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Narwhal

The narwhal (Monodon monoceros), also known as a narwhale, is a medium-sized toothed whale that lives year-round in Arctic waters around Greenland, Canada and Russia. It is one of two living species of whale in the family Monodontidae, along with the beluga whale, and the only species in the genus Monodon. The narwhal males are distinguished by a long, straight, helical tusk, which in actuality is an oversized canine tooth. On the other hand, females rarely possess this feature; an example of sexual dimorphism. The narwhal was one of many species described by Carl Linnaeus in his publication Systema Naturae in 1758.

Narwhal[1]
Temporal range: Quaternary-recent[2][3]
Size compared to an average human
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[5]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Monodontidae
Genus: Monodon
Linnaeus, 1758
Species:
M. monoceros
Binomial name
Monodon monoceros
The frequent (solid) and rare (striped) occurrence of narwhal populations

Like the beluga, narwhals are medium-sized whales. For both sexes, excluding the male's tusk, the total body size can range from 3.95 to 5.5 m (13 to 18 ft); the males are slightly larger than the females. The average weight of an adult narwhal is 800 to 1,600 kg (1,800 to 3,500 lb). At around 11 to 13 years old, the males become sexually mature; females become sexually mature at about 5 to 8 years old. Narwhals do not have a dorsal fin and their neck vertebrae are jointed like those of most other mammals, not fused as in dolphins and most whales.

Found primarily in Canadian Arctic and Greenlandic and Russian waters, the narwhal is a uniquely specialised Arctic predator. In winter, it feeds on demersal prey, mostly flatfish, under dense pack ice. During the summer, narwhals eat mostly Arctic cod and Greenland halibut, with other fish such as polar cod making up the remainder of their diet.[6] Each year, they migrate from bays into the ocean as summer comes. In the winter, the male narwhals occasionally dive up to 1,500 m (4,920 ft) in depth, with dives lasting up to 25 minutes. Narwhals, like most toothed whales, communicate with "clicks", "whistles" and "knocks".

Narwhals can live up to 50 years[inconsistent] and often die by suffocation after being trapped due to the formation of sea ice. Other causes of death, specifically among young whales, are starvation and predation by orcas. As previous estimates of the world narwhal population were below 50,000, narwhals are categorised by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as "nearly threatened". More recent estimates list higher populations (upwards of 170,000), thus lowering the status to "least concern".[4] Narwhals have been harvested for hundreds of years by Inuit in northern Canada and Greenland for meat and ivory and a regulated subsistence hunt continues.

Taxonomy and etymology

 
Illustration of a narwhal (lower image) and a beluga (upper image), its closest related species

The narwhal was one of many species originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae.[7] Its name is derived from the Old Norse word nár, meaning "corpse", in reference to the animal's greyish, mottled pigmentation, like that of a drowned sailor[8] and its summertime habit of lying still at or near the surface of the sea (called "logging").[9] The scientific name, Monodon monoceros, is derived from Greek: "one-tooth one-horn".[8]

The narwhal is most closely related to the beluga whale. Together, these two species comprise the only extant members of the family Monodontidae, sometimes referred to as the "white whales". The Monodontidae are distinguished by their medium size (at around 4 m (13.1 ft) in length), pronounced melons (acoustic sensory organ), short snouts and the absence of a true dorsal fin.[10]

Although the narwhal and the beluga are classified as separate genera, with one species each, there is some evidence that they may, very rarely, interbreed. The complete skull of an anomalous whale was discovered in West Greenland c. 1990. It was described by marine zoologists as unlike any known species, but with features midway between a narwhal and a beluga, consistent with the hypothesis that the anomalous whale was a narwhal-beluga hybrid;[11] in 2019, this was confirmed by DNA and isotopic analysis.[12]

The white whales, dolphins (Delphinidae) and porpoises (Phocoenidae) together comprise the superfamily Delphinoidea, which are of likely monophyletic origin. Genetic evidence suggests the porpoises are more closely related to the white whales and that these two families constitute a separate clade which diverged from the rest of Delphinoidea within the past 11 million years.[13] Fossil evidence shows that ancient white whales lived in tropical waters. They may have migrated to Arctic and sub-Arctic waters in response to changes in the marine food chain during the Pliocene.[14]

