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Southern right whale dolphin

The southern right whale dolphin (Lissodelphis peronii) is a small and slender species of cetacean, found in cool waters of the Southern Hemisphere. It is one of two species of right whale dolphin (genus Lissodelphis). This genus is characterized by the lack of a dorsal fin. The other species, the northern right whale dolphin (Lissodelphis borealis), is found in deep oceans of the Northern Hemisphere and has a different pigmentation pattern than the southern right whale dolphin.

Southern right whale dolphin
A French drawing from 1847
Size compared to an average human
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Delphinidae
Genus: Lissodelphis
Species:
L. peronii
Binomial name
Lissodelphis peronii
Range map

Taxonomy edit

The species was first published by Bernard Germain de Lacépède in 1804. The southern right whale dolphins together with the northern right whale dolphins are the only members of the genus Lissodelphis, which name is derived from the Greek, with lisso meaning smooth, and delphis meaning dolphin. Recent classifications have placed Lissodelphis within the Delphinidae, the oceanic dolphin family of cetaceans.[3] The specific epithet peronii commemorates François Péron, a French naturalist who saw the species near Tasmania during an expedition in 1802.[4] Although some doubts remain on the validity of these two species, most authors currently retain them as separate species.[5][6]

Both species in the genus are referred to by the name "right whale dolphin", a name derived from the right whales (Eubalaena) which also lack a dorsal fin.[7] Other common names for the southern right whale dolphin include: whitebellied right whale dolphin, southern right whale porpoise, mealy-mouthed porpoise, tunina (tonina) sin aleta (Spanish), delfin (delphin) liso austral (Spanish), minami semi-iruka (Japanese), dauphin de Peron (French), yuzhnyi kitovidnyi delfin (Russian), Südlicher Glattdelfin (German), and zuidelijke gladde dolfijn (Dutch).

Description edit

Southern right whale dolphins can be easily distinguished from other cetacean species within their range as they are the only dolphins without dorsal fins in the Southern Hemisphere. They have streamlined and graceful bodies, a single blowhole and a short and defined beak, possessing between 39 and 50 teeth per row.[5][6]

A sharp dividing line separates the black dorsal part from the white ventral part of the body, running from the tail stock forward, dipping down to the flipper insertion and sweeping back up, below the eyes, to cross the melon between the blowhole and snout crease.[5][8][6] Younger individuals can be grey/brownish dorsally but develop adult coloration within the first year.[9][5][6] The flippers of the southern right whale dolphins are small, recurved, predominantly white and located about one-quarter of the way back from the snout tip. Their flukes are small, have a white underside and dark grey upper side, with a notch in the middle and concave trailing edges.[5]

Variability in the size of these black and white areas exists.[10][11] More extensive anomalous pigmentation has been observed, with records of pure all-white individuals,[12][13] as well as melanistic (all-black) individuals.[14][15] In 1998, a potential hybrid of a southern right whale dolphin and a dusky dolphin (Lagenorhynchus obscurus) was observed and subsequently described in 2002. This animal showed intermediate morphological features between the two species.[8]

Newborn calves measure around 86 cm (34 in) in length and weigh around 5 kg (11 lb), while adults range between 2.18 and 2.5 m (7 ft 2 in and 8 ft 2 in) and weight between 60–100 kg (130–220 lb) on average.[5][14][6] The maximum weight for southern right whale dolphins is 116 kg, with maximum lengths reaching 297 cm (117 in) in males and 230 cm (91 in) in females but few specimens have been examined and it is expected they grow larger.[10] On average, males tend to grow slightly larger than females. Little is known of this species’ reproductive biology. Research suggests that males reach sexual maturity at lengths between 212–220 cm (83–87 in) and females between 206–212 cm (81–83 in).[5]

Population status edit

There are no current global abundance and mortality estimates of the species although it is considered a fairly common and abundant species along its range,[5] particularly in Chile.[16] The very low sighting rate is most likely caused by a lack of sampling effort and due to the difficulties of sighting the animals in their offshore habitat.

Distribution edit

Southern right whale dolphins have a circumpolar distribution across the Southern Hemisphere, generally occurring in cool temperate to Sub-Antarctic waters between 30°S and 65°S.[16][5][14] The precise boundary of their range has not been estimated or closely studied but the southern limit of the species appears to be bounded by the Antarctic Convergence while the northern limit seems bounded by the Tropical Convergence although rare sightings beyond these limits have been recorded.[16] Most sightings of the southern right whale dolphins occur in offshore and deep waters, with temperatures ranging between 1 and 20 °C. In regions where deep waters approach the coast and in upwelling areas, they have occasionally been observed near shore.[17][5][11]

South America edit

The species is known to be abundant along the western coasts of South America, ranging from Cape Horn (55°58’S) to Arica (18°28’S), with the northernmost record at 12°30’S near Pucusana (Peru). Although the southern right whale dolphin is considered abundant, only few confirmed records of the species in the Eastern South Pacific exist.[16][18]

