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Omura's whale

Omura's whale or the dwarf fin whale (Balaenoptera omurai) is a species of rorqual about which very little is known.[3] Before its formal description, it was referred to as a small, dwarf or pygmy form of Bryde's whale by various sources.[4] The common name and specific epithet commemorate Japanese cetologist Hideo Omura [jp].[5][6]

Omura's whale
Omura's whale
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Balaenopteridae
Genus: Balaenoptera
Species:
B. omurai
Binomial name
Balaenoptera omurai
Wada, Oishi & Yamada, 2003

The scientific description of this whale was made in Nature in 2003 by three Japanese scientists. They determined the existence of the species by analysing the morphology and mitochondrial DNA of nine individuals – eight caught by Japanese research vessels in the late 1970s in the Indo-Pacific and an adult female collected in 1998 from Tsunoshima, an island in the Sea of Japan. Later, abundant genetic evidence confirmed Omura's whale as a valid species and revealed it to be an early offshoot from the rorqual lineage, diverging much earlier than Bryde's and sei whales. It is perhaps more closely related to its larger relative, the blue whale.[5][7]

In the third edition of Mammal Species of the World, the "species" is relegated to being a synonym of Balaenoptera edeni. However, the authors note that this is subject to a revision of the genus.[8] The database ITIS lists this as a valid taxon, noting a caveat on the disputed systematics of this species, Balaenoptera edeni and Balaenoptera brydei.[9]

Taxonomy edit

 
Skull of Omura's whale in National Museum of Natural Science

The six specimens obtained in the Solomon Sea in 1976 were only noted to be smaller at sexual maturity than the "ordinary" Bryde's whales caught off New Zealand, whereas the two caught near the Cocos-Keeling Islands in 1978 were not differentiated from the 118 other "ordinary" Bryde's whales taken in the eastern Indian Ocean, south of Java. As a result of allozyme analysis, their distinctive baleen and small size at physical maturity compared to Bryde's whale, and photographs obtained of the harvested whales (showing their fin whale-like coloration), Shiro Wada and Kenichi Numachi (1991) decided that these eight individuals represented members of a new species of baleen whale. However, due to the lack of a detailed osteological study and the absence of "conclusive data", the International Whaling Commission decided to consider them only as a regionally distinct group of "small-form Bryde's whale". Despite this declaration, the specific status of the Solomon Sea specimens was supported by a mitochondrial DNA study done by Hideyoshi Yoshida and Hidehiro Kato (1999).[1][10][11][12][13]

The identity of these eight specimens was finally resolved in 1998 when an unidentified whale, which had died after colliding with a fishing boat in the Sea of Japan and was towed to Tsunoshima, was examined by Tadasu Yamada, Chief of the Division of Mammals and Birds at the National Science Museum, Tokyo. This specimen closely resembled the individuals caught in the 1970s in external appearance and allowed a complete osteological examination of the putative new species to be conducted. As a result of external morphology, osteology, and mitochondrial DNA analysis of two of the harvested whales and the Tsunoshima specimen, Wada, Masayuki Oishi, and Yamada described Balaenoptera omurai in the 20 November 2003 issue of the journal Nature. In honour of the people of Tsunoshima, who helped remove the flesh from the type specimen, it was given the Japanese vernacular name of Tsunoshima kujira (English: Horn Island whale).[5][12]

Holotype and paratypes edit

The holotype is an 11.03 m (36.2 ft) adult female, NSMT-M32505 (National Science Museum, Tokyo), which stranded at Tsunoshima (34°21′03″N 130°53′09″E / 34.35083°N 130.88583°E / 34.35083; 130.88583) in the southern Sea of Japan on 11 September 1998. It includes a complete skeleton, both complete rows of baleen plates, and frozen pieces of muscle, blubber, and kidney collected by T. K. Yamada, M. Oishi, T. Kuramochi, E. Jibiki, and S. Fujioka. The type locality is the Sea of Japan, which may not be representative of the species’ typical range. The paratypes include the eight specimens (five females and three males), NRIFSF1-8 (National Research Institute of Far Seas Fisheries, Fisheries Research Agency, Shizuoka), collected by Japanese research vessels in the Indo-Pacific in the late 1970s. The longest baleen plate (NRIFSF6 includes 18 more baleen plates), an earplug, and a piece of the sixth thoracic vertebra with associated epiphysis were collected from each individual.[1][5]

Description edit

Osteology edit

Omura's whale has several unique skeletal features that distinguish it from its congeners, namely B. brydei and B. edeni. In B. omurai and B. brydei, the posterior end of the ascending process of the maxilla widens to become squarish, whereas in B. edeni, it is slender and round throughout its length. In B. omurai, this widened posterior portion conceals the premaxilla, which disappears below the maxilla and nasal and does not reach the frontal, whereas in both B. brydei and B. edeni, the premaxilla reaches the frontal. The parietals flare laterally in dorsal view in B. omurai and the Indo-Pacific form of B. brydei, but are invisible in dorsal view in B. edeni and the North Pacific form of B. brydei. B. omurai has two small foramina "along the suture between the parietal and squamosal in the posterior wall of the temporal fossa", which both B. brydei and B. edeni lack. B. omurai has an oblique ridge on the dorsal side of the maxilla near the base of the rostrum, which is absent in both B. brydei and B. edeni. Unlike B. edeni, the alisphenoid is separate from the squamosal in B. omurai. The head of the first rib is not bifurcated in B. omurai, unlike B. brydei and B. edeni.[5][14]

Omura's whale has a total of 53 vertebrae, including seven cervical (the standard number among mammals), 13 thoracic, 12 lumbar, and 21 caudal. Like all members of its genus, it has only four digits on the manus of each pectoral fin (the third digit is missing). The phalangeal formula is: I-5, II-7, IV-6, V-3.[5][15]

External appearance edit

 
Feeding off Nosy Be, Madagascar

Its appearance resembles the larger fin whale (thus the alternate common names of dwarf fin whale[16] and little fin whale), both having a dark gray left lower jaw, and on the right side a white mandible patch, a white blaze, a dark eye stripe, a white inter-stripe wash, as well as a white chevron on the back, pectoral fins with a white anterior border and inner surface, and flukes with a white ventral surface and black margins. Like fin whales, it also exhibits a white left gape and a dark right gape, a reversal of the asymmetrical pigmentation on the lower jaw. It has a very falcate dorsal fin with a leading edge that gradually slopes into the back, halfway in shape between the more gradual slope of the fin whale and the more acute angle of Bryde's and sei whales. Its dorsal fin is also proportionally smaller and less upright than these other species. It typically has a single prominent median ridge on the rostrum, but can have faint lateral ridges, which are more pronounced in calves. Bryde's whale, on the other hand, has three prominent ridges on the rostrum. It has 45 to 95 ventral grooves that extend past the umbilicus. The type specimen (NSMT-M32505) had 203-208 pairs of baleen plates that were "short and broad with uncurled, stiff, grayish-white fringes", while NRIFSF6 had an estimated 181–190 on the right side – fewer than any other species in its genus. Other specimens of Omura's whale had between 204 and 246 pairs of baleen plates. Like the fin whale, NSMT-M32505 exhibited asymmetrical coloration in its baleen, as well: on the right side, the front third are yellowish-white, the intermediate 100 plates are bi-colored (dark on the outer side and yellowish-white on the inner side), and the remaining plates in the back were all black, while on the left side, the majority are bi-colored with the remaining back plates being all black like the right side. The average length and width for the nine specimens was 26 by 21.4 cm (10.2 by 8.4 in), the smallest length-to-breadth quotient (1.22) for any species in its genus.[3][5][17][18]

