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Wikipedia

False killer whale

The false killer whale (Pseudorca crassidens) is a species of oceanic dolphin that is the only extant representative of the genus Pseudorca. It is found in oceans worldwide but mainly in tropical regions. It was first described in 1846 as a species of porpoise based on a skull, which was revised when the first carcasses were observed in 1861. The name "false killer whale" comes from having a skull similar to the orca (Orcinus orca), or killer whale.

False killer whale
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene–Recent[1]
Size compared to an average human
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Delphinidae
Genus: Pseudorca
Species:
P. crassidens
Binomial name
Pseudorca crassidens
(Owen, 1846)
  Range of the false killer whale
Synonyms[4]
List of synonyms

The false killer whale reaches a maximum length of 6 m (20 ft), though size can vary around the world. It is highly sociable, known to form pods of up to 50 members, and can also form pods with other dolphin species, such as the common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). It can form close bonds with other species, as well as have sexual interactions with them. But the false killer has also been known to eat other dolphins, though it typically eats squid and fish. It is a deep-diver; maximum known depth is 927.5 m (3,043 ft); maximum speed is ~ 29 km/h (18 mph).

Several aquariums around the world keep one or more false killers, though its aggression toward other dolphins makes it less desirable. It is threatened by fishing operations, as it can entangle in fishing gear. It is drive hunted in some Japanese villages. The false killer has a tendency to mass strand given its highly social nature; the largest stranding consisted of 805 beached at Mar del Plata, Argentina. Most of what is known of this species comes from examining stranded individuals.

Taxonomy

 
Illustration of the skull

The false killer whale was first described by British paleontologist and biologist Richard Owen in his 1846 book, A history of British fossil mammals and birds, based on a fossil skull discovered in 1843. This specimen was unearthed from the Lincolnshire Fens near Stamford in England, a subfossil deposited in a marine environment that existed around 126,000 years ago.[1][5] The skull was reported as present in a number of museum collections, but noted as lost by William Henry Flower in 1884.[6] Owen compared the skull to those of the long-finned pilot whale (Globicephala melas), beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas), and Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus)–in fact, he gave it the nickname "thick toothed grampus" in light of this and assigned the animal to the genus Phocaena (a genus of porpoises) which Risso's dolphin was also assigned to in 1846. The species name crassidens means "thick toothed".[5]

In 1846, zoologist John Edward Gray put the false killer whale in the genus Orca, which had been known as the killer whale (Orcinus orca). Till 1861, when the first carcasses washed up on the shores of Kiel Bay, Denmark, the species was presumed extinct. Based on these and a pod that beached itself three months later in November, zoologist Johannes Theodor Reinhardt moved the species in 1862 to the newly erected genus Pseudorca, which established it as being neither a porpoise nor a killer whale.[7][8] The name "false killer whale" comes from the apparent similarity between its skull and that of the killer whale.[9]

The false killer whale is in the family Delphinidae (oceanic dolphins). It is in the subfamily Globicephalinae; its closest living relatives are Risso's dolphin, the melon-headed whale (Peponocephala electra), the pygmy killer whale (Feresa attenuata), pilot whales (Globicephala spp.), and possibly snubfin dolphins (Orcaella spp.).[10] Paules Edward Pieris Deraniyagala proposed a subspecies, P. c. meridionalis, in 1945, though without enough justification; and William Henry Flower suggested in 1884 and later abandoned a distinction between northern and southern false killer whales; there are currently no recognized subspecies.[11] But individuals in populations around the world can have different skull structure and vary in average length; Japanese false killers are 10–20% larger than South African ones.[9][12] It can hybridize with the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) to produce fertile offspring called "wholphins".[9][13]

Description

 
Pod of false killer whales

The false killer whale is black or dark gray; slightly lighter on the underside. It has a slender body with an elongated, tapered head and 44 teeth. The dorsal fin is sickle-shaped; and flippers are narrow, short, and pointed, with a distinctive bulge on the leading edge of the flipper (the side closest to the head). Average length is ~4.9 m (16.1 ft); females reach a maximum size of 5 m (16.4 ft) in length and 1,200 kg (2,600 lb) in weight, and males 6 m (20 ft) long and 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). But on average, males and females are about the same size. Newborns can be 1.5–2.1 m (4.9–6.9 ft) long.[9][14] Body temperature ranges from 36–37.2 °C (96.8–99.0 °F), increasing during activity.[8] The teeth are conical, and there are 14–21 in the upper jaw and 16–24 in the lower.[15]

A false killer reaches physical maturity at 8 to 14 years; maximum age in captivity is 57 years for males and 62 for females. Sexual maturity happens at 8 to 11 years. In one population, calving was at 7 year intervals; calving can occur year-round, though it usually occurs in late winter. Gestation takes ~15 months;[9] lactation, 9 months to 2 years.[16] The false killer is one of three toothed whales, the other two being the pilot whales, identified as having a sizable lifespan after menopause, which occurs at age 45 to 55.[17]