Preliminary boat surveys and stranding and fishery records suggest that southern right whale dolphins may be one of the most common species of cetacean in northern Chile. The range extends until 170 km (110 mi) offshore north of 40°S and 250 km (160 mi) off the southern coast of Chile and it has been suggested that at least a part of this Chilean population migrates northbound in the austral winter and spring, when the coastal component of the cold Humboldt Current and cool coastal upwelling are strongest.[16][5] An extension of the range to the North, associated to cold-water currents and food availability, has also been observed in Brazil, where a stranded individual was found in 1995 in an area where the warm Brazil Current meets the cold Malvinas Current.[19]

In 2018, two groups were sighted in the western area of the Strait of Magellan in Chile. It was unclear through which route and why they entered the Magellan Strait but these were the first sightings of live southern right whales dolphins in this shallow area.[20] A few reports of solitary stranded specimens in exterior channels south of 40°S and the Beagle Channel have also shown their occurrence inside shallow channel systems.[21][22] It has been hypothesized they may enter these channels accidentally or because of poor health.[16] In the past, a high number of stranded southern right whale dolphins were reported on beaches of north-central chile, most of which were discarded animals by-caught In fishing nets. An increase in strandings is possibly due to the developing swordfish gillnet fishery off northern Chile.[16]

The waters of the Patagonian continental shelf of Argentina harbor a high diversity of cetaceans, including southern right whale dolphins. They are known to occur in cold waters off Santa Cruz Province, the Falkland Islands,[23] as well as off Tierra del Fuego.[21] Sightings in coastal areas are rare but exist in Mar del Plata[24] and in Golfo Nuevo, where three southern right whale dolphins were observed once during the summer of 1992.[8]

Africa edit

In Southern Africa, the range is associated with cold currents up the western and southern coasts, ranging northwards as far as about 23°S due to the cold counter clockwise Benguela Current. The species has been found to occur year-round in a localized area on the southwestern coast of Namibia, in Lüderitz, linked to the strong Lüderitz upwelling cell area and high productivity waters.[11][14] These animals may occasionally extend their range into South African waters although more sampling effort is needed to support this. Just one confirmed sighting of the species exists from the South African coast, just south of the Orange River. Southern right whale dolphins have also been observed in waters around Marion Island.[9][11][25]

Australia edit

The species has been observed in Australian waters since 1802, although only few actual records exist since then.[26] They are found off southern continental Australia including sightings south and southwestward of Tasmania, in the Great Australian Bight and off south-western Australia.[27] One pair was sighted on the 20th of October 1910 at 42°51S, 153°56E, approximately 460 km to the east of Australia, in the Tasman Sea.[28] No localised areas where the species occurs year-round are known from the coast of Australia, although more survey effort could result in the identification of these areas, similar to the one off the west coast of Namibia.[11][7]

Few stranded individuals have been documented in Australian waters.[10] In December 2019, a dolphin washed up on a beach at Port Fairy, Victoria, with the deceased animal being assessed by state authorities, researchers and local Australian aboriginal elders. Another dolphin washed up in January 2020 and was photographed, but the dead animal washed back off the beach. The dual strandings were described as ‘very unusual’ by authorities.[29]

New Zealand edit

One of the earliest records of this species in New Zealand waters was during the Terra Nova Expedition, when a pair was sighted approximately 145 km west-south-west of Nugget Point Lighthouse, South Island at 47°04'S, 171°33'E.[28] Southern right whale dolphins have been observed at sea to the southeast of New Zealand [30][31] and are largely found between the Subtropical Convergence and the subantarctic waters to the south of it, between surface temperatures of 9°-17 °C.[31]

The first recorded photographs of the species globally, were from a stranding of three individuals in New Zealand in 1952, which were apparently rescued.[32] Since then there have been a number of strandings around the country, including seven events between 1970 and 1981[10] and a mass stranding of 75 individuals occurred at the Chatham In 1988.[33] More recently a stranding of a single animal occurred at Mahia Beach, North Island in April 2020 which was euthanised by the Department of Conservation.[34] The northernmost record of a stranding in New Zealand was of a ~200 cm long male at Whananaki (35° 31’S, 174° 28’), Northland, in November 1979.[10]

Southern right whale dolphins are occasionally observed off the coast of Kaikōura, on the eastern coast of South Island, typically in groups of 50-200, although larger groups of >500 are also encountered.[15] In 1967, research showed that the species could also be found off-shore from the Chatham, Bounty and Antipodes Islands (approximately 43-57°S, 168-158°E) between January and March.[31]

Behavior edit

Social edit

 
Southern right whale dolphins porpoising. One melanistic individual can be observed in this group (on the foreground in the middle)

Southern right whale dolphins are generally gregarious and have been documented in aggregations of more than 1000 individuals[35] although small groups of one to 10 have also been reported.[28][31][35] Mean group size estimates differ and range between 52 and 368 off northern Chile,[16][7][36] however, they typically live in groups of 100-200 individuals.[37] Pods of just a few animals have also been observed, often associated with other cetacean species. Mixed groups with Dusky dolphins (Lagenorhynchus obscurus) appear common in the southern Atlantic and have occasionally been reported in New-Zealand,[38][28] off Southwest Africa[11][9] and along the coast of southern Chile.[39] They have been observed to intermix freely with pilot whales (Globicephala spp.)[40] and in Chile, associations with common dolphins (Delphinus delphis) have been reported.[5][16] Along their range they have also occasionally been sighted with hourglass dolphins (Lagenorhynchus cruciger), common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus)[40] and fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus).[11][5]