Omura's whale seen off New Caledonia, the Solomon Islands, West Sumatra, and East Kalimantan showed extensive scarring from cookiecutter shark bites, indicating they had ventured into deep waters;[19] whereas those off Madagascar did not exhibit them.[17]

Morphometrics edit

The rostrum is flat and V-shaped with the head occupying about a quarter of the body length. The pectoral fins are short but slender, being from about 13 to 15 per cent of the body length. The dorsal fin ranges between 7.5 and 20 cm (3 to 8 inches) in height and 18 to 60 cm (7 to 23.6 inches) in length for specimens 3.9 to 7.15 m (12.8 to 23.4 ft) in length, and is placed about 57 per cent of the body length back from the tip of the rostrum. It is 61.5 per cent of the body length from the tip of the lower jaw to the umbilicus, whereas it is about 63 per cent from the tip of the lower jaw to the end of the ventral grooves. The flukes are about a quarter to a fifth of the body length in width.[18][20][21]

Size edit

Omura's whale is among the smallest of the rorquals – only the two species of minke whale, the common and Antarctic, which reach 9.75 and 10.7 m (32.0 and 35.1 ft) in length, respectively, are smaller.[22] Of the eight specimens taken during Japanese whaling in the Indo-Pacific, the five females ranged in length from 10.1 to 11.5 m (33.1 to 37.7 ft), while the three males ranged from 9.6 to 10.0 m (31.5 to 32.8 ft). The females ranged in age from perhaps only 9 years (the earplug was damaged or partially lost) for an 11.2 m (36.7 ft) individual to 29 years for the longest female, whereas the three males ranged from perhaps 21 years (another damaged or partially lost earplug) for the longest male to 38 years for one of the 9.6 m (31.5 ft) specimens. All were physically mature with the exception of the smallest female. Of individuals found stranded in Taiwan and Thailand between 1983 and 2004, five males ranged in length from 5.13 to 10 m (16.8 to 32.8 ft), while two females were 4.3 and 5.95 m (14.1 and 19.5 ft), respectively – a specimen of unknown sex that stranded in 1983 in Phuket Province, Thailand, was 7 m (23.0 ft) in length.[5][14]

Of 16 "Bryde's whales" caught by hunters from Pamilacan between 1991 and 1993, 12 were measured. These cluster into two size categories, nine whales less than 10 m (32.8 ft), and three 12 m (39.4 ft) or more. Later, 85% (24 of 28) of the identified skull specimens examined from the Bohol Sea were found to be Omura's whales, whereas only 15% (4 of 28) were what was tentatively called the Indo-Pacific form of Bryde's whale (B. brydei). The former size category may be primarily (if not entirely) Omura's whale, whereas the larger whales – one of unknown sex of 12 m (39.4 ft) and two females of 13 m (42.7 ft) – would be the larger, offshore form of Bryde's whale. Of those smaller whales, four males ranged from 6.7 to 9.8 m (22.0 to 32.2 ft), four females ranged from 4.9 to 9.3 m (16.1 to 30.5 ft), and one of unknown sex was 9.4 m (30.8 ft).[23][24]

Lone individuals seen off Madagascar were estimated to range between 8 and 12 m (26.2 to 39.4 ft), while calves were estimated to be between 3 and 5 m (9.8 to 16.4 ft).[17]

The identity of three mature specimens (two females and a male) examined by biologist Graham Chittleborough in 1958 at a whaling station in Western Australia, which ranged in length from 10.6 to 11.74 m (34.8 to 38.5 ft), is uncertain – they may refer to Omura's whale or the smaller form of Bryde's whale (B. edeni). These three individuals were noted to have very small baleen plates – about 22 cm (8.8 in) by 15 cm (5.9 in), about 22 cm (8.8 in) by 16 cm (6.3 in), and 23.5 by 17.5 cm (9.3 by 6.9 in), respectively – with length-breadth quotients of 1.34 to 1.46, within the upper range (1.00-1.43) of the 9 specimens included in the formal description of Omura's whale, but also within the lower range of the Bryde's whale complex (1.2 to 1.33). The holotype of the smaller form of Bryde's whale (B. edeni) from Myanmar, though, had baleen plates of 30 by 15 cm (11.8 by 5.9 in), or a length-breadth quotient of exactly 2.0 – within the typical range of the Bryde's whale complex (1.8 to 2.4).[1][11][25][26][27]

Mating edit

Of the three females caught in the Solomon Sea, two were ovulating and lactating and one was resting (not lactating, ovulating, or pregnant), while one of the two females caught near the Cocos Islands was accompanied by a calf estimated to be about 3 m (9.8 ft) in length.[10][11] Nothing is known of the duration of gestation and lactation, and little is known of the timing or extent of breeding seasons. In August 2005, a 3.2 m (10 ft) female neonate with fetal folds and folded dorsal fin and flukes stranded at Miyazaki, Miyazaki Prefecture, on the eastern coast of Kyushu.[28][29] Off northwestern Madagascar, six different cow-calf pairs were seen: one in August 2011, three in November 2013, and two in August 2015, suggesting a protracted calving season. The three calves observed in November had bent dorsal fins (indicating that they were fairly young) but did not have fetal folds, while one of the calves sighted in August had an erect dorsal fin, indicating that it was older but still probably born that year. These calves were estimated to range in length from 3 to 5 m (9.8 to 16.4 ft).[17]

Behavior and diet edit

 
breaching off Nosy Be, Madagascar

Little is known of the behavior and diet of Omura's whale. Their blow is low and diffuse. After surfacing, the dorsal fin is usually not visible until after the head and splashguard have disappeared and they don't fluke when diving. They have been seen lunge feeding, defecating, and breaching off both Komodo National Park and northwestern Madagascar; they've also been seen rolling at the surface in apparent mating (the last of which allowed the identification of a male) off the former area.[30][17] Off Madagascar, average group size was only 1.1 individuals (272 individuals in 247 groups), but loose aggregations of as many as a dozen whales could be seen. A total of thirteen cow-calf pairs were observed between 2011 and 2016, including a female first seen in an aggregation in 2012, then with a calf in 2013, and alone again in 2015 and 2017, showing that individuals can exhibit strong site fidelity.[31]

The six paratypes taken in the Solomon Sea in 1976 reportedly only had krill (Euphausia diomedeae) in their stomachs,[1][32] while crustaceans and fish were found in a 7 m (23 ft) female from Japan. Individuals in Madagascar have been observed lunge feeding on the krill Pseudeuphausia latifrons.[31]

Song edit

Omura's whale produce amplitude-modulated songs of 15-50 Hz with a peak frequency of 36.1 Hz and an average duration of 9.2 seconds.[17] This is sometimes followed by a tonal call of 17 Hz and four seconds in duration. These songs are repeated every two to three minutes, sometimes for as long as thirteen hours. Songs have been recorded off northwest Madagascar year-round, with peak activity from late October to late January and again from late May to late June. Overlapping choruses of several singing individuals have been recorded throughout the year as well.[31]

Movements edit

Four Omura's whales were satellite-tagged off northwest Madagascar in November 2016. The tags stayed on an average of 42 days (range: 30–58 days). The tagged whales traveled an average of 2,530 km (range: 2,148 to 3,181 km) but remained within a small coastal range of only 230 to 405 km (average: 283 km) off the northwest coast of the island. All whales traversed their entire individual ranges several times, spending most of their time on shelf waters and rarely venturing into deep waters.[31]

