have a series of longitudinal pleats or grooves on the anterior half of their ventral surface Balaenopterids diverged from the other families of suborder Mysticeti also called the whalebone whales as long ago as the middle Miocene 14 Little is known about when members of the various families in the Mysticeti including the Balaenopteridae diverged from each other 15 Whole genome sequencing suggests that sei and blue whales are closely related with gray whales as a sister group This study also found significant gene flow between minke whales and the ancestors of the blue and sei whale 12 Two subspecies have been identified the northern sei whale B b borealis and southern sei whale B b schlegelii 16 Etymology edit The origin of sei is derived from pollock in Norwegian 17 The specific name is the Latin word borealis meaning northern The genus name Balaenoptera is Latin for whale 18 19 In the Pacific the whale has been called the Japan finner finner was a common term used to refer to rorquals In Japanese the whale was called iwashi kujira or sardine whale a name originally applied to Bryde s whales by early Japanese whalers Later as modern whaling shifted to Sanriku where both species occur it was confused for the sei whale Now the term only applies to the latter species 20 21 It has also been referred to as the lesser fin whale because it somewhat resembles the fin whale 22 Description editSee also Whale anatomy nbsp A sei whale showing distinctive upright dorsal finThe sei whale s body is typically a dark steel grey with irregular light grey to white markings on the ventral surface or towards the front of the lower body The whale has a relatively short series of 32 60 pleats or grooves along its ventral surface that extend halfway between the pectoral fins and umbilicus in other species it usually extends to or past the umbilicus restricting the expansion of the buccal cavity during feeding compared to other species 23 The rostrum is pointed and the pectoral fins are relatively short only 9 10 of body length and pointed at the tips 17 Sei whales have a solitary ridge extending from the tip of the rostrum to the paired blowholes that are a distinctive characteristic of baleen whales 24 Its skin is often marked by pits or wounds which after healing become white scars These are now known to be caused by cookie cutter sharks Isistius brasiliensis 25 It has a tall sickle shaped dorsal fin that ranges in height from 38 90 cm 15 35 in and averages 53 56 cm 21 22 in about two thirds of the way back from the tip of the rostrum 26 Dorsal fin shape pigmentation pattern and scarring have been used to a limited extent in photo identification studies 27 The tail is thick and the fluke or lobe is relatively small in relation to the size of the whale s body 17 nbsp Close up view of baleen plates used to strain food from the waterAdults have 300 380 ashy black baleen plates on each side of the mouth up to 80 cm 31 in long Each plate is made of fingernail like keratin which is bordered by a fringe of very fine short curly wool like white bristles 28 The sei s very fine baleen bristles about 0 1 mm 0 0039 in are the most reliable characteristic that distinguishes it from other rorquals 29 The sei whale looks very similar to other large rorquals especially to its smaller relative the Bryde s whale Exceptional individuals may resemble a fin whale which leads to confusion They are usually differentiated from the fin whale by the colour of their head Contrary to the fin whale s smooth rostrum the sei whale s rostrum is curved 30 Size edit nbsp Painting of a sei whale nbsp Sei whale skeletonThe sei whale is the third largest balaenopterid after the blue whale and the fin whale 31 Adults usually weigh between 15 20 t 15 20 long tons 17 22 short tons 32 They exhibit sexual dimorphism with females outweighing and being longer than their male counterparts 30 At birth a calf typically measures 4 4 4 5 m 14 15 ft in length 33 In the Northern Hemisphere males reach up to 17 1 m 56 ft and females up to 18 6 m 61 ft 34 while in the Southern Hemisphere males reach a maximum of 18 6 m 61 ft and females of 19 5 m 64 ft The authenticity of an alleged 22 m 72 ft female caught 80 km 50 mi northwest of St Kilda in July 1911 is doubted 35 36 37 Five specimens taken off Iceland exceeded 14 6 m 48 ft in length 37 38 The longest measured during JARPN II cruises in the North Pacific were a 16 32 m 53 5 ft female and a 15 m 49 ft male 39 40 In the North Pacific adult males average 13 7 m 45 ft and adult females 15 m 49 ft In the North Atlantic the average length of an adult male is 14 m 46 ft and of an adult female is 14 5 m 48 ft In the Southern