Four basic herd configuration types have been reported and conform to the types described for the northern right whale dolphin: (1) Densely packed schools, without identifiable subgroups; (2) herds of scattered subgroups of various sizes; (3) V-shaped herds; and (4) herds in ‘’chorus line’’ formation.[9][41] Their movement is very graceful and they often move by leaping out of the water continuously. When they swim slowly, they expose only a small area of the head and back while surfacing to breath. When travelling at higher speeds they have been observed to either (1) swim just below the surface, surfacing briefly to breath and then submerge or (2) swim rapidly at the surface, performing low-angle leaps covering much surface distance. Breaching, belly-flopping, side-slapping, and lob-tailing (slapping the flukes on the water surface) have been witnessed.[14] Some groups will avoid boats, whereas others approach and possibly bow-ride. Few direct speed measurements at sea exist but swimming speed has been reported to be 22 km/h (14 mph).[9][11]

Foraging edit

Southern right whale dolphins prey on an undetermined range of fish, but it has been suggested they prey primarily on mesopelagic fish and squid, and may dive to depths in excess of 200 m (660 ft) in search of food.[10][5] However, little is known of their particular habits, and it is unknown whether they generally search for their food at these greater depths or near the surface.[7] Based on stomach contents, epipelagic coastal food habits, mesopelagic or a combination of both were suggested for southern right whale dolphins.[42][10][43] Geographical variability in prey species has been observed by comparing stomach contents of animals from central Chile and New Zealand.[42][16][20]

The species itself is presumably occasionally predated upon by larger sharks and killer whales (Orcinus orca) however, other predators might exist. In 1983, an intact dolphin measuring 0.86 m (2 ft 10 in) was found in the stomach of a 1.7 m (5 ft 7 in) Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) taken off central Chile, and in 1990, a foetus was discovered inside a sleeper shark (Somniosus cf. pacificus).[16][5]

Threats edit

Overall, clear evidence of the impact of potential threats on the species are sparse. Southern right whale dolphins were taken by whaling operations of the 19th century, primarily for their meat.[9] In the past they have been infrequently caught off the coasts of Peru and Chile, where their meat and blubber were used as food and crab bait.[42][5][14] High levels of bycaught animals have been recorded in the swordfish (Xiphias gladius) driftnet fishery in northern Chile, which started in the early 1980s,[44] and to a lesser extent, the species has also been incidentally caught in driftnets along the coast of Peru.[45]

Large numbers of southern right whale dolphins are sometimes taken by gillnetting and longline fishing in oceans off the southern coast of Australia.[7] Off the west coast of southern Africa, no evidence exists of bycatch in gillnet fisheries, but there may be competition for forage resources with pelagic trawl fisheries due to the pelagic distribution of the species and their squid based diet.[25] The direct and indirect impacts of global climate change on the southern right whale dolphin are largely unknown, but could have a cascading effect on the movement and feeding ecology. Seismic activity, for oil and gas, might also be a minor threat.[46][47][25] No reported attempts to capture live southern right whale dolphins exist.

Conservation status edit

As of 2018, the Global IUCN Red List classifies the southern right whale dolphin as Least Concern (LC), due to their apparent wide distribution in pelagic waters of the sub-Antarctic and the lack of evidence of severe threats to the populations. However, the species remains extremely data-poor throughout its range so the assessment should be considered provisional until more knowledge is obtained.[48]

The 2016 Regional Red List of Mammals of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland also classified the species as Least Concern[25] while in Australia and Chile, based on the limited current knowledge on the species, southern right whale dolphins are classified as Data Deficient by the Action Plan for Australian Mammals[49][30] and the Chilean Species National List respectively.[50] Under the New Zealand Threat Classification System this species is listed locally as Data Deficient.[51]

Southern right whale dolphins are listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) and the species is subject to International Whaling Commission (IWC) regulations. In South-Africa, the species is protected by the Marine Living Resources Act (No. 18 of 1998).[25] They are 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)[52] and the Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region (Pacific Cetaceans MoU).[53] Within the Australian Whale Sanctuary, all cetaceans, including the southern right whale dolphins are protected under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act (EPBC Act). The Sanctuary includes all Commonwealth waters from the three nautical mile state waters limit out to the boundary of the Australian Exclusive Economic Zone (out to 200 nautical miles and further in some places). The species is also protected within the Indian Ocean Sanctuary and Southern Ocean Sanctuary.[7] Although the species is included in legislation, no specific conservation measures have been identified for this species as throughout its range, there is still a clear deficiency of data to build these measures upon.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ a b "Lissodelphis peronii (Lacépède, 1804)". Integrated Taxonomic Information System.
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  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Jefferson, Thomas; Newcomer, Michael W.; Leatherwood, Stephen; Van Waerebeek, Koen (1994). Right Whale Dolphins Lissodelphis borealis (Peale, 1848) and Lissodelphis peronii (Lacépède, 1804). Academic Press Ltd. pp. 335–362. ISBN 0-12-588505-9.
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  48. ^ Braulik, Gill (2018). "Lissodelphis peronii, Southern Right Whale Dolphin. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018". doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T12126A50362558.en. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  49. ^ Woinarski, John C. Z.; Burbidge, Andrew A.; Harrison, Peter L. (2014). The Action Plan for Australian Mammals 2012. CSIRO Publishing. p. 811. ISBN 9780643108745.
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  53. ^ "Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region" (PDF). Retrieved 25 January 2020.