Range edit

 
Distribution in western Pacific Ocean

Omura's whale are found in the Indo-Pacific and the Atlantic Oceans, primarily in shelf waters between 35° N and 35° S, with the majority of records in the tropics (between 23° 26' N and 23° 26' S).[19] Their range includes southern Japan (with strandings and entanglements recorded in March and from May to October; including the prefectures of Yamaguchi,[33] Miyazaki,[34] Kagawa,[35] Mie, Shizuoka, and Chiba),[19] South Korea[36] (December to January, from the provinces of South Jeolla and South Gyeongsang),[19] China[37][38] (with strandings from November to February and in August; including the provinces of Zhejiang, Fujian, Guangdong,[18] and Guangxi),[20] Taiwan (with strandings from November to March and in May; there are also sightings from April to May and July to August),[14][39] Hong Kong (March),[40][41] the Philippines[42] (Manila Bay, Busuanga,[19] and the Bohol Sea),[24] Vietnam (Quảng Ngãi Province),[19] Malaysia (Pahang),[43] Thailand (with sightings and strandings from February, May to June, and November to December; including the provinces of Phang Nga, Phuket,[14] Prachuap Khiri Khan, and Songkhla),[19] Indonesia (with sightings and strandings from February, April to June, and from September to November; with records from West Sumatra, the southern Java Sea, Bali,[19] Komodo,[30] the Solor Archipelago, Seram, Raja Ampat Islands, and East Kalimantan),[19] the Cocos (Keeling) Islands,[5] the Andaman Islands (April),[19] Australia (Western Australia from Exmouth[44] to north of Darwin in the Northern Territory at about 9° 30' S - 10° S, 130° E),[45] South Australia[46] (January, Gulf St Vincent), Queensland (November to December, Port Douglas and Mission Beach),[47] the Solomon Islands,[48] New Caledonia,[49] Sri Lanka (February),[50] the Chagos Archipelago,[19] Iran (September, Strait of Hormuz),[51] Egypt (April, the northern Red Sea)[19] northwestern Madagascar (12° 01' S to 19° 23' S, with sightings by researchers from August and October to December, by whale watch operators from April to December, and acoustically detected year-round),[31] Mauritania (November, Trarza Region),[52] Brazil (September, Ceará),[21] and in the vicinity of the Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago.[19]

Sightings edit

In 1999 and 2000, an unidentified species of rorqual was repeatedly seen in the waters of Komodo National Park. They were small (most estimated to be only 7 to 10 m (23 to 33 ft) in length) with asymmetrical coloration similar to the fin whale, only had a single prominent ridge on the rostrum, and an extremely hooked dorsal fin. At first, they were tentatively identified as a "pygmy or regionally distinct" form of Bryde's whale, which was confirmed when one was photographed and biopsied in October 2000 and its tissue sample sent to the Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla, California. There, its DNA was analyzed and found to be a complete match with a "pygmy Bryde's" sample obtained from the Philippines – later, however, it was discovered samples from the Philippines corresponded to B. omurai and not B. edeni.[1][3][30]

During marine mammal surveys conducted in the Solomon Islands in 2009 and 2010, what were "most likely" Omura's whales were sighted on three occasions. They were estimated to be 6 to 10 m (20 to 33 ft) in length and lacked obvious auxiliary ridges. The sightings were made very close to shore (within a few hundred meters), one on the west coast of Malaita in November 2009, one on the northwest coast of Guadalcanal in November 2010, and a pair observed feeding within the Sandfly Passage of the Florida Islands on 14 November 2010.[48]

In October 2015, an international team of scientists, led by Salvatore Cerchio of the New England Aquarium and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, released the first images and field observations of the species from a population off northwestern Madagascar.[53] Forty-four sightings of Omura's whale were made between 2011 and 2014, with the majority in 2013 (thirteen) and 2014 (twenty-five). Forty-two were made off Nosy Iranja and the Ampasindava Peninsula, while only two occurred off Nosy Be. They were observed in open shelf waters that averaged 31 m (100 ft) deep (range: 4 to 202 m, or 13.1 to 662 ft) and were never seen in deep waters off the shelf break or in shallower coastal waters or embayments.[17]

In 2018, Pierre Laboute and Philippe Borsa published a paper on sightings of Omura's whale made off Nosy Be in 1991–1995, 1998, and 2000, including photographs of an aggregation of a dozen whales seen skim and lunge feeding in 40 to 80 m (130 to 260 ft) of water in November 1994 at 13° 26' S, 48° 05' E.[54]

In 2017, the first confirmed live sightings of Omura's whale were made off Taiwan[55] and Sri Lanka.[50]

Hunting and other mortality edit

Artisanal whaling edit

 
Photograph showing a small rorqual taken by villagers of Lamakera between 1915 and 1944. This is thought to likely be an Omura's whale (see text).

As early as the late 19th century, the natives of Lila, Bohol, began hunting whales in the Bohol Sea. By the turn of the century, this had spread to nearby Pamilacan Island and later to Sagay, Camiguin. At Pamilacan, whales were caught as early as January and as late as June, but most were taken in April and May. When a whale was spotted from shore, between 10 and 20 pump boats (boats with motors originally used for pumps) were launched in chase. When within range, a "hookman" jumped onto the whale's head and stabbed it with a 35-cm-long, 22.5-cm-wide stainless steel hook attached to a heavy line of 30 m (98 ft) with a 2 m (6.6 ft) bamboo spar buoy at the end of it. At Camiguin, they harpooned it with a toggle-headed grommet harpoon with a 2.5 m (8.2 ft) wooden shaft similar to the "dolphin irons" used by American whalemen in the mid-19th century, which in turn was either attached to a 140 m (460 ft) rope with a plastic fishing float or a 400 m (1,300 ft) rope with a plastic float or oil drum at the end. After an hour or more, the whale tired, and men took turns cutting it until it died. The boats usually towed the carcass to Lila for butchering, where it was sold and the meat eaten raw or cooked. Pamilacan hunters alone caught 10 to 20 per year, whereas at Camiguin, they caught them only sporadically.[23]

When Maria Louella L. Dolar and colleagues (1994) examined photographs or baleen of the whales caught in the Bohol Sea between 1991 and 1993, they identified them as Bryde's whales; this was supported by osteological examinations of skulls collected from the same sites by Dolar, William F. Perrin, and others (1996), who suggested they were a "small form" of Bryde's whale. The specimens were deposited in the collections of the Marine Research Laboratory of Silliman University in Dumaguete, Negros Oriental, Philippines, where they were examined by T. K. Yamada and co-workers (2008). They discovered that 24 of the skulls were actually from Omura's whales, whereas only four were from the Indo-Pacific Bryde's whale (B. brydei). This was supported by genetic studies, which found that, based on comparison of published phylogenies, the small "Bryde's whales" from the Philippines correspond to Omura's whale.[7][23][24][56]

A monograph from 1923 describes three skulls of balaenopterids taken by native whalers in Indonesia. Later examination of photographs of those skulls by one of the scientists (Tadasu K. Yamada) that had formally described Omura's whale showed that two of them, one from Bangsri, Java, and another from Lamakera, Solor, belonged to B. omurai. There is also a photograph (taken between 1915 and 1944) of a whale caught by the villagers of Lamakera that "strongly resembles a young Omura's whale in size and shape".[19]

Commercial whaling edit

Among the small "Bryde's whale" caught 40 mi off Shionomisaki, Wakayama Prefecture, in June 1976, were two sexually mature females of 7.9 m (25.9 ft) and 8.5 m (27.9 ft), both of which are thought to likely be Omura's whale.[19]

Scientific whaling edit

Of the eight individuals taken by Japanese scientific whaling in the 1970s, six were processed aboard the factory ship Tonan Maru No. 2 in the Solomon Sea (9°49'-10°17'S, 157°29'-157°56'E) on 24 October 1976, and two were processed aboard the factory ship Nisshin Maru No. 3 near the Cocos Islands (10°51′S 97°02′E / 10.850°S 97.033°E / -10.850; 97.033 and 10°53′S 94°29′E / 10.883°S 94.483°E / -10.883; 94.483, respectively) on 15 and 17 November 1978.[5][10][57]