As a toothed whale, a false killer can echolocate using its melon organ in the forehead to create sound, which it uses to navigate and find prey.[18][19][20] The melon is larger in males than in females.[9]

Behavior

 
Mixed-species pod of common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) and false killer whales[21]

The false killer whale has been known to interact non-aggressively with some dolphins: the common bottlenose dolphin, the Pacific white-sided dolphin (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens), the rough-toothed dolphin (Steno bredanensis), the pilot whales, the melon-headed whale, the pantropical spotted dolphin (Stenella attenuata), the pygmy killer whale, and Risso's dolphin.[21][8][9][22][23] They have been shown to engage in depredation at fisheries with killer whales (Orcinus orca), though their diets differ with the killer whales and false killer whales perfering swordfish (4) and smaller fish respectively.[24]

A false killer may respond to distress calls and protect other species from predators, aid in childbirth by helping to remove the afterbirth, and has been known to interact sexually with bottlenose dolphins (see Wholphin) and pilot whales,[8] including homosexually.[25] It has been known to form mixed-species pods with those dolphins, probably due to shared feeding grounds. In Japan, these only occur in winter, suggesting it is tied to seasonal food shortages.[9][8][15]

A pod near Chile had a 15 km/h (9.3 mph) cruising speed, and false killer whales in captivity were recorded to have a maximum speed of 26.9–28.8 km/h (16.7–17.9 mph), similar to a bottlenose dolphin. Diving behavior is not well recorded, but one individual near Japan dove for 12 minutes to a depth of 230 m (750 ft).[9][26] In Japan, one individual had a documented dive of 600 m (2,000 ft), and one in Hawaii 927.5 m (3,043 ft), comparable to pilot whales and other similarly-sized dolphins. Its maximum dive time is likely 18.5 minutes.[15]

The false killer travels in large pods, evidenced by mass strandings; usually 10 to 20 members, though these smaller groups can be part of larger groups; it is highly social and can travel in groups of more than 500 whales.[27] These large groups may break up into smaller family groups of 4 to 6 members while feeding. Members stay with the pod long-term, some recorded as 15 years, and, indicated by mass strandings, share strong bonds with other members. It is thought it has a matrifocal family structure, with mothers heading the pod instead of the father, like in sperm whales and pilot whales. Different populations around the world have different vocalizations, similar to other dolphins. The false killer whale is probably polygynous, with males mating with multiple females.[9][15][28][29]

Ecology

 
False killer whale breaching

Generally, the false killer whale targets a wide array of squid and fish of various sizes during daylight hours.[9][30] They typically target large species of fish, such as mahi-mahi and tuna.[31] In captivity, it eats 3.4 to 4.3% of its body weight per day.[15] A video taken in 2016 near Sydney shows a group hunting a juvenile shark.[32] It sometimes discards the tail, gills, and stomach of captured fish, and pod members have been known to share food.[9]

In the Eastern Pacific, the false killer whale has been known to target smaller dolphins during tuna purse-seine fishing operations; there are attacks on sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus), and one instance against a humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) calf. Killer whales are known to prey on the false killer, and it also possibly faces a threat from large sharks, though there are no documented instances.[9][8][15][33]

The false killer is known to host parasites: trematode Nasitrema in the sinuses, nematode Stenurus in the sinuses and lungs, an unidentified crassicaudine nematode in the sinuses, stomach nematodes Anisakis simplex and Anisakis typica, acanthocephalan worm Bolbosoma capitatum in the intestines, whale lice Syncyamus pseudorcae and Isocyamus delphinii, and the whale barnacle Xenobalanus globicipitis. Some strandings had whales with large Bolbosoma infestations, such as the 1976 and 1986 strandings in Florida.[8]

Population and distribution

The false killer whale appears to have a widespread presence in tropical and semitropical oceans.[34] The species has been found in temperate waters, but these occurrences were possibly stray individuals, or associated with warm water events. It generally does not go beyond 50°N or below 50°S.[14][21] It usually inhabits open ocean and deep-water areas, though it may frequent coastal areas near oceanic islands.[35] Distinct populations inhabit the seas near the Hawaiian Islands[36][37] and in the eastern North Pacific.[38]

The false killer whale is thought to be common around the world, though no total estimate has been made.[39] The population in the Eastern Pacific is probably in the low tens-of-thousands,[40] and ~16,000 near China and Japan.[41] The population around Hawaii has been declining.[35]

Human interaction

 
False killer whale at the Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium

The false killer whale is known to be much more adaptable in captivity than other dolphins, being easily trained and highly sociable with other species, and as such it has been kept in several public aquariums around the world, such as in Japan, the United States, the Netherlands, Hong Kong, and Australia.[42] Individuals were mainly captured off California and Hawaii, and then in Japan and Taiwan after 1980.[9][8][15][25] It has also been successfully bred in captivity.[9] But Chester, an orphaned newborn who was stranded in Tofino on Vancouver Island in 2014 and rescued by Vancouver Aquarium, died from a bacterial erysipelas infection in 2017 at the age of three and a half. Being the fifth whale to die in the aquarium, Chester's death caused the Vancouver Park Board to ban the aquarium from acquiring more whales.[43][44]

The false killer has been known to approach and offer fish it has caught to humans diving or boating. It also takes fish off hooks, which sometimes leads to entanglement or swallowing the hook. Entanglement can cause drowning, loss of circulation to an appendage, or impede the animal's ability to hunt, and swallowing the hook can puncture the digestive tract or can become a blockage. In Hawaii, this is likely leading to the decline in local populations, reducing them by 75% from 1989 to 2009. The false killer is more susceptible to organochloride buildup than other dolphins, being higher up on the food chain, and stranded individuals around the world show higher levels than other dolphins. It has been known to ride the wakes of large boats, which could put it at risk of hitting the propeller.[35][15]

In a few Japanese villages, the false killer is killed in drive hunts using sound to herd individuals together and cause a mass stranding or corral them into nets before being killed.[45]

Beachings

 
Mar del Plata in Argentina in 1946, the largest false killer whale stranding

The false killer whale regularly beaches itself, for reasons largely unknown, on coasts around the world, with the largest stranding consisting of 835 individuals on 9 October 1946 at Mar del Plata in Argentina.[9][35] Unlike other dolphins, but similar to other globicephalines, the false killer usually mass strands in pods, leading to such high mortality rates. These can also occur in temperate waters outside its normal range, such as with the mass strandings in Britain in 1927, 1935, and 1936.[29]

 
The Flinders Bay beaching in 1986

The 30 July 1986 mass stranding of 114 false killers in Flinders Bay, Western Australia was widely watched as volunteers and the newly created Department of Conservation and Land Management (CALM) saved 96 whales, and founded an informal network for whale strandings.[46][47] The 2 June 2005 Geographe Bay stranding of 120 whales in Western Australia, the fourth in the bay, was caused by a storm preventing the animals from seeing the shoreline; this also caused a rescue effort of 1,500 volunteers by CALM.[48][49]

Since 2005, there have been seven mass strandings of false killer whales in New Zealand involving more than one individual, the largest on 8 April 1943 on the Māhia Peninsula with 300 stranded, and 31 March 1978 in Manukau Harbour with 253 stranded.[15]

Whale strandings are rare in southern Africa, but mass strandings in this area are typically associated with the false killer, with mass strandings averaging at 58 individuals. Hot-spots for mass stranding exist along the coast of the Western Cape in South Africa; the most recent in 30 May 2009 near the village of Kommetjie with 55 individuals.[50]

On 14 January 2017, a pod of ~100 beached themselves in Everglades National Park, Florida; the remoteness of the area was detrimental to rescue efforts, causing the deaths of 81 whales. The other two strandings in Florida were in 1986 with three beached whales from a pod of 40 in Cedar Key, and 1980 with 28 stranded in Key West.[51]

Conservation

The false killer whale is covered by the Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic, North East Atlantic, Irish and North Seas (ASCOBANS), and the Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area (ACCOBAMS). The species is further included in the Memorandum of Understanding Concerning the Conservation of the Manatee and Small Cetaceans of Western Africa and Macaronesia (Western African Aquatic Mammals MoU) and the Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region (Pacific Cetaceans MoU).[52]

No accurate global estimates for the false killer whale exist, so the species is listed as Near Threatened by the IUCN Redlist.[2] In November 2012, the United States' National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recognized the Hawaiian population of false killers, comprising ~150 whales, as endangered.[53]

See also

References

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External links

  • Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society
  • NOAA Fisheries Office of Protected Resources, False Killer Whale (Pseudorca crassidens)
  • Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic, North East Atlantic, Irish and North Seas
  • Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area
  • Memorandum of Understanding Concerning the Conservation of the Manatee and Small Cetaceans of Western Africa and Macaronesia
  • Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region
  • Voices in the Sea - Sounds of the False Killer Whale 9 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine

false, killer, whale, false, killer, whale, pseudorca, crassidens, species, oceanic, dolphin, that, only, extant, representative, genus, pseudorca, found, oceans, worldwide, mainly, tropical, regions, first, described, 1846, species, porpoise, based, skull, wh. The false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens is a species of oceanic dolphin that is the only extant representative of the genus Pseudorca It is found in oceans worldwide but mainly in tropical regions It was first described in 1846 as a species of porpoise based on a skull which was revised when the first carcasses were observed in 1861 The name false killer whale comes from having a skull similar to the orca Orcinus orca or killer whale False killer whaleTemporal range Middle Pleistocene Recent 1 Size compared to an average humanConservation statusNear Threatened IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix II CITES 3 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaInfraorder CetaceaFamily DelphinidaeGenus PseudorcaSpecies P crassidensBinomial namePseudorca crassidens Owen 1846 Range of the false killer whaleSynonyms 4 List of synonyms Globicephalus grayi Burmeister 1867 Orca crassidens Gray 1846 Orca destructor Cope 1866 Orca meridionalis Flower 1865 Pseudorca crassidens meridionalis Deraniyagala 1945 Pseudorca grayi Burmeister 1872 Pseudorca mediterranea Giglioli 1882 Pseudorca meridionalis Gray 1866The false killer whale reaches a maximum length of 6 m 20 ft though size can vary around the world It is highly sociable known to form pods of up to 50 members and can also form pods with other dolphin species such as the common bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus It can form close bonds with other species as well as have sexual interactions with them But the false killer has also been known to eat other dolphins though it typically eats squid and fish It is a deep diver maximum known depth is 927 5 m 3 043 ft maximum speed is 29 km h 18 mph Several aquariums around the world keep one or more false killers though its aggression toward other dolphins makes it less desirable It is threatened by fishing operations as it can entangle in fishing gear It is drive hunted in some Japanese villages The false killer has a tendency to mass strand given its highly social nature the largest stranding consisted of 805 beached at Mar del Plata Argentina Most of what is known of this species comes from examining stranded individuals Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Behavior 4 Ecology 5 Population and distribution 6 Human interaction 7 Beachings 8 Conservation 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksTaxonomy Edit Illustration of the skull The false killer whale was first described by British paleontologist and biologist Richard Owen in his 1846 book A history of British fossil mammals and birds based on a fossil skull discovered in 1843 This specimen was unearthed from the Lincolnshire Fens near Stamford in England a subfossil deposited in a marine environment that existed around 126 000 years ago 1 5 The skull was reported as present in a number of museum collections but noted as lost by William Henry Flower in 1884 6 Owen compared the skull to those of the long finned pilot whale Globicephala melas beluga whale Delphinapterus leucas and Risso s dolphin Grampus griseus in fact he gave it the nickname thick toothed grampus in light of this and assigned the animal to the genus Phocaena a genus of porpoises which Risso s dolphin was also assigned to in 1846 The species name crassidens means thick toothed 5 In 1846 zoologist John Edward Gray put the false killer whale in the genus Orca which had been known as the killer whale Orcinus orca Till 1861 when the first carcasses washed up on the shores of Kiel Bay Denmark the species was presumed extinct Based on these and a pod that beached itself three months later in November zoologist Johannes Theodor Reinhardt moved the species in 1862 to the newly erected genus Pseudorca which established it as being neither a porpoise nor a killer whale 7 8 The name false killer whale comes from the apparent similarity between its skull and that of the killer whale 9 The false killer whale is in the family Delphinidae oceanic dolphins It is in the subfamily Globicephalinae its closest living relatives are Risso s dolphin the melon headed whale Peponocephala electra the pygmy killer whale Feresa attenuata pilot whales Globicephala spp and possibly snubfin dolphins Orcaella spp 10 Paules Edward Pieris Deraniyagala proposed a subspecies P c meridionalis in 1945 though without enough justification and William Henry Flower suggested in 1884 and later abandoned a distinction between northern and southern false killer whales there are currently no recognized subspecies 11 But individuals in populations around the world can have different skull structure and vary in average length Japanese false killers are 10 20 larger than South African ones 9 12 It can hybridize with the bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus to produce fertile offspring called wholphins 9 13 Description Edit Pod of false killer whales The false killer whale is black or dark gray slightly lighter on the underside It has a slender body with an elongated tapered head and 44 teeth The dorsal fin is sickle shaped and flippers are narrow short and pointed with a distinctive bulge on the leading edge of the flipper the side closest to the head Average length is 4 9 m 16 1 ft females reach a maximum size