External links edit

  • Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society

southern, right, whale, dolphin, southern, right, whale, dolphin, lissodelphis, peronii, small, slender, species, cetacean, found, cool, waters, southern, hemisphere, species, right, whale, dolphin, genus, lissodelphis, this, genus, characterized, lack, dorsal. The southern right whale dolphin Lissodelphis peronii is a small and slender species of cetacean found in cool waters of the Southern Hemisphere It is one of two species of right whale dolphin genus Lissodelphis This genus is characterized by the lack of a dorsal fin The other species the northern right whale dolphin Lissodelphis borealis is found in deep oceans of the Northern Hemisphere and has a different pigmentation pattern than the southern right whale dolphin Southern right whale dolphinA French drawing from 1847Size compared to an average humanConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaInfraorder CetaceaFamily DelphinidaeGenus LissodelphisSpecies L peroniiBinomial nameLissodelphis peroniiLacepede 1804 3 Range map Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Population status 4 Distribution 4 1 South America 4 2 Africa 4 3 Australia 4 4 New Zealand 5 Behavior 5 1 Social 5 2 Foraging 6 Threats 7 Conservation status 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksTaxonomy editThe species was first published by Bernard Germain de Lacepede in 1804 The southern right whale dolphins together with the northern right whale dolphins are the only members of the genus Lissodelphis which name is derived from the Greek with lisso meaning smooth and delphis meaning dolphin Recent classifications have placed Lissodelphis within the Delphinidae the oceanic dolphin family of cetaceans 3 The specific epithet peronii commemorates Francois Peron a French naturalist who saw the species near Tasmania during an expedition in 1802 4 Although some doubts remain on the validity of these two species most authors currently retain them as separate species 5 6 Both species in the genus are referred to by the name right whale dolphin a name derived from the right whales Eubalaena which also lack a dorsal fin 7 Other common names for the southern right whale dolphin include whitebellied right whale dolphin southern right whale porpoise mealy mouthed porpoise tunina tonina sin aleta Spanish delfin delphin liso austral Spanish minami semi iruka Japanese dauphin de Peron French yuzhnyi kitovidnyi delfin Russian Sudlicher Glattdelfin German and zuidelijke gladde dolfijn Dutch Description editSouthern right whale dolphins can be easily distinguished from other cetacean species within their range as they are the only dolphins without dorsal fins in the Southern Hemisphere They have streamlined and graceful bodies a single blowhole and a short and defined beak possessing between 39 and 50 teeth per row 5 6 A sharp dividing line separates the black dorsal part from the white ventral part of the body running from the tail stock forward dipping down to the flipper insertion and sweeping back up below the eyes to cross the melon between the blowhole and snout crease 5 8 6 Younger individuals can be grey brownish dorsally but develop adult coloration within the first year 9 5 6 The flippers of the southern right whale dolphins are small recurved predominantly white and located about one quarter of the way back from the snout tip Their flukes are small have a white underside and dark grey upper side with a notch in the middle and concave trailing edges 5 Variability in the size of these black and white areas exists 10 11 More extensive anomalous pigmentation has been observed with records of pure all white individuals 12 13 as well as melanistic all black individuals 14 15 In 1998 a potential hybrid of a southern right whale dolphin and a dusky dolphin Lagenorhynchus obscurus was observed and subsequently described in 2002 This animal showed intermediate morphological features between the two species 8 Newborn calves measure around 86 cm 34 in in length and weigh around 5 kg 11 lb while adults range between 2 18 and 2 5 m 7 ft 2 in and 8 ft 2 in and weight between 60 100 kg 130 220 lb on average 5 14 6 The maximum weight for southern right whale dolphins is 116 kg with maximum lengths reaching 297 cm 117 in in males and 230 cm 91 in in females but few specimens have been examined and it is expected they grow larger 10 On average males tend to grow slightly larger than females Little is known of this species reproductive biology Research suggests that males reach sexual maturity at lengths between 212 220 cm 83 87 in and females between 206 212 cm 81 83 in 5 Population status editThere are no current global abundance and mortality estimates of the species although it is considered a fairly common and abundant species along its range 5 particularly in Chile 16 The very low sighting rate is most likely caused by a lack of sampling effort and due to the difficulties of sighting the animals in their offshore habitat Distribution editSouthern right whale dolphins have a circumpolar distribution across the Southern Hemisphere generally occurring in cool temperate to Sub Antarctic waters between 30 S and 65 S 16 5 14 The precise boundary of their range has not been estimated or closely studied but the southern limit of the species appears to be bounded by the Antarctic Convergence while the northern limit seems bounded by the Tropical Convergence although rare sightings beyond these limits have been recorded 16 Most sightings of the southern right whale dolphins occur in offshore and deep waters with temperatures ranging between 1 