Bycatch edit

Three of the seven records from Japan involve bycaught individuals, including a 9.2 m (30.1 ft) male in Sagami Bay in October 2003, a 10.05 m (33 ft) female in Tokyo Bay in May 2004, and a 6.3 m (20.7 ft) female near Ise Bay in March 2012. Both records from South Korea were individuals taken as bycatch, including a 6.3 m (20.7 ft) female off Geoje in January 2004 and a 6.4 m (21 ft) male off Goheung in December 2006. A 4.4 m (14.4 ft) male calf was also caught in small-mesh herring seine nets in the Gulf of Thailand, Songkhla Province, in May 2011, while a 7.5 m (24.6 ft) whale (thought to likely be an Omura's whale) was caught in fishing gear off Negombo, Sri Lanka, in August 1985.[19] A live whale seen off Sri Lanka in 2017 also had a scar on its rostrum suggestive of an entanglement with fishing gear.[50]

Ship strikes edit

Two individuals of Omura's whale were victims of ship strike, including the holotype of the species, an 11 m (36.1 ft) female found off Tsunoshima in the Sea of Japan in September 1998, and a whale brought into Manila Bay on the bow of a ship.[19]

Conservation edit

Omura's whale is listed on Appendix II of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals. It is listed on Appendix II as it has an unfavourable conservation status or would benefit significantly from international co-operation organised by tailored agreements.[58]

In addition, Omura's whale is covered by the Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region (Pacific Cetaceans MOU).[59]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
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  4. ^ Ohsumi 1978, Wada and Numachi 1991, Carwardine 1995, Perrin et al. 1996, Kahn 2001, LeDuc and Dizon 2002, Kato 2002, and many others
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  6. ^ Weintraub, Karen (March 22, 2019). "An Elusive Whale Is Found All Around the World - Researchers are learning about a newly identified species of baleen whales, tracing sightings and sounds to learn that they stay mainly in tropical waters". The New York Times. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Sasaki, T.; Nikaido, M.; Wada, S.; Yamada, T.K.; Cao, Y.; Hasegawa, M.; Okada, N. (2006). "Balaenoptera omurai is a newly discovered baleen whale that represents an ancient evolutionary lineage". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 41 (1): 40–52. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2006.03.032. PMID 16843687.
  8. ^ Balaenoptera edeni Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M., eds. (2005). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  9. ^ "Balaenoptera omura Wada, Oishi, and Yamada, 2003". Integrated Taxonomic Information System.
  10. ^ a b c Ohsumi, S. (1978). "Provisional report on Bryde's whales caught under special permit in the Southern Hemisphere". Reports of the International Whaling Commission. 28: 281–288.
  11. ^ a b c Wada, S., & Numachi, K. I. (1991). "Allozyme analyses of genetic differentiation among the populations and species of the Balaenoptera". Genetic ecology of whales and dolphins. Reports of the International Whaling Commission, Special (13): 125-154.
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  13. ^ Yoshida, H.; Kato, H. (1999). "Phylogenetic relationships of Bryde's whales in the western North Pacific and adjacent waters inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequences". Marine Mammal Science. 15 (4): 1269–1286. doi:10.1111/j.1748-7692.1999.tb00890.x.
  14. ^ a b c d Yamada, T. K., L.-S. Chou, S. Chantrapornsyl, K. Adulyanukosol, S. K. Chakravarti, M. Oishi, S. Wada, C.-J. Yao, T. Kakuda, Y. Tajima, K. Arai, A. Umetani & N. Kurihara (2006). "Middle sized balaenopterid whale specimens (Cetacea: Balaenopteridae) preserved at several institutions in Taiwan, Thailand, and India". Memoirs of the National Science Museum Tokyo. 44: 1–10.
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External links edit

  •   Media related to Balaenoptera omurai at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Balaenoptera omurai at Wikispecies