Description

 
Complete skeleton at the Zoological Museum of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Narwhals are medium-sized whales and are around the same size as beluga whales. Total length in both sexes, excluding the tusk of the male, can range from 3.95 to 5.5 m (13 to 18 ft).[15] Males, at an average length of 4.1 m (13.5 ft), are slightly larger than females, with an average length of 3.5 m (11.5 ft). Typical adult body weight ranges from 800 to 1,600 kg (1,760 to 3,530 lb).[15] Male narwhals attain sexual maturity at 11 to 13 years of age, when they are about 3.9 m (12.8 ft) long. Females become sexually mature at a younger age, between 5 and 8 years old, when they are around 3.4 m (11.2 ft) long.[15]

The pigmentation of narwhals is a mottled pattern, with blackish-brown markings over a white background. They are darkest when born and become whiter with age; white patches develop on the navel and genital slit at sexual maturity. Old males may be almost pure white.[8][15][16] Narwhals do not have a dorsal fin; they instead possess a shallower dorsal ridge. This is possibly an evolutionary adaptation to make swimming under ice easier, to facilitate rolling, or to reduce surface area and heat loss.[17] Their neck vertebrae are jointed, like those of land mammals, instead of being fused together as in most whales, allowing a great range of neck flexibility. Both these characteristics are shared by the closely related beluga whale.[9] The tail flukes of female narwhals have front edges that are swept back and those of males have front edges that are more concave and lack a sweep-back. This is thought to be an adaptation for reducing drag caused by the tusk.[18]

Tusk

 
This narwhal skull has rare double tusks. Usually, the canine tooth only on the left side of the upper jaw becomes a tusk. Rarely, males develop two tusks. This specimen, however, was of a female (Zoologisches Museum, Hamburg; collected in 1684)

The most conspicuous characteristic of the male narwhal is a single long tusk, which is in fact a canine tooth[19][20] that projects from the left side of the upper jaw, through the lip and forms a left-handed helical spiral. The tusk grows throughout life, reaching a length of about 1.5 to 3.1 m (4.9 to 10.2 ft). It is hollow and weighs around 10 kg (22 lb). About one in 500 males has two tusks, occurring when the right canine also grows out through the lip. Only about 15 per cent of females grow a tusk,[21] which typically is smaller than a male tusk, with a less noticeable spiral.[22][23][24]

Scientists have long speculated on the biological function of the tusk. Proposed functions include use of the tusk as a weapon, for opening breathing holes in sea ice, in foraging, as an acoustic organ and as a secondary sex character. The leading theory has long been that the narwhal tusk serves as a secondary sex character of males, for nonviolent assessment of hierarchical status on the basis of relative tusk size.[25] However, detailed analysis reveals that the tusk is a highly innervated sensory organ with millions of nerve endings connecting seawater stimuli in the external ocean environment with the brain.[26][27][28][29] The rubbing of tusks together by male narwhals is thought to be a method of communicating information about characteristics of the water each has travelled through, rather than the previously assumed posturing display of aggressive male-to-male rivalry.[28] In August 2016, drone videos of narwhals surface-feeding in Tremblay Sound, Nunavut showed that the tusk was used to tap and stun small Arctic cod, making them easier to catch for feeding.[30][31] The tusk cannot serve a critical function for the animal's survival, as females—which generally do not have tusks—typically live longer than males. Therefore, the general scientific consensus is that the narwhal tusk is a sexual trait, much like the antlers of a stag, the mane of a lion, or the feathers of a peacock.[32]

Vestigial teeth

The tusks are surrounded posteriorly, ventrally and laterally by several small vestigial teeth which vary in morphology and histology.[19] These teeth can sometimes be extruded from the bone, but mainly reside inside open tooth sockets in the narwhal's snout alongside the tusks.[19][33] The varied morphology and anatomy of small teeth indicate a path of evolutionary obsolescence,[19] leaving the narwhal's mouth toothless.[33]

Genome

A 2.3 GB genome sequence has been assembled from multiple Illumina libraries. The genome consists of 37.9% repetitive elements and encodes 21,785 protein-coding genes (similar to many other mammals). The genome will help to place the narwhal both into the evolutionary context of other whales but also will help to understand the evolution and embryonic development of features such as the tusk and its sexual dimorphism.[34]