and 20 C In regions where deep waters approach the coast and in upwelling areas they have occasionally been observed near shore 17 5 11 South America edit The species is known to be abundant along the western coasts of South America ranging from Cape Horn 55 58 S to Arica 18 28 S with the northernmost record at 12 30 S near Pucusana Peru Although the southern right whale dolphin is considered abundant only few confirmed records of the species in the Eastern South Pacific exist 16 18 Preliminary boat surveys and stranding and fishery records suggest that southern right whale dolphins may be one of the most common species of cetacean in northern Chile The range extends until 170 km 110 mi offshore north of 40 S and 250 km 160 mi off the southern coast of Chile and it has been suggested that at least a part of this Chilean population migrates northbound in the austral winter and spring when the coastal component of the cold Humboldt Current and cool coastal upwelling are strongest 16 5 An extension of the range to the North associated to cold water currents and food availability has also been observed in Brazil where a stranded individual was found in 1995 in an area where the warm Brazil Current meets the cold Malvinas Current 19 In 2018 two groups were sighted in the western area of the Strait of Magellan in Chile It was unclear through which route and why they entered the Magellan Strait but these were the first sightings of live southern right whales dolphins in this shallow area 20 A few reports of solitary stranded specimens in exterior channels south of 40 S and the Beagle Channel have also shown their occurrence inside shallow channel systems 21 22 It has been hypothesized they may enter these channels accidentally or because of poor health 16 In the past a high number of stranded southern right whale dolphins were reported on beaches of north central chile most of which were discarded animals by caught In fishing nets An increase in strandings is possibly due to the developing swordfish gillnet fishery off northern Chile 16 The waters of the Patagonian continental shelf of Argentina harbor a high diversity of cetaceans including southern right whale dolphins They are known to occur in cold waters off Santa Cruz Province the Falkland Islands 23 as well as off Tierra del Fuego 21 Sightings in coastal areas are rare but exist in Mar del Plata 24 and in Golfo Nuevo where three southern right whale dolphins were observed once during the summer of 1992 8 Africa edit In Southern Africa the range is associated with cold currents up the western and southern coasts ranging northwards as far as about 23 S due to the cold counter clockwise Benguela Current The species has been found to occur year round in a localized area on the southwestern coast of Namibia in Luderitz linked to the strong Luderitz upwelling cell area and high productivity waters 11 14 These animals may occasionally extend their range into South African waters although more sampling effort is needed to support this Just one confirmed sighting of the species exists from the South African coast just south of the Orange River Southern right whale dolphins have also been observed in waters around Marion Island 9 11 25 Australia edit The species has been observed in Australian waters since 1802 although only few actual records exist since then 26 They are found off southern continental Australia including sightings south and southwestward of Tasmania in the Great Australian Bight and off south western Australia 27 One pair was sighted on the 20th of October 1910 at 42 51S 153 56E approximately 460 km to the east of Australia in the Tasman Sea 28 No localised areas where the species occurs year round are known from the coast of Australia although more survey effort could result in the identification of these areas similar to the one off the west coast of Namibia 11 7 Few stranded individuals have been documented in Australian waters 10 In December 2019 a dolphin washed up on a beach at Port Fairy Victoria with the deceased animal being assessed by state authorities researchers and local Australian aboriginal elders Another dolphin washed up in January 2020 and was photographed but the dead animal washed back off the beach The dual strandings were described as very unusual by authorities 29 New Zealand edit One of the earliest records of this species in New Zealand waters was during the Terra Nova Expedition when a pair was sighted approximately 145 km west south west of Nugget Point Lighthouse South Island at 47 04 S 171 33 E 28 Southern right whale dolphins have been observed at sea to the southeast of New Zealand 30 31 and are largely found between the Subtropical Convergence and the subantarctic waters to the south of it between surface temperatures of 9 17 C 31 The first recorded photographs of the species globally were from a stranding of three individuals in New Zealand in 1952 which were apparently rescued 32 Since then there have been a number of strandings around the country including seven events between 1970 and 1981 10 and a mass stranding of 75 individuals occurred at the Chatham In 1988 33 More recently a stranding of a single animal occurred at Mahia Beach North Island in April 2020 which was euthanised by the Department of Conservation 34 The northernmost record of a stranding in New Zealand was of a 200 cm long male at Whananaki 35 31 S 174 28 Northland in November 1979 10 Southern right whale dolphins are occasionally observed off the coast of Kaikōura on the eastern coast of South Island typically in groups of 50 200 although larger groups of gt 500 are also encountered 15 In 1967 