Hemisphere they average 14 5 m 48 ft and 15 m 49 ft in males and females respectively 32 41 In the North Pacific males weigh an average of 15 t 15 long tons 17 short tons and females 18 5 t 18 2 long tons 20 4 short tons North Atlantic sei whale males average 15 5 t 15 3 long tons 17 1 short tons and females 17 t 17 long tons 19 short tons Southern Hemisphere whales average 17 18 5 t 16 7 18 2 long tons 18 7 20 4 short tons in body weight 32 41 Life history editSurface behaviours edit Very little is known about the sei whale social structure They have been documented traveling alone or in pods of up to six individuals larger groups may assemble at particularly abundant feeding grounds 42 27 During the southern Gulf of Maine influx in mid 1986 groups of at least three sei whales were observed milling on four occasions i e moving in random directions rolling and remaining at the surface for over 10 minutes One whale would always leave the group during or immediately after such socializing bouts 27 The sei whale is among the fastest cetaceans The American naturalist Roy Chapman Andrews compared the sei whale to the cheetah because it can swim at great speeds for a few hundred yards but it soon tires if the chase is long and does not have the strength and staying power of its larger relatives 43 It can reach speeds of up to 50 km h 31 mph over short distances 28 However it is not a remarkable diver reaching relatively shallow depths for 5 to 15 minutes Between dives the whale surfaces for a few minutes remaining visible in clear calm waters with blows occurring at intervals of about 60 seconds range 45 90 sec When about to dive the sei whale usually just sinks below the surface only the dorsal fin and blowholes protrude The whale is generally less active on water surfaces than other whale species they rarely exhibit lobtail behaviour 30 Feeding edit nbsp Krill shrimp like marine invertebrate animals are one of the sei whale s primary foods This rorqual is a filter feeder using its baleen plates to obtain its food by opening its mouth engulfing or skimming large amounts of the water containing the food then straining the water out through the baleen trapping any food items inside its mouth 44 The sei whale feeds near the surface of the ocean swimming on its side through swarms of prey to obtain its average of about 900 kg 2 000 lb of food each day 28 For an animal of its size its preferred prey lies low within the food chain this includes zooplankton and small fish The whale s diet preferences has been determined from stomach analyses direct observation of feeding behavior 45 46 and analyzing fecal matter collected near them which appears as a dilute brown cloud The feces are collected in nets and DNA is separated individually identified and matched with known species 47 The whale competes for food against different baleen whales 48 In the North Atlantic it feeds primarily on calanoid copepods specifically Calanus finmarchicus with a secondary preference for euphausiids in particular Meganyctiphanes norvegica and Thysanoessa inermis 49 50 In the North Pacific it feeds on similar zooplankton including the copepod species Neocalanus cristatus N plumchrus and Calanus pacificus and euphausiid species Euphausia pacifica E similis Thysanoessa inermis T longipes T gregaria and T spinifera In addition it eats larger organisms such as the Japanese flying squid Todarodes pacificus pacificus 51 and small fish including anchovies Engraulis japonicus and E mordax sardines Sardinops sagax Pacific saury Cololabis saira mackerel Scomber japonicus and S australasicus jack mackerel Trachurus symmetricus and juvenile rockfish Sebastes jordani 49 52 Off central California they mainly feed on anchovies between June and August and on krill Euphausia pacifica during September and October 53 In the Southern Hemisphere prey species include the copepods Neocalanus tonsus Calanus simillimus and Drepanopus pectinatus as well as the euphausiids Euphausia superba and Euphausia vallentini 49 and the pelagic amphipod Themisto gaudichaudii 54 Parasites and epibiotics edit Ectoparasites and epibiotics are rare on sei whales Species of the parasitic copepod Pennella were only found on 8 of sei whales caught off California and 4 of those taken off South Georgia and South Africa The pseudo stalked barnacle Xenobalanus globicipitis was found on 9 of individuals caught off California it was also found on a sei whale taken off South Africa The acorn barnacle Coronula reginae and the stalked barnacle Conchoderma virgatum were each only found on 0 4 of whales caught off California Remora australis were rarely found on sei whales off California only 