of 5 m 16 4 ft in length and 1 200 kg 2 600 lb in weight and males 6 m 20 ft long and 2 000 kg 4 400 lb But on average males and females are about the same size Newborns can be 1 5 2 1 m 4 9 6 9 ft long 9 14 Body temperature ranges from 36 37 2 C 96 8 99 0 F increasing during activity 8 The teeth are conical and there are 14 21 in the upper jaw and 16 24 in the lower 15 A false killer reaches physical maturity at 8 to 14 years maximum age in captivity is 57 years for males and 62 for females Sexual maturity happens at 8 to 11 years In one population calving was at 7 year intervals calving can occur year round though it usually occurs in late winter Gestation takes 15 months 9 lactation 9 months to 2 years 16 The false killer is one of three toothed whales the other two being the pilot whales identified as having a sizable lifespan after menopause which occurs at age 45 to 55 17 As a toothed whale a false killer can echolocate using its melon organ in the forehead to create sound which it uses to navigate and find prey 18 19 20 The melon is larger in males than in females 9 Behavior Edit Mixed species pod of common bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus and false killer whales 21 The false killer whale has been known to interact non aggressively with some dolphins the common bottlenose dolphin the Pacific white sided dolphin Lagenorhynchus obliquidens the rough toothed dolphin Steno bredanensis the pilot whales the melon headed whale the pantropical spotted dolphin Stenella attenuata the pygmy killer whale and Risso s dolphin 21 8 9 22 23 They have been shown to engage in depredation at fisheries with killer whales Orcinus orca though their diets differ with the killer whales and false killer whales perfering swordfish 4 and smaller fish respectively 24 A false killer may respond to distress calls and protect other species from predators aid in childbirth by helping to remove the afterbirth and has been known to interact sexually with bottlenose dolphins see Wholphin and pilot whales 8 including homosexually 25 It has been known to form mixed species pods with those dolphins probably due to shared feeding grounds In Japan these only occur in winter suggesting it is tied to seasonal food shortages 9 8 15 A pod near Chile had a 15 km h 9 3 mph cruising speed and false killer whales in captivity were recorded to have a maximum speed of 26 9 28 8 km h 16 7 17 9 mph similar to a bottlenose dolphin Diving behavior is not well recorded but one individual near Japan dove for 12 minutes to a depth of 230 m 750 ft 9 26 In Japan one individual had a documented dive of 600 m 2 000 ft and one in Hawaii 927 5 m 3 043 ft comparable to pilot whales and other similarly sized dolphins Its maximum dive time is likely 18 5 minutes 15 The false killer travels in large pods evidenced by mass strandings usually 10 to 20 members though these smaller groups can be part of larger groups it is highly social and can travel in groups of more than 500 whales 27 These large groups may break up into smaller family groups of 4 to 6 members while feeding Members stay with the pod long term some recorded as 15 years and indicated by mass strandings share strong bonds with other members It is thought it has a matrifocal family structure with mothers heading the pod instead of the father like in sperm whales and pilot whales Different populations around the world have different vocalizations similar to other dolphins The false killer whale is probably polygynous with males mating with multiple females 9 15 28 29 Ecology Edit False killer whale breaching Generally the false killer whale targets a wide array of squid and fish of various sizes during daylight hours 9 30 They typically target large species of fish such as mahi mahi and tuna 31 In captivity it eats 3 4 to 4 3 of its body weight per day 15 A video taken in 2016 near Sydney shows a group hunting a juvenile shark 32 It sometimes discards the tail gills and stomach of captured fish and pod members have been known to share food 9 In the Eastern Pacific the false killer whale has been known to target smaller dolphins during tuna purse seine fishing operations there are attacks on sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus and one instance against a humpback whale Megaptera novaeangliae calf Killer whales are known to prey on the false killer and it also possibly faces a threat from large sharks though there are no documented instances 9 8 15 33 The false killer is known to host parasites trematode Nasitrema in the sinuses nematode Stenurus in the sinuses and lungs an unidentified crassicaudine nematode in the sinuses stomach nematodes Anisakis simplex and Anisakis typica acanthocephalan worm Bolbosoma capitatum in the intestines whale lice Syncyamus pseudorcae and Isocyamus delphinii and the whale barnacle Xenobalanus globicipitis Some strandings had whales with large Bolbosoma infestations such as the 1976 and 1986 strandings in Florida 8 Population and distribution EditThe false killer whale appears to have a widespread presence in tropical and semitropical oceans 34 The species has been found in temperate waters but these occurrences were possibly stray individuals or associated with warm water events It generally does not go beyond 50 N or below 50 S 14 21 It usually inhabits open ocean and deep water areas though it may frequent coastal areas near oceanic islands 35 Distinct populations inhabit the seas near the Hawaiian Islands 36 37 and in the eastern North Pacific 38 The false