research showed that the species could also be found off shore from the Chatham Bounty and Antipodes Islands approximately 43 57 S 168 158 E between January and March 31 Behavior editSocial edit nbsp Southern right whale dolphins porpoising One melanistic individual can be observed in this group on the foreground in the middle Southern right whale dolphins are generally gregarious and have been documented in aggregations of more than 1000 individuals 35 although small groups of one to 10 have also been reported 28 31 35 Mean group size estimates differ and range between 52 and 368 off northern Chile 16 7 36 however they typically live in groups of 100 200 individuals 37 Pods of just a few animals have also been observed often associated with other cetacean species Mixed groups with Dusky dolphins Lagenorhynchus obscurus appear common in the southern Atlantic and have occasionally been reported in New Zealand 38 28 off Southwest Africa 11 9 and along the coast of southern Chile 39 They have been observed to intermix freely with pilot whales Globicephala spp 40 and in Chile associations with common dolphins Delphinus delphis have been reported 5 16 Along their range they have also occasionally been sighted with hourglass dolphins Lagenorhynchus cruciger common bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus 40 and fin whales Balaenoptera physalus 11 5 Four basic herd configuration types have been reported and conform to the types described for the northern right whale dolphin 1 Densely packed schools without identifiable subgroups 2 herds of scattered subgroups of various sizes 3 V shaped herds and 4 herds in chorus line formation 9 41 Their movement is very graceful and they often move by leaping out of the water continuously When they swim slowly they expose only a small area of the head and back while surfacing to breath When travelling at higher speeds they have been observed to either 1 swim just below the surface surfacing briefly to breath and then submerge or 2 swim rapidly at the surface performing low angle leaps covering much surface distance Breaching belly flopping side slapping and lob tailing slapping the flukes on the water surface have been witnessed 14 Some groups will avoid boats whereas others approach and possibly bow ride Few direct speed measurements at sea exist but swimming speed has been reported to be 22 km h 14 mph 9 11 Foraging edit Southern right whale dolphins prey on an undetermined range of fish but it has been suggested they prey primarily on mesopelagic fish and squid and may dive to depths in excess of 200 m 660 ft in search of food 10 5 However little is known of their particular habits and it is unknown whether they generally search for their food at these greater depths or near the surface 7 Based on stomach contents epipelagic coastal food habits mesopelagic or a combination of both were suggested for southern right whale dolphins 42 10 43 Geographical variability in prey species has been observed by comparing stomach contents of animals from central Chile and New Zealand 42 16 20 The species itself is presumably occasionally predated upon by larger sharks and killer whales Orcinus orca however other predators might exist In 1983 an intact dolphin measuring 0 86 m 2 ft 10 in was found in the stomach of a 1 7 m 5 ft 7 in Patagonian toothfish Dissostichus eleginoides taken off central Chile and in 1990 a foetus was discovered inside a sleeper shark Somniosus cf pacificus 16 5 Threats editOverall clear evidence of the impact of potential threats on the species are sparse Southern right whale dolphins were taken by whaling operations of the 19th century primarily for their meat 9 In the past they have been infrequently caught off the coasts of Peru and Chile where their meat and blubber were used as food and crab bait 42 5 14 High levels of bycaught animals have been recorded in the swordfish Xiphias gladius driftnet fishery in northern Chile which started in the early 1980s 44 and to a lesser extent the species has also been incidentally caught in driftnets along the coast of Peru 45 Large numbers of southern right whale dolphins are sometimes taken by gillnetting and longline fishing in oceans off the southern coast of Australia 7 Off the west coast of southern Africa no evidence exists of bycatch in gillnet fisheries but there may be competition for forage resources with pelagic trawl fisheries due to the pelagic distribution of the species and their squid based diet 25 The direct and indirect impacts of global climate change on the southern right whale dolphin are largely unknown but could have a cascading effect on the movement and feeding ecology Seismic activity for oil and gas might also be a minor threat 46 47 25 No reported attempts to capture live southern right whale dolphins exist Conservation status editAs of 2018 the Global IUCN Red List classifies the southern right whale dolphin as Least Concern LC due to their apparent wide distribution in pelagic waters of the sub Antarctic and the lack of evidence of severe threats to the populations However the species remains extremely data poor throughout its range so the assessment should be considered provisional until more knowledge is obtained 48 The 2016 Regional Red List of Mammals of South Africa Lesotho and Swaziland also classified the species as Least Concern 25 while in Australia and Chile based on the limited current knowledge on the species southern right whale dolphins are classified as Data Deficient by the Action Plan for Australian Mammals 49 30 and the Chilean Species National List respectively 50 Under the New Zealand Threat Classification