0 8 They often bear scars from the bites of cookiecutter sharks with 100 of individuals sampled off California South Africa and South Georgia having them these scars have also been found on sei whales captured off Finnmark Diatom Cocconeis ceticola films on sei whales are rare having been found on sei whales taken off California and South Georgia 26 53 55 Due to their diverse diet endoparasites are frequent and abundant in sei whales The harpacticoid copepod Balaenophilus unisetus infests the baleen of sei whales caught off California South Georgia South Africa and Finnmark The ciliate protozoan Haematophagus was commonly found in the baleen of sei whales taken off South Georgia nearly 85 They often carry heavy infestations of acanthocephalans e g Bolbosoma turbinella which was found in 40 of sei whales sampled off California it was also found in individuals off South Georgia and Finnmark and cestodes e g Tetrabothrius affinis found in sei whales off California and South Georgia in the intestine nematodes in the kidneys Crassicauda sp California and stomach Anisakis simplex nearly 60 of whales taken off California and flukes Lecithodesmus spinosus found in 38 of individuals caught off California in the liver 26 53 55 Reproduction edit See also Whale reproduction Mating occurs in temperate subtropical seas during the winter Gestation is estimated to vary around 103 4 months 56 111 4 months 57 or one year 58 During the breeding period a mating pair will remain together 59 A newborn is weaned from its mother at 6 9 months of age when it is 8 9 m 26 30 ft long 34 so weaning takes place at the summer or autumn feeding grounds Females reproduce every 2 3 years 56 usually to a single calf 28 In the Northern Hemisphere males are usually 12 8 12 9 m 42 42 ft and females 13 3 13 5 m 44 44 ft at sexual maturity while in the Southern Hemisphere males average 13 6 m 45 ft and females 14 m 46 ft 41 The average age of sexual maturity of both sexes is 8 10 years 56 The whales can reach ages up to 70 years 59 Vocalizations edit See also Whale sound The sei whale makes long loud low frequency sounds Relatively little is known about specific calls but in 2003 observers noted sei whale calls in addition to sounds that could be described as growls or whooshes off the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula 60 Many calls consisted of multiple parts at different frequencies This combination distinguishes their calls from those of other whales Most calls last about a second and occur in the 37 98 hertz range well within the range of human hearing The maximum volume of the vocal sequences is reported as 156 decibels relative to 1 micropascal mPa at a reference distance of one metre 60 An observer situated one metre from a vocalizing whale would perceive a volume roughly equivalent to the volume of a jackhammer operating two meters away 61 In November 2002 scientists recorded calls in the presence of sei whales off Maui All the calls were downswept tonal calls all but two ranging from a mean high frequency of 39 1 Hz down to 21 Hz of 1 3 second duration the two higher frequency downswept calls ranged from an average of 100 3 Hz to 44 6 Hz over 1 second of duration These calls closely resembled and coincided with a peak in 20 to 35 Hz irregular repetition interval downswept pulses described from seafloor recordings off Oahu which had previously been attributed to fin whales 62 Between 2005 and 2007 low frequency downswept vocalizations were recorded in the Great South Channel east of Cape Cod Massachusetts which were associated with the presence of sei whales These calls averaged 82 3 Hz down to 34 Hz over about 1 4 seconds in duration This call has also been reported from recordings in the Gulf of Maine New England shelf waters the mid Atlantic Bight and in Davis Strait It likely functions as a contact call 63 BBC News quoted Roddy Morrison a former whaler active in South Georgia as saying When we killed the sei whales they used to make a noise like a crying noise They seemed so friendly and they d come round and they d make a noise and when you hit them they cried really I didn t think it was really nice to do that Everybody talked about it at the time I suppose but it was money At the end of the day that s what counted at the time That s what we were there for 64 Range and migration edit nbsp Beached sei whale carcassSei whales live in all oceans although rarely in polar or tropical waters 30 The difficulty of differentiating them at sea from their close relatives Bryde s whales and in some cases from fin whales creates confusion about their range and population especially in warmer waters where Bryde s whales