killer whale is thought to be common around the world though no total estimate has been made 39 The population in the Eastern Pacific is probably in the low tens of thousands 40 and 16 000 near China and Japan 41 The population around Hawaii has been declining 35 Human interaction Edit False killer whale at the Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium The false killer whale is known to be much more adaptable in captivity than other dolphins being easily trained and highly sociable with other species and as such it has been kept in several public aquariums around the world such as in Japan the United States the Netherlands Hong Kong and Australia 42 Individuals were mainly captured off California and Hawaii and then in Japan and Taiwan after 1980 9 8 15 25 It has also been successfully bred in captivity 9 But Chester an orphaned newborn who was stranded in Tofino on Vancouver Island in 2014 and rescued by Vancouver Aquarium died from a bacterial erysipelas infection in 2017 at the age of three and a half Being the fifth whale to die in the aquarium Chester s death caused the Vancouver Park Board to ban the aquarium from acquiring more whales 43 44 The false killer has been known to approach and offer fish it has caught to humans diving or boating It also takes fish off hooks which sometimes leads to entanglement or swallowing the hook Entanglement can cause drowning loss of circulation to an appendage or impede the animal s ability to hunt and swallowing the hook can puncture the digestive tract or can become a blockage In Hawaii this is likely leading to the decline in local populations reducing them by 75 from 1989 to 2009 The false killer is more susceptible to organochloride buildup than other dolphins being higher up on the food chain and stranded individuals around the world show higher levels than other dolphins It has been known to ride the wakes of large boats which could put it at risk of hitting the propeller 35 15 In a few Japanese villages the false killer is killed in drive hunts using sound to herd individuals together and cause a mass stranding or corral them into nets before being killed 45 Beachings EditSee also Cetacean stranding Mar del Plata in Argentina in 1946 the largest false killer whale stranding The false killer whale regularly beaches itself for reasons largely unknown on coasts around the world with the largest stranding consisting of 835 individuals on 9 October 1946 at Mar del Plata in Argentina 9 35 Unlike other dolphins but similar to other globicephalines the false killer usually mass strands in pods leading to such high mortality rates These can also occur in temperate waters outside its normal range such as with the mass strandings in Britain in 1927 1935 and 1936 29 The Flinders Bay beaching in 1986 The 30 July 1986 mass stranding of 114 false killers in Flinders Bay Western Australia was widely watched as volunteers and the newly created Department of Conservation and Land Management CALM saved 96 whales and founded an informal network for whale strandings 46 47 The 2 June 2005 Geographe Bay stranding of 120 whales in Western Australia the fourth in the bay was caused by a storm preventing the animals from seeing the shoreline this also caused a rescue effort of 1 500 volunteers by CALM 48 49 Since 2005 there have been seven mass strandings of false killer whales in New Zealand involving more than one individual the largest on 8 April 1943 on the Mahia Peninsula with 300 stranded and 31 March 1978 in Manukau Harbour with 253 stranded 15 Whale strandings are rare in southern Africa but mass strandings in this area are typically associated with the false killer with mass strandings averaging at 58 individuals Hot spots for mass stranding exist along the coast of the Western Cape in South Africa the most recent in 30 May 2009 near the village of Kommetjie with 55 individuals 50 On 14 January 2017 a pod of 100 beached themselves in Everglades National Park Florida the remoteness of the area was detrimental to rescue efforts causing the deaths of 81 whales The other two strandings in Florida were in 1986 with three beached whales from a pod of 40 in Cedar Key and 1980 with 28 stranded in Key West 51 Conservation EditThe false killer whale is covered by the Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic North East Atlantic Irish and North Seas ASCOBANS and the Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area ACCOBAMS The species is further included in the Memorandum of Understanding Concerning the Conservation of the Manatee and Small Cetaceans of Western Africa and Macaronesia Western African Aquatic Mammals MoU and the Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region Pacific Cetaceans MoU 52 No accurate global estimates for the false killer whale exist so the species is listed as Near Threatened by the IUCN Redlist 2 In November 2012 the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recognized the Hawaiian population of false killers comprising 150 whales as endangered 53 See also Edit Cetaceans portal Mammals portal Marine life portalList of cetaceansReferences Edit a b Pseudorca crassidens at fossilworks org retrieved 11 August 2018 a b Baird R W 2018 Pseudorca crassidens IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T18596A145357488 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T18596A145357488 en Retrieved 13 November 2021 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 14 January 2022 Perrin WF ed Pseudorca crassidens World Cetacea