omura, whale, dwarf, whale, balaenoptera, omurai, species, rorqual, about, which, very, little, known, before, formal, description, referred, small, dwarf, pygmy, form, bryde, whale, various, sources, common, name, specific, epithet, commemorate, japanese, cet. Omura s whale or the dwarf fin whale Balaenoptera omurai is a species of rorqual about which very little is known 3 Before its formal description it was referred to as a small dwarf or pygmy form of Bryde s whale by various sources 4 The common name and specific epithet commemorate Japanese cetologist Hideo Omura jp 5 6 Omura s whaleOmura s whaleConservation statusData Deficient IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaInfraorder CetaceaFamily BalaenopteridaeGenus BalaenopteraSpecies B omuraiBinomial nameBalaenoptera omuraiWada Oishi amp Yamada 2003The scientific description of this whale was made in Nature in 2003 by three Japanese scientists They determined the existence of the species by analysing the morphology and mitochondrial DNA of nine individuals eight caught by Japanese research vessels in the late 1970s in the Indo Pacific and an adult female collected in 1998 from Tsunoshima an island in the Sea of Japan Later abundant genetic evidence confirmed Omura s whale as a valid species and revealed it to be an early offshoot from the rorqual lineage diverging much earlier than Bryde s and sei whales It is perhaps more closely related to its larger relative the blue whale 5 7 In the third edition of Mammal Species of the World the species is relegated to being a synonym of Balaenoptera edeni However the authors note that this is subject to a revision of the genus 8 The database ITIS lists this as a valid taxon noting a caveat on the disputed systematics of this species Balaenoptera edeni and Balaenoptera brydei 9 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Holotype and paratypes 3 Description 3 1 Osteology 3 2 External appearance 3 3 Morphometrics 3 4 Size 3 5 Mating 4 Behavior and diet 4 1 Song 4 2 Movements 5 Range 5 1 Sightings 6 Hunting and other mortality 6 1 Artisanal whaling 6 2 Commercial whaling 6 3 Scientific whaling 6 4 Bycatch 6 5 Ship strikes 7 Conservation 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksTaxonomy edit nbsp Skull of Omura s whale in National Museum of Natural ScienceThe six specimens obtained in the Solomon Sea in 1976 were only noted to be smaller at sexual maturity than the ordinary Bryde s whales caught off New Zealand whereas the two caught near the Cocos Keeling Islands in 1978 were not differentiated from the 118 other ordinary Bryde s whales taken in the eastern Indian Ocean south of Java As a result of allozyme analysis their distinctive baleen and small size at physical maturity compared to Bryde s whale and photographs obtained of the harvested whales showing their fin whale like coloration Shiro Wada and Kenichi Numachi 1991 decided that these eight individuals represented members of a new species of baleen whale However due to the lack of a detailed osteological study and the absence of conclusive data the International Whaling Commission decided to consider them only as a regionally distinct group of small form Bryde s whale Despite this declaration the specific status of the Solomon Sea specimens was supported by a mitochondrial DNA study done by Hideyoshi Yoshida and Hidehiro Kato 1999 1 10 11 12 13 The identity of these eight specimens was finally resolved in 1998 when an unidentified whale which had died after colliding with a fishing boat in the Sea of Japan and was towed to Tsunoshima was examined by Tadasu Yamada Chief of the Division of Mammals and Birds at the National Science Museum Tokyo This specimen closely resembled the individuals caught in the 1970s in external appearance and allowed a complete osteological examination of the putative new species to be conducted As a result of external morphology osteology and mitochondrial DNA analysis of two of the harvested whales and the Tsunoshima specimen Wada Masayuki Oishi and Yamada described Balaenoptera omurai in the 20 November 2003 issue of the journal Nature In honour of the people of Tsunoshima who helped remove the flesh from the type specimen it was given the Japanese vernacular name of Tsunoshima kujira English Horn Island whale 5 12 Holotype and paratypes editThe holotype is an 11 03 m 36 2 ft adult female NSMT M32505 National Science Museum Tokyo which stranded at Tsunoshima 34 21 03 N 130 53 09 E 34 35083 N 130 88583 E 34 35083 130 88583 in the southern Sea of Japan on 11 September 1998 It includes a complete skeleton both complete rows of baleen plates and frozen pieces of muscle blubber and kidney collected by T K Yamada M Oishi T Kuramochi E Jibiki and S Fujioka The type locality is the Sea of Japan which may not be representative of the species typical range The paratypes include the eight specimens five females and three males NRIFSF1 8 National Research Institute of Far Seas Fisheries Fisheries Research Agency Shizuoka collected by Japanese research vessels in the Indo Pacific in the late 1970s The longest baleen plate NRIFSF6 includes 18 more baleen plates an earplug and a piece of the sixth thoracic vertebra with associated epiphysis were collected from each individual 1 5 Description editOsteology edit Omura s whale has several unique skeletal features that distinguish it from its congeners namely B brydei and B edeni In B omurai and B brydei the posterior end of the ascending process of the maxilla widens to become squarish whereas in B edeni it is slender and round throughout its length In B omurai this widened posterior portion conceals the premaxilla which disappears below the maxilla and nasal and does not reach the frontal whereas in both B brydei and B edeni the premaxilla reaches the frontal The parietals flare laterally in dorsal view in B omurai and the Indo Pacific form of B brydei but are invisible in dorsal view in B edeni and the North Pacific form of B brydei B omurai has two small foramina along the suture between the parietal and squamosal in the posterior wall of the temporal fossa which both B brydei and B edeni lack B omurai has an oblique ridge on the dorsal side of the maxilla near the base of the rostrum which is absent in both B brydei and B edeni Unlike B edeni the alisphenoid is separate from the squamosal in B omurai The head of the first rib is not bifurcated in B omurai unlike B brydei and B edeni 5 14 Omura s whale has a total of 53 vertebrae including seven cervical the standard number among mammals 13 thoracic 12 lumbar and 21 caudal Like all members of its genus it has only four digits on the manus of each pectoral fin the third digit is missing The phalangeal formula is I 5 II 7 IV 6 V 3 5 15 External appearance edit nbsp Feeding off Nosy Be MadagascarIts appearance resembles the larger fin whale thus the alternate common names of dwarf fin whale 16 and little fin whale both having a dark gray left lower jaw and on the right side a white mandible patch a white blaze a dark eye stripe a white inter stripe wash as well as a white chevron on the back pectoral fins with a white anterior border and inner surface and flukes with a white ventral surface and black margins Like fin whales it also exhibits a white left gape and a dark right gape a reversal of the asymmetrical pigmentation on the lower jaw It has a very falcate dorsal fin with a leading edge that gradually slopes into the back halfway in shape between the more gradual slope of the fin whale and the more acute angle of Bryde s and sei whales Its dorsal fin is also proportionally smaller and less upright than these other species It typically has a single prominent median ridge on the rostrum but can have faint lateral ridges which are more pronounced in calves Bryde s whale on the other hand has three prominent ridges on the rostrum It has 45 to 95 ventral grooves that extend past the umbilicus The type specimen NSMT M32505 had 203 208 pairs of baleen plates that were short and broad with uncurled stiff grayish white fringes while NRIFSF6 had an estimated 181 190 on the right side fewer than any other species in its genus Other specimens of Omura s whale had between 204 and 246 pairs of baleen plates Like the fin whale NSMT M32505 exhibited asymmetrical coloration in its baleen as well on the right side the front third are yellowish white the intermediate 100 plates are bi colored dark on the outer side and yellowish white on the inner side and the remaining plates in the back were all black while on the left side the majority are bi colored with the remaining back plates being all black like the right side The average length and width for the nine specimens was 26 by 21 4 cm 10 2 by 8 4 in the smallest length to breadth quotient 1 22 for any species in its genus 3 5 17 18 Omura s whale seen off New Caledonia the Solomon Islands West Sumatra and East Kalimantan showed extensive scarring from cookiecutter shark bites indicating they had ventured into deep waters 19 whereas those off Madagascar did not exhibit them 17 Morphometrics edit The rostrum is flat and V shaped with the head occupying about a quarter of the body length The pectoral fins are short but slender being from about 13 to 15 per cent of the body length The dorsal fin ranges