are most common 65 66 In the North Atlantic its range extends from southern Europe or northwestern Africa to Norway and from the southern United States to Greenland 67 The southernmost confirmed records are strandings along the northern Gulf of Mexico and in the Greater Antilles 29 It rarely enters the Mediterranean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico which are both considered to be small waterbodies Sei whales are pelagic and are typically found in basins in oceans or open seas 30 In the North Pacific it ranges from 20 N to 23 N latitude in the winter and from 35 N to 50 N latitude in the summer 68 Approximately 75 of the North Pacific population lives east of the International Date Line 69 As of February 2017 update the U S National Marine Fisheries Service estimated that the eastern North Pacific population stood at 374 whales 70 Two whales tagged in deep waters off California were later recaptured off Washington and British Columbia revealing a possible link between these areas 71 but the lack of other tag recovery data makes these two cases inconclusive Occurrences within the Gulf of California have been fewer 72 In Sea of Japan and Sea of Okhotsk whales are not common although whales were more commonly seen than today in southern part of Sea of Japan There had been a sighting in Golden Horn Bay 73 and whales were much more abundant in the triangle area around Kunashir Island in whaling days making the area well known as sei ground 74 There had been sightings of the species off the Sea of Japan during cetacean surveys 75 Sei whales have been recorded from northern Indian Ocean as well such as around Sri Lanka and Indian coasts 76 In the Southern Hemisphere summer distribution based upon historic catch data is between 40 S and 50 S latitude in the South Atlantic and southern Indian Oceans and 45 S and 60 S in the South Pacific while winter distribution is poorly known with former winter whaling grounds being located off northeastern Brazil 7 S and Peru 6 S 2 The majority of the sei whales caught off Angola and Congo as well as other nearby areas in equatorial West Africa are thought to have been predominantly misidentified Bryde s whales For example Ruud 1952 found that 42 of the sei whale caught off Gabon in 1952 were actually Bryde s whales based on examination of their baleen plates The only confirmed historical record is the capture of a 14 m 46 ft female which was brought to the Cap Lopez whaling station in Gabon in September 1950 During cetacean sighting surveys off Angola between 2003 and 2006 only a single confirmed sighting of two individuals was made in August 2004 compared to 19 sightings of Bryde s whales 77 Sei whales are commonly distributed along west to southern Latin America including the entire Chilean coast down to the Beagle Channel 78 79 The Falkland Islands appear to be a regionally important area for the sei whale as a small population exists in coastal waters off the eastern Falkland archipelago For reasons unknown the whales prefer to stay inland here even venturing into large bays 80 Migration edit In general the sei whale migrates annually from cool and subpolar waters in summer to temperate and subtropical waters for winter where food is more abundant 30 In the northwest Atlantic sightings and catch records suggest the whales move north along the shelf edge to arrive in the areas of Georges Bank Northeast Channel and Browns Bank by mid to late June They are present off the south coast of Newfoundland in August and September and a southbound migration begins moving west and south along the Nova Scotian shelf from mid September to mid November Whales in the Labrador Sea as early as the first week of June may move farther northward and arrive at waters southwest of Greenland later in the summer 81 In the northeast Atlantic the sei whale winters as far south as West Africa such as off Bay of Arguin off coastal Western Sahara and follows the continental slope northward in spring Large females lead the northward migration and reach the Denmark Strait earlier and more reliably than other sexes and classes arriving in mid July and remaining through mid September In some years males and younger females remain at lower latitudes during the summer 37 Despite knowing some general migration patterns exact routes are incompletely known and scientists cannot readily predict exactly where groups will appear from one year to the next 82 37 A 1985 study suggested a correlation between appearances west of Greenland and the incursion of relatively warm waters from the Irminger Current into that area 83 Some evidence from tagging data indicates individuals return off