Database World Register of Marine Species Retrieved 4 August 2018 a b Owen R 1846 A history of British fossil mammals and birds J Van Voorst pp 516 520 Hershkovitz P 1966 Catalog of living whales Bulletin of the United States National Museum 246 viii 1 259 81 Reinhardt J 1866 Pseudorca crassidens In Eschricht D F Lilljeborg W Reindhardt J eds Recent memoirs on the Cetacea pp 190 218 a b c d e f g h Odell D K McClune K M 1981 False killer whale Pseudorca crassidens Owen 1946 In Ridgeway S H Harrison R Harrison R J eds Handbook of marine mammals the second book of dolphins and the porpoises Elsevier ISBN 978 0 12 588506 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Baird R W 2009 False Killer Whale Pseudorca crassidens In Perrin W F Wursig B Thewissen J G M eds Encyclopedia of marine mammals Academic Press pp 405 406 ISBN 978 0 08 091993 5 Cunha H A Moraes L C Medeiros B V Lailson Brito Jr J da Silva V M F Sole Cava A M Schrago C G 2011 Phylogenetic Status and Timescale for the Diversification of Steno and Sotalia Dolphins PLOS ONE 6 12 e28297 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 628297C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0028297 PMC 3233566 PMID 22163290 Stacey P J Leatherwood S Baird R W 1994 Pseudorca crassidens PDF Mammalian Species 456 1 6 doi 10 2307 3504208 JSTOR 3504208 S2CID 253993005 Ferreira I M Kasuya T Marsh H Best P B 2013 False killer whales Pseudorca crassidens from Japan and South Africa Differences in growth and reproduction Marine Mammal Science 30 1 64 84 doi 10 1111 mms 12021 hdl 2263 50452 Carroll S B 13 September 2010 Hybrids may thrive where parents fear to tread New York Times a b False killer whale Pseudorca crassidens Marine Species Identification Portal Retrieved 26 January 2013 a b c d e f g h i Zaeschmar J R 2014 False killer whales Pseudorca crassidens in New Zealand waters Massey University Archived from the original PDF on 3 August 2018 Retrieved 2 August 2018 Riccialdelli L Goodall R N P 2015 Intra specific trophic variation in false killer whales Pseudorca crassidens from the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean through stable isotopes analysis Mammalian Biology 80 4 298 302 doi 10 1016 j mambio 2015 01 003 Photopoulou T Ferreira I M Best P B Kasuya T Marsh H 2017 Evidence for a postreproductive phase in female false killer whales Pseudorca crassidens Frontiers in Zoology 14 30 30 arXiv 1606 04519 doi 10 1186 s12983 017 0208 y PMC 5479012 PMID 28649267 Au W W L Pawloski J L Nachtigall P E 1995 Echolocation signals and transmission beam pattern of a false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 98 51 51 59 Bibcode 1995ASAJ 98 51A doi 10 1121 1 413643 PMID 7608405 Marlee Breese 2012 Echolocation beam focusing in the false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience 6 doi 10 3389 conf fnbeh 2012 27 00161 ISSN 1662 5153 Kloepper Laura Nachtigall Paul Donahe Megan Breese Marlee 15 April 2012 Active echolocation beam focusing in the false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens Journal of Experimental Biology 215 8 1306 1312 doi 10 1242 jeb 066605 PMID 22442368 S2CID 207170104 a b c Halpin Luke R Towers Jared R Ford John K B 20 April 2018 First record of common bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus in Canadian Pacific waters Marine Biodiversity Records 11 3 doi 10 1186 s41200 018 0138 1 Brown David H Caldwell David K Caldwell Melba C 4 April 1966 Observations on the behavior of wild and captive false killer whales with notes on associated behavior of other genera of captive delphinids Contributions in Science 95 1 32 doi 10 5962 p 241085 ISSN 0459 8113 S2CID 91933110 Zaeschmar Jochen R Dwyer Sarah L Stockin Karen A 9 July 2012 Rare observations of false killer whales Pseudorca crassidens cooperatively feeding with common bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus in the Hauraki Gulf New Zealand Marine Mammal Science 29 3 555 562 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2012 00582 x ISSN 0824 0469 S2CID 83714092 Passadore Cecilia Domingo Andres Secchi Eduardo R 16 January 2015 Depredation by killer whale Orcinus orca and false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens on the catch of the Uruguayan pelagic longline fishery in Southwestern Atlantic Ocean ICES Journal of Marine Science 72 5 1653 1666 doi 10 1093 icesjms fsu251 ISSN 1095 9289 a b Brown D H Caldwell D H Caldwell M B 1966 Observations on the wild and captive false killer whales with notes on associated behavior of other genera of captive delphinids PDF Los Angeles County Museum 95 Archived from the original PDF on 22 March 2016 Minamikawa S Watanabe H Iwasaki T 2011 Diving behavior of a false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens in the Kuroshio Oyashio transition region and the Kuroshio front region of the western North Pacific Marine Mammal Science 29 1 177 185 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2011 00532 x Caldwell David K Caldwell Melba C Walker Cecil M August 1970 Mass and Individual Strandings of False Killer Whales Pseudorca crassidens in Florida Journal of Mammalogy 51 3 634 doi 10 2307 1378415 ISSN 0022 2372 JSTOR 1378415 Chivers S J Baird R W McSweeney D J Webster D L Hedrick N M Salinas J C 2007 Genetic variation and evidence for population structure in eastern North Pacific false killer whales Pseudorca crassidens PDF Canadian Journal of Zoology 85 7 783 794 doi 10 1139 Z07 059 a b Sergeant D E 1982 Mass strandings of toothed whales Odontoceti