between 7 5 and 20 cm 3 to 8 inches in height and 18 to 60 cm 7 to 23 6 inches in length for specimens 3 9 to 7 15 m 12 8 to 23 4 ft in length and is placed about 57 per cent of the body length back from the tip of the rostrum It is 61 5 per cent of the body length from the tip of the lower jaw to the umbilicus whereas it is about 63 per cent from the tip of the lower jaw to the end of the ventral grooves The flukes are about a quarter to a fifth of the body length in width 18 20 21 Size edit Omura s whale is among the smallest of the rorquals only the two species of minke whale the common and Antarctic which reach 9 75 and 10 7 m 32 0 and 35 1 ft in length respectively are smaller 22 Of the eight specimens taken during Japanese whaling in the Indo Pacific the five females ranged in length from 10 1 to 11 5 m 33 1 to 37 7 ft while the three males ranged from 9 6 to 10 0 m 31 5 to 32 8 ft The females ranged in age from perhaps only 9 years the earplug was damaged or partially lost for an 11 2 m 36 7 ft individual to 29 years for the longest female whereas the three males ranged from perhaps 21 years another damaged or partially lost earplug for the longest male to 38 years for one of the 9 6 m 31 5 ft specimens All were physically mature with the exception of the smallest female Of individuals found stranded in Taiwan and Thailand between 1983 and 2004 five males ranged in length from 5 13 to 10 m 16 8 to 32 8 ft while two females were 4 3 and 5 95 m 14 1 and 19 5 ft respectively a specimen of unknown sex that stranded in 1983 in Phuket Province Thailand was 7 m 23 0 ft in length 5 14 Of 16 Bryde s whales caught by hunters from Pamilacan between 1991 and 1993 12 were measured These cluster into two size categories nine whales less than 10 m 32 8 ft and three 12 m 39 4 ft or more Later 85 24 of 28 of the identified skull specimens examined from the Bohol Sea were found to be Omura s whales whereas only 15 4 of 28 were what was tentatively called the Indo Pacific form of Bryde s whale B brydei The former size category may be primarily if not entirely Omura s whale whereas the larger whales one of unknown sex of 12 m 39 4 ft and two females of 13 m 42 7 ft would be the larger offshore form of Bryde s whale Of those smaller whales four males ranged from 6 7 to 9 8 m 22 0 to 32 2 ft four females ranged from 4 9 to 9 3 m 16 1 to 30 5 ft and one of unknown sex was 9 4 m 30 8 ft 23 24 Lone individuals seen off Madagascar were estimated to range between 8 and 12 m 26 2 to 39 4 ft while calves were estimated to be between 3 and 5 m 9 8 to 16 4 ft 17 The identity of three mature specimens two females and a male examined by biologist Graham Chittleborough in 1958 at a whaling station in Western Australia which ranged in length from 10 6 to 11 74 m 34 8 to 38 5 ft is uncertain they may refer to Omura s whale or the smaller form of Bryde s whale B edeni These three individuals were noted to have very small baleen plates about 22 cm 8 8 in by 15 cm 5 9 in about 22 cm 8 8 in by 16 cm 6 3 in and 23 5 by 17 5 cm 9 3 by 6 9 in respectively with length breadth quotients of 1 34 to 1 46 within the upper range 1 00 1 43 of the 9 specimens included in the formal description of Omura s whale but also within the lower range of the Bryde s whale complex 1 2 to 1 33 The holotype of the smaller form of Bryde s whale B edeni from Myanmar though had baleen plates of 30 by 15 cm 11 8 by 5 9 in or a length breadth quotient of exactly 2 0 within the typical range of the Bryde s whale complex 1 8 to 2 4 1 11 25 26 27 Mating edit Of the three females caught in the Solomon Sea two were ovulating and lactating and one was resting not lactating ovulating or pregnant while one of the two females caught near the Cocos Islands was accompanied by a calf estimated to be about 3 m 9 8 ft in length 10 11 Nothing is known of the duration of gestation and lactation and little is known of the timing or extent of breeding seasons In August 2005 a 3 2 m 10 ft female neonate with fetal folds and folded dorsal fin and flukes stranded at Miyazaki Miyazaki Prefecture on the eastern coast of Kyushu 28 29 Off northwestern Madagascar six different cow calf pairs were seen one in August 2011 three in November 2013 and two in August 2015 suggesting a protracted calving season The three calves observed in November had bent dorsal fins indicating that they were fairly young but did not have fetal folds while one of the calves sighted in August had an erect dorsal fin indicating that it was older but still probably born that year These calves were estimated to range in length from 3 to 5 m 9 8 to 16 4 ft 17 Behavior and diet edit nbsp breaching off Nosy Be MadagascarLittle is known of the behavior and diet of Omura s whale Their blow is low and diffuse After surfacing the dorsal fin is usually not visible until after the head and splashguard have disappeared and they don t fluke when diving They have been seen lunge feeding defecating and breaching off both Komodo National Park and northwestern Madagascar they ve also been seen rolling at the surface in apparent mating the last of which allowed the identification of a male off the former area 30 17 Off Madagascar average group size was only 1 1 individuals 272 individuals in 247 groups but loose aggregations of as many as a dozen whales could be seen A total of thirteen cow calf pairs were observed between 2011 and 2016 including a female first seen in an aggregation in 2012 then with a calf in 2013 and alone again in 2015 and 2017 showing that individuals can exhibit strong site fidelity 31 The six paratypes taken in the Solomon Sea in 1976 reportedly only had krill Euphausia diomedeae in their stomachs 1 32 while crustaceans and fish were found in a 7 m 23 ft female from Japan Individuals in Madagascar have been observed lunge feeding on the krill Pseudeuphausia latifrons 31 Song edit Omura s whale produce amplitude modulated songs of 15 50 Hz with a peak frequency of 36 1 Hz and an average duration of 9 2 seconds 17 This is sometimes followed by a tonal call of 17 Hz and four seconds in duration These songs are repeated every two to three minutes sometimes for as long as thirteen hours Songs have been recorded off northwest Madagascar year round with peak activity from late October to late January and again from late May to late June Overlapping choruses of several singing individuals have been recorded throughout the year as well 31 Movements edit Four Omura s whales were satellite tagged off northwest Madagascar in November 2016 The tags stayed on an average of 42 days range 30 58 days The tagged whales traveled an average of 2 530 km range 2 148 to 3 181 km but remained within a small coastal range of only 230 to 405 km average 283 km off the northwest coast of the island All whales traversed their entire individual ranges several times spending most of their time on shelf waters and rarely venturing into deep waters 31 Range edit nbsp Distribution in western Pacific OceanOmura s whale are found in the Indo Pacific and the Atlantic Oceans primarily in shelf waters between 35 N and 35 S with the majority of records in the tropics between 23 26 N and 23 26 S 19 Their range includes southern Japan with strandings and entanglements recorded in March and from May to October including the prefectures of Yamaguchi 33 Miyazaki 34 Kagawa 35 Mie Shizuoka and Chiba 19 South Korea 36 December to January from the provinces of South Jeolla and South Gyeongsang 19 China 37 38 with strandings from November to February and in August including the provinces of Zhejiang Fujian Guangdong 18 and Guangxi 20 Taiwan with strandings from November to March and in May there are also sightings from April to May and July to August 14 39 Hong Kong March 40 41 the Philippines 42 Manila Bay Busuanga 19 and the Bohol Sea 24 Vietnam Quảng Ngai Province 19 Malaysia Pahang 43 Thailand with sightings and strandings from February May to June and November to December including the provinces of Phang Nga Phuket 14 Prachuap Khiri Khan and Songkhla 19 Indonesia with sightings and strandings from February April to June and from September to November with records from West Sumatra the southern Java Sea Bali 19 Komodo 30 the Solor Archipelago Seram Raja Ampat Islands and East Kalimantan 19 the Cocos Keeling Islands 5 the Andaman Islands April 19 Australia Western Australia from Exmouth 44 to north of Darwin in the Northern Territory at about 9 30 S 10 S 130 E 45 South Australia 46 January Gulf St Vincent Queensland November to December Port Douglas and Mission Beach 47 the Solomon Islands 48 New Caledonia 49 Sri Lanka February 50 the Chagos Archipelago 19 Iran September Strait of Hormuz 51 Egypt April the northern Red Sea 19 northwestern Madagascar 12 01 S to 19 23 S with sightings by researchers from August and October to December by whale watch operators from April to December and acoustically detected year round 31 Mauritania November Trarza Region 52 Brazil September Ceara 21 and in the vicinity of the Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago 19 Sightings edit In 1999 and 2000 an unidentified species of rorqual was repeatedly seen in the waters of Komodo National Park They were small most estimated to be only 7 to 10 m 23 to 33 ft in length with asymmetrical coloration