the coast of Iceland on an annual basis 84 An individual satellite tagged off Faial in the Azores traveled more than 4 000 km 2 500 mi to the Labrador Sea via the Charlie Gibbs Fracture Zone CGFZ between April and June 2005 It appeared to hitch a ride on prevailing currents with erratic movements indicative of feeding behavior in five areas in particular the CGFZ an area of known high sei whale abundance as well as high copepod concentrations 85 Seven whales tagged off Faial and Pico from May to June in 2008 and 2009 made their way to the Labrador Sea while an eighth individual tagged in September 2009 headed southeast its signal was lost between Madeira and the Canary Islands 86 Whaling editMain articles Whaling and History of whaling The development of explosive harpoons and steam powered whaling ships in the late nineteenth century brought previously unobtainable large whales within the reach of commercial whalers Initially the sei whale s speed and elusiveness partially protected them 87 and later the comparatively small yield of oil and meat Once stocks of more profitable right whales blue whales fin whales and humpback whales became depleted sei whales were hunted in earnest particularly from 1950 to 1980 31 North Atlantic edit nbsp A sei whale foreground caught off Finnmark In the North Atlantic between 1885 and 1984 14 295 sei whales were taken 69 They were hunted in large numbers off the coasts of Norway and Scotland beginning in the late 19th and early 20th centuries 82 and in 1885 alone more than 700 were caught off Finnmark 88 Their meat was a popular Norwegian food The meat s value made the hunting of this difficult to catch species profitable in the early twentieth century 89 In Iceland a total of 2 574 whales were taken from the Hvalfjordur whaling station between 1948 and 1985 Since the late 1960s to early 1970s the sei whale has been second only to the fin whale as the preferred target of Icelandic whalers with meat in greater demand than whale oil the prior target 87 Small numbers were taken off the Iberian Peninsula beginning in the 1920s by Spanish whalers 90 off the Nova Scotian shelf in the late 1960s and early 1970s by Canadian whalers 81 and off the coast of West Greenland from the 1920s to the 1950s by Norwegian and Danish whalers 83 North Pacific edit In the North Pacific the total reported catch by commercial whalers was 72 215 between 1910 and 1975 69 the majority were taken after 1947 91 Shore stations in Japan and Korea processed 300 600 each year between 1911 and 1955 In 1959 the Japanese catch peaked at 1 340 Heavy exploitation in the North Pacific began in the early 1960s with catches averaging 3 643 per year from 1963 to 1974 total 43 719 annual range 1 280 6 053 92 In 1971 after a decade of high catches it became scarce in Japanese waters ending commercial whaling in the country by 1975 49 93 Off the coast of North America sei whales were hunted off British Columbia from the late 1950s to the mid 1960s when the number of whales captured dropped to around 14 per year 31 More than 2 000 were caught in British Columbian waters between 1962 and 1967 94 Between 1957 and 1971 California shore stations processed 386 whales 53 Commercial Sei whaling ended in the eastern North Pacific in 1971 95 Southern Hemisphere edit A total of 152 233 were taken in the Southern Hemisphere between 1910 and 1979 69 Whaling in southern oceans originally targeted humpback whales By 1913 this species became rare and the catch of fin and blue whales began to increase As these species likewise became scarce sei whale catches increased rapidly in the late 1950s and early 1960s 49 The catch peaked in 1964 65 at over 20 000 sei whales but by 1976 this number had dropped to below 2 000 and commercial whaling for the species ended in 1977 31 Post protection whaling edit Since the moratorium on commercial whaling some sei whales have been taken by Icelandic and Japanese whalers under the IWC s scientific research programme Iceland carried out four years of scientific whaling between 1986 and 1989 killing up to 40 sei whales a year 96 97 The research is conducted by the Institute of Cetacean Research ICR in Tokyo a privately funded nonprofit institution The main focus of the research is to examine what they eat and to assess the competition between whales and fisheries 98 99 In a span of 15 years around 1 453 whales were killed in the North Pacific between 2002 and 2017 100 Conservation groups such as the World Wildlife Fund dispute the value of this research claiming that sei whales feed primarily on squid and plankton which are not hunted by humans and only rarely on fish 101 At the 2001 meeting of the