System this species is listed locally as Data Deficient 51 Southern right whale dolphins are listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species CITES and the species is subject to International Whaling Commission IWC regulations In South Africa the species is protected by the Marine Living Resources Act No 18 of 1998 25 They are 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 52 and the Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region Pacific Cetaceans MoU 53 Within the Australian Whale Sanctuary all cetaceans including the southern right whale dolphins are protected under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act EPBC Act The Sanctuary includes all Commonwealth waters from the three nautical mile state waters limit out to the boundary of the Australian Exclusive Economic Zone out to 200 nautical miles and further in some places The species is also protected within the Indian Ocean Sanctuary and Southern Ocean Sanctuary 7 Although the species is included in legislation no specific conservation measures have been identified for this species as throughout its range there is still a clear deficiency of data to build these measures upon See also edit nbsp Cetaceans portal nbsp Mammals portal nbsp Marine life portalRight whale dolphin Northern right whale dolphin List of cetaceans Marine biologyReferences edit Braulik G 2018 Lissodelphis peronii IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T12126A50362558 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T12126A50362558 en Retrieved 18 December 2018 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 a b Lissodelphis peronii Lacepede 1804 Integrated Taxonomic Information System Leatherwood S Reeves R R 1983 The Sierra Club handbook of whales and dolphins San Francisco Sierra Club Books a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Jefferson Thomas Newcomer Michael W Leatherwood Stephen Van Waerebeek Koen 1994 Right Whale Dolphins Lissodelphis borealis Peale 1848 and Lissodelphis peronii Lacepede 1804 Academic Press Ltd pp 335 362 ISBN 0 12 588505 9 a b c d e Lipsky Jessica D 2008 Right Whale Dolphins Lissodelphis borealis L Peroni In Perrin W F Wursig B Thewissen J G M eds Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals Academic Press pp 958 962 ISBN 978 0 12 373553 9 Retrieved 25 January 2020 a b c d e f Lissodelphis peronii Species Profile and Threats Database Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts Canberra Retrieved 30 January 2020 a b c Yazdi Parissa 2002 A possible hybrid between the dusky dolphin Lagenorhynchus obscurus and the southern right whale dolphin Lissodelphis peronii Aquatic Mammals 28 211 217 a b c d e f Cruickshank R A Brown S G 1981 Recent observations and some historical records of southern right whale dolphins Lissodelphis peronii Fisheries Bulletin of South Africa 15 109 121 a b c d e f g Baker A N 1981 The Southern Right Whale dolphin Lissodelphis peroni Lacepede in Australasian water 2 ed Wellington National Museum of New Zealand pp 17 34 OCLC 889342917 a b c d e f g h Rose Barrie Payne Andrew I L 1991 Occurrence and behavior of the southern right whale dolphin Lissodelphis peronii off Namibia Marine Mammal Science 7 1 25 34 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1991 tb00547 x Brown S 1973 Recent sight records of southern right whale dolphins in the Pacific Ocean Marine Observer 43 78 80 Watson Lyall 1981 Sea guide to whales of the world London Hutchinson p 302 ISBN 9780091466008 OCLC 8448534 a b c d e f Newcomer Michael W Jefferson Thomas A Brownell Robert L 27 December 1996 Lissodelphis peronii Mammalian Species 531 1 5 doi 10 2307 3504326 ISSN 0076 3519 JSTOR 3504326 a b Visser Ingrid Fertl Dagmar Pusser L 2004 Melanistic southern right whale dolphins Lissodelphins peronii off Kaikoura New Zealand with records of other anomalously all black cetaceans New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 38 5 833 836 doi 10 1080 00288330 2004 9517282 S2CID 86208502 a b c d e f g h i j k Van Waerebeek K Canto J Gonzalez J Oporto J Brito J L 1991 Southern Right whale dolphins Lissodelphis peronii off the Pacific coast of South America Mammalian Biology Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 56 284 295 Aguayo L A 1975 Progress report on small cetacean research in Chile J Fish Res Board Can 32 7 1123 1143 doi 10 1139 f75 134 Aguayo Lobo A Torres Navarro D Acevedo Ramirez J 1998 Los Mamiferos Marinos de Chile 1 Cetacea Marine Mammals of Chile 1 Cetacea Serie Cientifica Instituto Antartico Chileno 48 19 159 ISSN 0073 9871 Martuscelli P Olmos F Silva e Silva R Mazzarella I P Pino F V Raduan E N 1996 Cetaceans of Sao Paulo Southeastern Brazil Mammalia 60 1 125 139 doi 10 1515 mamm 1996 60 1 125 S2CID 85375719 a b Pinto Torres Marco Acevedo Jorge Mora Carla Iglesias Eva Bravo Gomez Daniel Martinez Francisco 2019 Sighting of southern right whale dolphin Lissodelphis peronii in the Magellan Strait Chile Polar Biology 42 3 633 638 doi 10 1007 s00300 018 02446 4 S2CID 57240844 Retrieved 25 January 2020 a b Goodall Rae 1978 Report on the small cetaceans stranded on the coasts of Tierra del Fuego Sci Rep Whales Res Inst 30 197 230 Gibbons J Gazitua F Venegas C 2000 Cetacean in the Strait of Magellan and Otway skyring and almirantazgo sounds An Inst de la Patagonia Punta Arenas 28 107 118 Lesson R P 1826 Indication de quelques Cetaces nouveaux observes dans le Voyage atour du monde de la Corvette La Coquille Bulletin des Sciences Naturelles et de Geologie 7 373 374 Gallardo A 1912 El delfin Lagenorhynchus Fitzroyi Waterhouse Flower capturado en Mar del Plata Anales Museo Nacional Historia