similar to the fin whale only had a single prominent ridge on the rostrum and an extremely hooked dorsal fin At first they were tentatively identified as a pygmy or regionally distinct form of Bryde s whale which was confirmed when one was photographed and biopsied in October 2000 and its tissue sample sent to the Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla California There its DNA was analyzed and found to be a complete match with a pygmy Bryde s sample obtained from the Philippines later however it was discovered samples from the Philippines corresponded to B omurai and not B edeni 1 3 30 During marine mammal surveys conducted in the Solomon Islands in 2009 and 2010 what were most likely Omura s whales were sighted on three occasions They were estimated to be 6 to 10 m 20 to 33 ft in length and lacked obvious auxiliary ridges The sightings were made very close to shore within a few hundred meters one on the west coast of Malaita in November 2009 one on the northwest coast of Guadalcanal in November 2010 and a pair observed feeding within the Sandfly Passage of the Florida Islands on 14 November 2010 48 In October 2015 an international team of scientists led by Salvatore Cerchio of the New England Aquarium and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution released the first images and field observations of the species from a population off northwestern Madagascar 53 Forty four sightings of Omura s whale were made between 2011 and 2014 with the majority in 2013 thirteen and 2014 twenty five Forty two were made off Nosy Iranja and the Ampasindava Peninsula while only two occurred off Nosy Be They were observed in open shelf waters that averaged 31 m 100 ft deep range 4 to 202 m or 13 1 to 662 ft and were never seen in deep waters off the shelf break or in shallower coastal waters or embayments 17 In 2018 Pierre Laboute and Philippe Borsa published a paper on sightings of Omura s whale made off Nosy Be in 1991 1995 1998 and 2000 including photographs of an aggregation of a dozen whales seen skim and lunge feeding in 40 to 80 m 130 to 260 ft of water in November 1994 at 13 26 S 48 05 E 54 In 2017 the first confirmed live sightings of Omura s whale were made off Taiwan 55 and Sri Lanka 50 Hunting and other mortality editArtisanal whaling edit nbsp Photograph showing a small rorqual taken by villagers of Lamakera between 1915 and 1944 This is thought to likely be an Omura s whale see text As early as the late 19th century the natives of Lila Bohol began hunting whales in the Bohol Sea By the turn of the century this had spread to nearby Pamilacan Island and later to Sagay Camiguin At Pamilacan whales were caught as early as January and as late as June but most were taken in April and May When a whale was spotted from shore between 10 and 20 pump boats boats with motors originally used for pumps were launched in chase When within range a hookman jumped onto the whale s head and stabbed it with a 35 cm long 22 5 cm wide stainless steel hook attached to a heavy line of 30 m 98 ft with a 2 m 6 6 ft bamboo spar buoy at the end of it At Camiguin they harpooned it with a toggle headed grommet harpoon with a 2 5 m 8 2 ft wooden shaft similar to the dolphin irons used by American whalemen in the mid 19th century which in turn was either attached to a 140 m 460 ft rope with a plastic fishing float or a 400 m 1 300 ft rope with a plastic float or oil drum at the end After an hour or more the whale tired and men took turns cutting it until it died The boats usually towed the carcass to Lila for butchering where it was sold and the meat eaten raw or cooked Pamilacan hunters alone caught 10 to 20 per year whereas at Camiguin they caught them only sporadically 23 When Maria Louella L Dolar and colleagues 1994 examined photographs or baleen of the whales caught in the Bohol Sea between 1991 and 1993 they identified them as Bryde s whales this was supported by osteological examinations of skulls collected from the same sites by Dolar William F Perrin and others 1996 who suggested they were a small form of Bryde s whale The specimens were deposited in the collections of the Marine Research Laboratory of Silliman University in Dumaguete Negros Oriental Philippines where they were examined by T K Yamada and co workers 2008 They discovered that 24 of the skulls were actually from Omura s whales whereas only four were from the Indo Pacific Bryde s whale B brydei This was supported by genetic studies which found that based on comparison of published phylogenies the small Bryde s whales from the Philippines correspond to Omura s whale 7 23 24 56 A monograph from 1923 describes three skulls of balaenopterids taken by native whalers in Indonesia Later examination of photographs of those skulls by one of the scientists Tadasu K Yamada that had formally described Omura s whale showed that two of them one from Bangsri Java and another from Lamakera Solor belonged to B omurai There is also a photograph taken between 1915 and 1944 of a whale caught by the villagers of Lamakera that strongly resembles a young Omura s whale in size and shape 19 Commercial whaling edit Among the small Bryde s whale caught 40 mi off Shionomisaki Wakayama Prefecture in June 1976 were two sexually mature females of 7 9 m 25 9 ft and 8 5 m 27 9 ft both of which are thought to likely be Omura s whale 19 Scientific whaling edit Of the eight individuals taken by Japanese scientific whaling in the 1970s six were processed aboard the factory ship Tonan Maru No 2 in the Solomon Sea 9 49 10 17 S 157 29 157 56 E on 24 October 1976 and two were processed aboard the factory ship Nisshin Maru No 3 near the Cocos Islands 10 51 S 97 02 E 10 850 S 97 033 E 10 850 97 033 and 10 53 S 94 29 E 10 883 S 94 483 E 10 883 94 483 respectively on 15 and 17 November 1978 5 10 57 Bycatch edit Three of the seven records from Japan involve bycaught individuals including a 9 2 m 30 1 ft male in Sagami Bay in October 2003 a 10 05 m 33 ft female in Tokyo Bay in May 2004 and a 6 3 m 20 7 ft female near Ise Bay in March 2012 Both records from South Korea were individuals taken as bycatch including a 6 3 m 20 7 ft female off Geoje in January 2004 and a 6 4 m 21 ft male off Goheung in December 2006 A 4 4 m 14 4 ft male calf was also caught in small mesh herring seine nets in the Gulf of Thailand Songkhla Province in May 2011 while a 7 5 m 24 6 ft whale thought to likely be an Omura s whale was caught in fishing gear off Negombo Sri Lanka in August 1985 19 A live whale seen off Sri Lanka in 2017 also had a scar on its rostrum suggestive of an entanglement with fishing gear 50 Ship strikes edit Two individuals of Omura s whale were victims of ship strike including the holotype of the species an 11 m 36 1 ft female found off Tsunoshima in the Sea of Japan in September 1998 and a whale brought into Manila Bay on the bow of a ship 19 Conservation editOmura s whale is listed on Appendix II of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals It is listed on Appendix II as it has an unfavourable conservation status or would benefit significantly from international co operation organised by tailored agreements 58 In addition Omura s whale is covered by the Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region Pacific Cetaceans MOU 59 See also edit nbsp Cetaceans portal nbsp Mammals portal nbsp Marine life portalList of cetaceans Baleen whaleReferences edit a b c d e f Cooke J G amp Brownell Jr R L 2019 Balaenoptera omurai amended version of 2018 assessment The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T136623A144790120 https dx doi org 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 1 RLTS T136623A144790120 en Downloaded on 03 May 2021 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved January 14 2022 a b c Thomas Jefferson Marc A Webber amp Robert L Pitman 2008 Marine Mammals of the World A Comprehensive Guide to their Identification London Academic ISBN 978 0 12 383853 7 OCLC 272382231 Ohsumi 1978 Wada and Numachi 1991 Carwardine 1995 Perrin et al 1996 Kahn 2001 LeDuc and Dizon 2002 Kato 2002 and many others a b c d e f g h i j Wada S Oishi M Yamada T K 2003 A newly discovered species of living baleen whale Nature 426 6964 278 281 Bibcode 2003Natur 426 278W doi 10 1038 nature02103 OCLC 110553472 PMID 14628049 S2CID 4301170 Weintraub Karen March 22 2019 An Elusive Whale Is Found All Around the World Researchers are learning about a newly identified species of baleen whales tracing sightings and sounds to learn that they stay mainly in tropical waters The New York Times Retrieved March 25 2019 a b Sasaki T Nikaido M Wada S Yamada T K Cao Y Hasegawa M Okada N 2006 Balaenoptera omurai is a newly discovered baleen whale that represents an ancient evolutionary lineage Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 41 1 40 52 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2006 03 032 PMID 16843687 Balaenoptera edeni Wilson D E Reeder D M eds 2005 Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Balaenoptera omura Wada Oishi and Yamada 2003 Integrated Taxonomic Information System a b c Ohsumi S 1978 Provisional report on Bryde s whales caught under special permit in the Southern Hemisphere Reports of the International Whaling Commission 28 281 288 a b c Wada S amp Numachi K