IWC Scientific Committee 32 scientists submitted a document expressing their belief that the Japanese program lacked scientific rigor and would not meet minimum standards of academic review 102 In 2010 a Los Angeles exclusive sushi restaurant confirmed to be serving sei whale meat was closed by its owners after a covert investigation and protests lead to prosecution by authorities for handling an endangered protected species 103 Conservation status edit nbsp Member states of the International Whaling Commission in blue The sei whale is listed by the IUCN Red List as endangered and with an increasing population trend as of 2018 2 The sei whale did not have meaningful international protection until 1970 when the International Whaling Commission first set catch quotas for the North Pacific for individual species Before quotas there were no legal limits 104 Complete protection from commercial whaling in the North Pacific came in 1976 95 Quotas on sei whales in the North Atlantic began in 1977 Southern Hemisphere stocks were protected in 1979 Facing mounting evidence that several whale species were threatened with extinction the IWC established a complete moratorium on commercial whaling beginning in 1986 30 In the late 1970s some pirate whaling took place in the eastern North Atlantic 105 There is no direct evidence of illegal whaling in the North Pacific despite the acknowledged misreporting of whaling data by the Soviet Union 106 Northern Hemisphere populations are listed in CITES Appendix II indicating they are not immediately threatened with extinction but may become so if they are not listed Populations in the Southern Hemisphere are listed in CITES Appendix I indicating they are threatened with extinction if trade is not halted 28 The sei whale is listed on both Appendix I and Appendix II of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals CMS It is listed on Appendix I as this species has been categorized as being in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant proportion of their range and CMS parties strive towards strictly protecting these animals and also on Appendix II 107 The species is listed as endangered by the U S government National Marine Fisheries Service under the U S Endangered Species Act 31 Population estimates edit As of 2018 the global population is estimated to be 50 000 mature individuals with an increasing population trend In the North Atlantic 12 000 whales were estimated As of 1983 around 10 000 whales were estimated in the Southern Hemisphere and by 2011 approximately 35 000 individuals inhabited the North Pacific 2 Sei whales were said to have been scarce in the 1960s and early 1970s off northern Norway One possible explanation for this disappearance is that the whales were overexploited 108 The drastic reduction in northeastern Atlantic copepod stocks during the late 1960s may be another culprit Surveys in the Denmark Strait found 1 290 whales in 1987 and 1 590 whales in 1989 109 Nova Scotia s 1977 population estimates were between 1 393 and 2 248 with a minimum of 870 81 A 1977 study estimated Pacific Ocean totals of 9 110 based upon catch and CPUE data 92 Japanese interests claim this figure is outdated and in 2002 claimed the western North Pacific population was over 28 000 99 a figure not accepted by the scientific community 101 In western Canadian waters researchers with Fisheries and Oceans Canada observed five seis together in the summer of 2017 the first such sighting in over 50 years 110 In California waters there was only one confirmed and five possible sightings by 1991 to 1993 aerial and ship surveys 111 112 and there were no confirmed sightings off Oregon coasts such as Maumee Bay and Washington Prior to commercial whaling the North Pacific hosted an estimated 42 000 By the end of whaling the population was down to between 7 260 and 12 620 92 In the Southern Hemisphere population estimates range between 9 800 and 12 000 based upon catch history and CPUE 113 The IWC estimated 9 718 whales based upon survey data between 1978 and 1988 114 Prior to commercial whaling there were an estimated 65 000 113 Mass death events for sei whales have been recorded for many years and evidence suggests endemic poisoning red tide may have caused mass deaths in prehistoric times In June 2015 scientists flying over southern Chile counted 337 dead sei whales in what is regarded as the largest mass beaching ever documented 115 The cause is not yet known however toxic algae blooms caused by unprecedented warming in the Pacific Ocean known as the Blob may be implicated 116 See also edit nbsp Cetaceans portal nbsp Mammals portal nbsp Marine life portalList of cetaceans