Natural Buenos Aires 23 391 397 a b c d e Plon Stephanie Preston Whyte Fiona Relton Claire 2016 A conservation assessment of Lissodelphis peronii In Child MF Roxburgh L Do Linh San E Raimondo D Davies Mostert HT editors The Red List of Mammals of South Africa Swaziland and Lesotho South African National Biodiversity Institute and Endangered Wildlife Trust South Africa The Red List of Mammals of South Africa Lesotho and Swaziland South Africa South African National Biodiversity Institute and Endangered Wildlife Trust Clarke Rohan H 2000 First record of the southern right whale dolphin Lissodelphis Peronii Lacepede 1804 Odonoceti Delphinidae from waters off South Australia Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 124 2 177 178 Bannister J L Kemper C M Warneke R M 1996 The Action Plan for Australian Cetaceans Canberra Australian Nature Conservation Agency ISBN 0642213887 a b c d Lillie D G 1915 Cetacea British Antarctic Terra Nova Expedition 1910 Zoology British Museum Natural History 1 3 85 124 Johnson Sian 14 January 2020 Southern right whale dolphins wash up on Port Fairy s East Beach in south west Victoria ABC South West Vic Retrieved 25 January 2020 a b Ross Graham J B 2006 Review of the conservation status of Australia s smaller whales and dolphins Report Australian Government Department of the Environment and Heritage a b c d Gaskin D E 1968 Distribution of Delphinidae Cetacea in relation to sea surface temperatures off Eastern and Southern New Zealand New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 2 3 527 534 doi 10 1080 00288330 1968 9515253 Fraser F C 1955 The southern right whale dolphin Lissodelphis peronii Lacepede external characteristics and distribution Bull Br Mus Nat Hist Zool 2 11 339 346 doi 10 5962 p 314151 Baker A N 1990 Whales and dolphins of New Zealand and Australia an identification guide Wellington New Zealand Victoria University Press O Connor M Mahia stranding quite remarkable The Gisborne Herald Retrieved 18 May 2020 a b Gaskin D E 1972 Whales dolphins and seals with special reference of the New Zealand region London Heinemann Educational Books Ltd pp 118 122 Stanley E Podzikowski L Lissodelphis peronii On line Animal Diversity Web Retrieved 29 January 2020 Shirihai H Jarrett B 2006 Whales dolphins and seals a field guide to the marine mammals of the world London Bloomsbury Publishing pp 225 227 ISBN 9780713670370 Yin Suzanne E 1999 Movement patterns behaviors and whistle sounds of dolphin groups off Kaikoura New Zealand MS thesis Texas A amp M University hdl 1969 1 ETD TAMU 1999 THESIS Y46 Van Waerebeek K C C 1992 Population identity and general biology of the dusky dolphin Lagenorhynchus obscurus Gray 1828 in the Southeast Pacific Thesis University of Amsterdam PhD Thesis Institute for Taxonomic Zoology a b Southern Right Whale Dolphins at Tristan Tristan da Cunha Whale News Archived from the original on 18 May 2020 Retrieved 22 May 2020 Leatherwood S Walker W A 1979 The Northern Right Whale Dolphin Lissodelphis borealis Peale in the Eastern North Pacific In Winn H E Olla B L eds Behavior of Marine Animals Volume 3 Cetaceans New York Plenum Press p 438 ISBN 978 1 4684 2985 5 a b c Torres Daniel N Aguayo Anelio L 1979 Habitos alimentarios de Lissodelphis peronii Lacepede 1804 en Chile Central Cetacea Delphinidae PDF Rev Biol Mar Dep Oceanol Univ Chile 16 3 221 224 Crovetto A Lamilla J Pequeno G 1992 Lissodelphis peronii Lacepede 1804 Delphinidae Cetacea within the stomach contents of a sleeping shark Somniosus cf pacificus Bigelow and Schroeder 1944 in Chilean waters Marine Mammal Science 8 3 312 314 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1992 tb00415 x Reyes J C Oporto J A 1994 Gillnet fisheries and cetaceans in the southeast Pacific Reports of the International Whaling Commission 15 467 474 Jefferson Thomas A Leatherwood Stephen Webber Marc A 1993 Marine mammals of the world Rome Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations ISBN 92 5 103292 0 OCLC 30643250 Learmonth J A Macleod C D Santos Vazquez M B Pierce G J Crick H Q P Robinson R A 2006 Potential effects of climate change on marine mammals Oceanography and Marine Biology An Annual Review 44 431 464 ISBN 9781420006391 Kaschner Kristin Tittensor Derek P Ready Jonathan Gerrodette Tim Worm Boris 2011 Current and future patterns of global marine mammal biodiversity PLOS ONE 6 5 e19653 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 619653K doi 10 1371 journal pone 0019653 PMC 3100303 PMID 21625431 Braulik Gill 2018 Lissodelphis peronii Southern Right Whale Dolphin The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T12126A50362558 en a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Woinarski John C Z Burbidge Andrew A Harrison Peter L 2014 The Action Plan for Australian Mammals 2012 CSIRO Publishing p 811 ISBN 9780643108745 Regulamento de Clasificacion de Especies RCE PDF 2017 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Baker C S Boren L Childerhouse R Constantine R Van Helden A Lundquist D Rayment W Rolfe J R 2019 Conservation status of New Zealand marine mammals 2019 PDF Retrieved 22 May 2020 Memorandum of Understanding Concerning the Conservation of the Manatee and Small Cetaceans of Western Africa and Macaronesia PDF Retrieved 25 January 2020 Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region PDF Retrieved 25 January 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lissodelphis peronii Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern right whale dolphin amp oldid 1214096107, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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