I 1991 Allozyme analyses of genetic differentiation among the populations and species of the Balaenoptera Genetic ecology of whales and dolphins Reports of the International Whaling Commission Special 13 125 154 a b Yuko Hashimoto amp Michael D O Neill July 7 2004 Japanese Scientists Identify New Species of Whale PDF Applied Biosystems BioBeat Online Magazine reprinted on babec org Yoshida H Kato H 1999 Phylogenetic relationships of Bryde s whales in the western North Pacific and adjacent waters inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequences Marine Mammal Science 15 4 1269 1286 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1999 tb00890 x a b c d Yamada T K L S Chou S Chantrapornsyl K Adulyanukosol S K Chakravarti M Oishi S Wada C J Yao T Kakuda Y Tajima K Arai A Umetani amp N Kurihara 2006 Middle sized balaenopterid whale specimens Cetacea Balaenopteridae preserved at several institutions in Taiwan Thailand and India Memoirs of the National Science Museum Tokyo 44 1 10 Tinker Spencer Wilkie 1988 Whales of the World Brill Archive p 310 ISBN 978 0 935848 47 2 Berta Annalisa 2015 Whales dolphins and porpoises a natural history and species guide University of Chicago Press Chicago Ill p 98 a b c d e f g Cerchio Salvatore Andrianantenaina Boris Lindsay Alec Rekdahl Melinda Adrianarivela Norbert Rasoloarijao Tahina October 14 2015 Omura s whales Balaenoptera omurai off northwest Madagascar ecology behaviour and conservation needs Royal Society Open Science 2 10 150301 Bibcode 2015RSOS 240301C doi 10 1098 rsos 150301 PMC 4632516 PMID 26587244 a b c Xu M Wang X Miao X Wu F Ma M Tao C et al 2017 A stranding of Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai Wada Oishi and Yamada 2003 in the Taiwan Strait China Aquat Mamm 43 289 298 doi 10 1578 AM 43 3 2017 289 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Cerchio S Yamada T K Brownell Jr R L 2019 Global distribution of Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai and assessment of range wide threats Front Mar Sci 6 67 1 18 doi 10 3389 fmars 2019 00067 a b Zhao L M Zhong F Wu Y Dai R Aierken M Chen and X Wang 2020 First record of Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai in the Beibu Gulf China Aqua Mamm 46 3 301 306 doi 10 1578 AM 46 3 2020 301 a b Cypriano Souza L A Meirelles d O C A Carvalho L V Bonatto L S 2016 Rare or cryptic The first report of an Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai in the South Atlantic Ocean Marine Mammal Science 32 80 95 doi 10 1111 mms 12348 Horwood Joseph 1990 Biology and exploitation of the minke whale CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 6069 2 ISBN 978 0 8493 6069 5 a b c Dolar M L L Leatherwood S Wood C J Alava M N R Hill C L Arangones L V 1994 Directed fisheries for cetaceans in the Philippines Reports of the International Whaling Commission 44 439 449 a b c Yamada T K T Kakuda amp Y Tajima 2008 Middle sized balaenopterid whale specimens in the Philippines and Indonesia Memoirs of the National Science Museum Tokyo 45 75 83 Ellis Richard 1980 The Book of Whales Alfred Knopf New York Best Peter B Two Allopatric Forms of Bryde s Whale off South Africa Reports of the International Whaling Commission Special Issue 1 1977 pp 10 38 Omura Hidero 1977 Review of the Occurrence of the Bryde s Whale in the Northwest Pacific Rep Int Commn Special Issue 1 pp 88 91 Yamada T K 2008 Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai pp 799 801 In Perrin W F P B Wursig and J G M Thewissen eds Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals 2nd ed Academic Press San Diego 1315 pp Balaenoptera omurai M 816 Marine Mammals Stranding Database National Museum of Nature and Science Tokyo 2009 Retrieved September 15 2013 permanent dead link a b c Kahn B 2001 Komodo National Park Cetacean Surveys April 2001 and 1999 2001 survey synopsis Presented working paper CMS SEAMAMSII 24 United Nations Environment Programme Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals UNEP CMS Second International Conference on the Marine Mammals of Southeast Asia July 22 23 2002 Demaguette Philippines 39pp a b c d e Cerchio S Andrianantenaina B Zerbini A Pendleton D Rasoloarijao T and Cholewiak D 2018 Residency feeding ecology local movements and potential isolation of the Madagascar Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai population Paper SC 67B NH 09 Presented to the International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee Histon and Impington 25 Kawamura A 1977 On the food of Bryde s whales caught in the South Pacific and Indian Oceans Scientific Reports of the Whales Research Institute 29 49 58 Balaenoptera omurai 32505 Marine Mammals Stranding Database National Museum of Nature and Science Tokyo 1998 Retrieved September 12 2020 Balaenoptera omurai 34053 Marine Mammals Stranding Database National Museum of Nature and Science Tokyo 2005 Retrieved September 12 2020 Balaenoptera omurai 32992 Marine Mammals Stranding Database National Museum of Nature and Science Tokyo 2002 Retrieved September 12 2020 Kim J H Kim H W Kim E M and Sohn H 2018 First record of the Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai in Korean waters Anim Syst Evol Divers 34 162 167 Yang G Liu H Zhou K Guo Qing Y J 2002 Identification of a Balaenoptera edeni specimen by using mitochondrial DNA sequences Chinese Journal of Zoology 4 009 Wang H G Fan Z Y Shen H Peng Y J 2006 Description of a new record species of whales from Chinese coastal waters Fisheries Science 25 2 85 87 我国沿海鲸类 一 须鲸篇 上 科学公园 传送门 chuansong me Archived from the original on March 6 2016 Retrieved March 5 2016 巨鯨屍擱淺紅石門 東方日報 orientaldaily on cc 角島鯨煲骨去油 標本重現城大 Apple Daily 蘋果日報 Aragones L V Roque M A Flores M B Encomienda R P Laule G E Espinos B G Braun R C 2010 The Philippine Marine Mammal Strandings from 1998 to 2009 Animals in the Philippines in Peril Aquat Mamm 36 3 219 233 doi 10 1578 am 36 3 2010 219 Ponnampalam L S 2012 Opportunistic observations on the distribution of cetaceans in the Malaysian South China Sulu and Sulawesi Seas and an updated checklist of marine mammals in Malaysia The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 60 1 221 231 Ottewell K Coughran D Gall M Irvine L and Byrne M 2016 Stranding of Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai in Western Australia Aquat Mamm 42 193 197 doi 10 1578 AM 42 2 2016 193 McPherson C Kowarski K Delarue J Whitt C MacDonnell J and Martin B 2016 Passive Acoustic Monitoring of Ambient Noise and Marine Mammals Barossa Field JASCO Document 00997 Version 1 0 Technical report by JASCO Applied Sciences for Jacobs Capalaba JASCO Yamada T K Kemper C Tajima Y Umetani A Janetzki H and Pemberton D 2006b Marine mammal collections in Australia Natl Sci Museum Monogr 34 117 126 Unknown December 14 2016 Rare omura whale spotted inside Great Barrier Reef Marine Park for the first time ABC News Retrieved May 29 2018 a b Oremus M Leqata J Hurutarau J Taei S Donoghue M Thompson K Baker C S June 24 2011 Solomon Islands Dolphin Project Progress report on data collection and analyses PDF South Pacific Whale Research Consortium Extraordinarily Rare Whale Sighting Omura s Whale Balaenoptera omurai Marine Education and Research Society November 2012 Retrieved September 12 2020 a b c Vos D A 2017 First record of Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai in Sri Lankan waters Marine Biodiversity Records 201710 18 DOI 10 1186 s41200 017 0121 2 Retrieved on June 28 2017 Sharif Ranjbar S Dakhteh S M Waerebeek V K 2016 Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai stranding on Qeshm Island Iran further evidence for a wide sub tropical distribution including the Persian Gulf bioRxiv 10 1101 042614 Jung J L Mullie W C Van Waerebeek K Wagne M M Samba Ould Bilal A Ould Sidaty Z A Toomey L Meheust E amp Marret F 2015 Omura s whale off West Africa autochthonous population or inter oceanic vagrant in the Atlantic Ocean Marine Biology Research Retrieved March 3 2016 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Video shows first confirmed wild sighting of Omura s whale Australian Broadcasting Corporation November 1 2015 Laboute P and P Borsa 2018 A feeding aggregation of Omura s whale Balaenoptera omurai off Nosy Be Mozambique Channel WIO Journal of Marine Science 17 1 93 97 News Taiwan May 22 2017 Rare whale spotted in Taiwan for the first time Taiwan News a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Perrin W E Dolar M L L Ortega E 1996 Osteological comparison of Bryde s whales from the Philippines with specimens from other regions Report of the International Whaling Commission 46 409 413 Ohsumi S 1980 Population study of the Bryde s whale in the Southern Hemisphere under scientific permit in the three seasons 1976 77 1978 79 Reports of the International Whaling Commission 30 319 331 Appendix II Archived June 11 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 5th March 2009 Pacific Cetaceans Pacific Cetaceans External links edit nbsp Media related to Balaenoptera omurai at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Balaenoptera omurai at Wikispecies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Omura 27s whale amp oldid 1176871011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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