Pacific Islands Cetaceans Memorandum of Understanding HMS Daedalus 1826 References edit Mead J G Brownell R L Jr 2005 Order Cetacea In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press pp 723 743 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b c d Cooke J G 2018 Balaenoptera borealis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T2475A130482064 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T2475A130482064 en Retrieved 4 May 2021 Appendices CITES cites 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southern Gulf of Maine summer 1986 Whalewatcher 20 4 4 7 Darby A 6 February 2002 New Research Method May Ease Whale Killing National Geographic News Archived from the original on 4 April 2002 Retrieved 19 December 2006 Canada Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in 2003 COSEWIC Assessment and Update Status Report On the Sei Whale Balaenoptera Borealis Pacific Population Atlantic Population in Canada PDF Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada ISBN 978 0 662 35374 4 a b c d e Mizroch S A D W Rice J M Breiwick 1984 The Sei Whale Balaenoptera borealis Mar Fish Rev 46 4 25 29 Christensen I T Haug N Oien 1992 A review of feeding and reproduction in large baleen whales Mysticeti and sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus in Norwegian and adjacent waters Fauna Norvegica Series A 13 39 48 Tamura T October 2001 Competition for food in the Ocean Man and other apical predators PDF Reykjavik Conference on Responsible Fisheries in the Marine Ecosystem Reykjavik Iceland 1 4 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S2CID 85413269 Baumgartner M F Van Parijs S M Wenzel F W Tremblay C J Esch H C Ward A A 2008 Low frequency vocalizations attributed to sei whales Balaenoptera borealis Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 124 2 1339 1349 Bibcode 2008ASAJ 124 1339B doi 10 1121 1 2945155 hdl 1912 4618 PMID 18681619 South Georgia The lost whaling station at the end of the world BBC News 9 June 2014 Tinker Spencer Wilkie 1 January 1988 Whales of the World Brill Archive p 281 ISBN 978 0 935848 47 2 Amending the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan Broad based Gear Modifications Environmental Impact Statement Environmental Impact Statement 2007 pp 4 62 Gambell R 1985 Sei Whale Balaenoptera borealis Lesson 1828 In S H Ridgway R Harrison eds Handbook of Marine Mammals Vol 3 London Academic Press pp 155 170 Masaki Y 1976 Biological studies on the North Pacific sei whale Bull Far Seas Fish Res Lab 14 1 104 a b c d Horwood J 1987 The sei whale population biology ecology and management Kent England Croom Helm Ltd ISBN 978 0 7099 4786 8 SEI WHALE Balaenoptera borealis borealis Eastern North Pacific Stock National Marine Fisheries Service Marine Mammal Stock Assessment Reports 8 February 2017 Retrieved 23 May 2019 Rice D W 1974 Whales and whale research in the North Pacific In Schervill W E ed The Whale Problem a status report Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 170 195 ISBN 978 0 674 95075 7 Gendron D Rosales C S 1996 Recent sei whale Balaenoptera borealis sightings in the Gulf of California Mexico Aquatic Mammals 1996 22 2 pp 127 130 pdf Retrieved on February 24 2017 Sejval Balaenoptera borealis www zoosite com ua Uni Y 2006 Whales Dolphins and Porpoises off Shiretoko Bulletin of the Shiretoko Museum 27 pp 37 46 Retrieved on 16 December 2015 Omura H and Fujino K 1954 Sei Whales in the Adjacent Waters of Japan II Further Studies on the External Characters Scientific Report of the Whales Research Institute 9 89 103 Sathasivam K 2015 A CATALOGUE OF INDIAN MARINE 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Aguilar A S Lens 1981 Preliminary report on Spanish whaling operations Rep Int Whal Comm 31 639 643 Barlow J K A Forney P S Hill R L Brownell Jr J V Carretta D P DeMaster F Julian M S Lowry T Ragen amp R R Reeves 1997 U S Pacific marine mammal stock assessments 1996 PDF NOAA Tech Mem NMFS SWFSC 248 a b c Tillman M F 1977 Estimates of population size for the North Pacific sei whale Rep Int Whal Comm Spec Iss 1 98 106 Committee for Whaling Statistics 1942 International whaling statistics Oslo Committee for Whaling Statistics Pike G C I B MacAskie 1969 Marine mammals of British Columbia Fish Res Bd Canada Bull 171 a b Overview of Laws and Regulations Protecting Whales Animal Legal amp Historical Center www animallaw info Retrieved 28 December 2023 WWF condemns Iceland s announcement to resume whaling Press release WWF International 7 August 2003 Retrieved 10 November 2006 permanent dead link Sandra Altherr Iceland s Whaling Comeback PDF The Humane Society of the United States pp 3 4 Retrieved 