as a population phenomenon PDF The Scientific Reports of the Whales Research Institute 34 18 Alonso M K Pedraza S N Schiavini A C M Goodman R N P Crespo E A 1999 Stomach contents of false killer whales Pseudorca crassidens stranded on the coasts of the Strait of Magellan Marine Mammal Science 15 3 712 724 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1999 tb00838 x WDC us whales org Retrieved 7 October 2018 Hubbard N 10 May 2016 Drone films false killer whales hunting down a shark Earth Touch News Network Retrieved 2 August 2018 Palacios D M Mate B R 1996 Attack by false killer whales Pseudorca crassidens on sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus in the Galapagos Islands Marine Mammal Science 12 4 582 587 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1996 tb00070 x ACEVEDO GUTIERREZ ALEJANDRO BRENNAN BERNARD RODRIGUEZ PATRICIA THOMAS MOLLY April 1997 Resightings and Behavior of False Killer Whales Pseudorca Crasszdens in Costa Rica Marine Mammal Science 13 2 307 314 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1997 tb00634 x ISSN 0824 0469 a b c d Baird R W 23 December 2009 A review of false killer whales in Hawaiian waters biology status and risk factors PDF Cascadia Research Collective Retrieved 2 August 2018 Baird RW Schorr GS Webster DL McSweeney DJ Hanson MB Andrews RD 9 February 2010 Movements and habitat use of satellite tagged false killer whales around the main Hawaiian Islands Endangered Species Research 10 107 121 doi 10 3354 esr00258 ISSN 1863 5407 S2CID 54074273 Baird Robin W Gorgone Antoinette M McSweeney Daniel J Webster Daniel L Salden Dan R Deakos Mark H Ligon Allan D Schorr Gregory S Barlow Jay Mahaffy Sabre D July 2008 False killer whales Pseudorca crassidens around the main Hawaiian Islands Long term site fidelity inter island movements and association patterns Marine Mammal Science 24 3 591 612 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2008 00200 x ISSN 0824 0469 S2CID 12769431 Chivers Susan J Baird Robin W McSweeney Daniel J Webster Daniel L Hedrick Nicole M Salinas Juan Carlos July 2007 Genetic variation and evidence for population structure in eastern North Pacific false killer whales Pseudorca crassidens Canadian Journal of Zoology 85 7 783 794 doi 10 1139 z07 059 ISSN 0008 4301 Stacey P J Baird R W 1991 Status of the false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens in Canada Canadian Field Naturalist 105 2 189 197 Reeves R R Smith B D Crespo E A di Sciara G N 2003 Dolphins Whales and Porpoises 2002 2010 Conservation Action Plan for the World s Cetaceans PDF IUCN Retrieved 3 August 2018 Pseudorca crassidens False killer whale Australia Government Department of the Environment and Energy Retrieved 3 August 2018 Brown David H Caldwell David K Caldwell Melba C 4 April 1966 Observations on the behavior of wild and captive false killer whales with notes on associated behavior of other genera of captive delphinids Contributions in Science 95 1 32 doi 10 5962 p 241085 ISSN 0459 8113 S2CID 91933110 Eagland N 24 November 2017 Only one cetacean remains in Vancouver Aquarium s tanks after a false killer whale died Friday morning Vancouver Sun Retrieved 2 August 2018 False killer whale Chester may have died from bacterial infection preliminary necropsy report Global News 30 November 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2017 Brownell Jr R L Nowacek D P Ralls K 2008 Hunting cetaceans with sound a worldwide review PDF Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 10 1 81 88 Whale rescue in 1986 changed not just the people who were there ABC South West WA 7 June 2011 Retrieved 8 July 2012 World watched as WA town saved the whales The West Australian 19 July 2011 Retrieved 8 July 2012 No further sightings of stranded whales Department of Conservation and Land Management 6 March 2005 Archived from the original on 7 September 2006 Retrieved 2 August 2018 Chambers S L James R N 2005 Sonar termination as a cause of mass cetacean strandings in Geographe Bay south western Australia PDF Proceedings of the Australian Acoustical Society 391 398 Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2006 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Kirkman S Meyer M A Thornton M 2010 False killer whale Pseudorca crassidens mass stranding at Long Beach on South Africa s Cape Peninsula 2009 African Journal of Marine Science 32 1 167 170 doi 10 2989 1814232X 2010 481168 S2CID 84702502 Staletovich J 16 January 2017 Mysterious stranding kills 81 false killer whales off Southwest Florida Miami Herald Retrieved 2 August 2018 Accobams News Archived from the original on 16 October 2021 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Kearn Rebekah 27 November 2012 Hawaiian False Killer Whale Endangered Courthouse News Retrieved 27 November 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to false killer whales Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society NOAA Fisheries Office of Protected Resources False Killer Whale Pseudorca crassidens Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic North East Atlantic Irish and North Seas Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area Memorandum of Understanding Concerning the Conservation of the Manatee and Small Cetaceans of Western Africa and Macaronesia Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region Voices in the Sea Sounds of the False Killer Whale Archived 9 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en 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