15 April 2022 Japan not catching endangered whales PDF Press release The Institute of Cetacean Research Tokyo Japan 1 March 2002 Archived from the original PDF on 28 October 2006 Retrieved 10 November 2006 a b Japan s senior whale scientist responds to New York Times advertisement PDF Press release The Institute of Cetacean Research Tokyo Japan 20 May 2002 Archived from the original PDF on 9 December 2006 Retrieved 10 November 2006 Jayne Lyman Erica Jamin Olivier 22 June 2018 Japan s Introduction from the Sea of Sei Whale Meat the Breaking Point of CITES International Journal of Law and Public Administration 1 1 68 doi 10 11114 ijlpa v1i1 3379 ISSN 2576 2184 a b Japanese Scientific Whaling Irresponsible Science Irresponsible Whaling Press release WWF International 1 June 2005 Archived from the original on 25 August 2006 Retrieved 10 November 2006 Clapham P et al 2002 Relevance of JARPN II to management and a note on scientific standards Report of the IWC Scientific Committee Annex Q1 Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 4 supplement 395 396 L A eatery charged with serving whale meat closes Reuters 20 March 2010 Allen K R 1980 Conservation and Management of Whales Seattle WA Univ of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 95706 7 Best P B 1992 Catches of fin whales in the North Atlantic by the M V Sierra and associated vessels Rep Int Whal Comm 42 697 700 Yablokov A V 1994 Validity of whaling data Nature 367 6459 108 Bibcode 1994Natur 367 108Y doi 10 1038 367108a0 S2CID 4358731 Appendix I and Appendix II Archived 11 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals CMS As amended by the Conference of the Parties in 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 1999 2002 2005 and 2008 Effective 5 March 2009 Jonsgard A 1974 On whale exploitation in the eastern part of the North Atlantic Ocean In W E Schevill ed The whale problem Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 97 107 Cattanach K L J Sigurjonsson S T Buckland Th Gunnlaugsson 1993 Sei whale abundance in the North Atlantic estimated from NASS 87 and NASS 89 data Rep Int Whal Comm 43 315 321 Rabson Mia 26 September 2018 Scientists stumble across endangered whale not seen in Canada in years The Canadian Press CTV News Retrieved 26 September 2018 Hill P S amp J Barlow 1992 Report of a marine mammal survey of the California coast aboard the research vessel MacArthur July 28 5 November 1991 PDF NOAA Technical Memo NMFS SWFSC 169 U S Dept Commerce Carretta J V amp K A Forney 1993 Report of two aerial surveys for marine mammals in California coastal waters utilizing a NOAA DeHavilland Twin Otter aircraft March 9 7 April 1991 and February 8 6 April 1992 PDF NOAA Technical Memo NMFS SWFSC 185 U S Dept Commerce a b Braham H 1992 Endangered whales Status update Report Alaska Fisheries Science Center Seattle WA IWC 1996 Report of the sub committee on Southern Hemisphere baleen whales Annex E Rep Int Whal Comm 46 117 131 Howard Brian Clark 20 November 2015 337 Whales Beached in Largest Stranding Ever National Geographic Archived from the original on 21 November 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 On the Coast 14 September 2015 Dead whales in Pacific could be fault of the Blob CBC Retrieved 11 December 2015 Further reading editNational Audubon Society Guide to Marine Mammals of the World Reeves Stewart Clapham and Powell 2002 ISBN 0 375 41141 0 Eds C Michael Hogan and C J Cleveland Sei whale Encyclopedia of Earth National Council for Science and Environment content partner Encyclopedia of Life Whales amp Dolphins Guide to the Biology and Behaviour of Cetaceans Maurizio Wurtz and Nadia Repetto ISBN 1 84037 043 2 Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals editors Perrin Wursig and Thewissen ISBN 0 12 551340 2 Whales Dolphins and Porpoises Carwardine 1995 reprinted 2000 ISBN 978 0 7513 2781 6 Oudejans M G Visser F 2010 First confirmed record of a living sei whale Balaenoptera borealis Lesson 1828 in Irish coastal waters Ir Nat J 31 46 48 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Balaenoptera borealis nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Balaenoptera borealis US National Marine Fisheries Service Sei Whale web page ARKive images and movies of the sei whale Balaenoptera borealis World Wide Fund for Nature WWF species profile for the Sei Whale Official website of the Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area Voices in the Sea Sounds of the Sei Whale Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sei whale amp oldid 1211525992, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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