Distribution

 
Narwhals in the Creswell Bay at Somerset Island

The narwhal is found predominantly in the Atlantic and Russian areas of the Arctic Ocean. Individuals are commonly recorded in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago,[30] such as in the northern part of Hudson Bay, Hudson Strait, Baffin Bay; off the east coast of Greenland; and in a strip running east from the northern end of Greenland round to eastern Russia (170° East). Land in this strip includes Svalbard, Franz Joseph Land and Severnaya Zemlya.[8] The northernmost sightings of narwhal have occurred north of Franz Joseph Land, at about 85° North latitude.[8]

Behaviour

Social

Narwhals normally congregate in groups of about five to ten and sometimes up to 20 individuals outside the summer. Groups may be "nurseries" with only females and young, or can contain only post-dispersal juveniles or adult males ("bulls"), but mixed groups can occur at any time of year.[15] In the summer, several groups come together, forming larger aggregations which can contain from 500 to over 1,000 individuals.[15]

At times, a bull narwhal may rub its tusk with another bull, a display known as "tusking"[27][35] and thought to maintain social dominance hierarchies.[35] However, this behaviour may exhibit tusk use as a sensory and communication organ for sharing information about water chemistry sensed in tusk microchannels.[26][27]

Migration

Narwhals exhibit seasonal migrations, with a high fidelity of return to preferred, ice-free summering grounds, usually in shallow waters. In summer months, they move closer to coasts, often in pods of 10–100. In the winter, they move to offshore, deeper waters under thick pack ice, surfacing in narrow fissures in the sea ice, or leads.[36] As spring comes, these leads open up into channels and the narwhals return to the coastal bays.[37] Narwhals from Canada and West Greenland winter regularly in the pack ice of Davis Strait and Baffin Bay along the continental slope with less than 5% open water and high densities of Greenland halibut.[38] Feeding in the winter accounts for a much larger portion of narwhal energy intake than in the summer.[38][36]

Diet

Narwhals have a relatively restricted and specialized diet. Their prey is predominantly composed of Greenland halibut, polar and Arctic cod, cuttlefish, shrimp and armhook squid. Additional items found in stomachs have included wolffish, capelin, skate eggs and sometimes rocks, accidentally ingested when whales feed near the bottom.[15][38][36][35] Due to the lack of well-developed dentition in the mouth, narwhals are believed to feed by swimming towards prey until it is within close range and then sucking it with considerable force into the mouth. It is thought that the beaked whales, which have similarly reduced dentition, also suck up their prey.[39] The distinctive tusk is used to tap and stun small prey, facilitating a catch.[30][31]

Narwhals have a very intense summer feeding society. One study tested 73 narwhals of different ages and genders to see what they ate. The individuals were from the Pond Inlet and had their stomach contents tested from June 1978 until September 1979. The study found in 1978 that the Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) made up about 51% of the diet of the narwhals, with the next most common animal being the Greenland halibut (Reinhardtius hippoglossoides), consisting of 37% of the weight of their diet. A year later, the percentages of both animals in the diet of narwhals had changed. Arctic cod represented 57% and Greenland halibut 29% in 1979. The deep-water fish – halibut, redfish (Sebastes marinus) and polar cod (Arctogadus glacialis) – were found primarily in the diet of the males, which means that the narwhals can dive deeper than 500 m (1,640 ft) below sea level. The study found that the dietary needs of the narwhal did not differ among genders or ages.[40]

Diving

Upside-down swimming behaviour of narwhals
 
Narwhal tail fluke

When in their wintering waters, narwhals make some of the deepest dives recorded for a marine mammal, diving to at least 800 m (2,620 ft) over 15 times per day, with many dives reaching 1,500 m (4,920 ft). Dives to these depths last around 25 minutes, including the time spent at the bottom and the transit down and back from the surface.[41] Dive times can also vary in time and depth, based on local variation between environments, as well as seasonality. For example, in the Baffin Bay wintering grounds, narwhals farther south appear to be spending most of their time diving to deeper depths along the steep slopes of Baffin Bay, suggesting differences in habitat structure, prey availability, or innate adaptations between subpopulations. Curiously, whales in the deeper northern wintering ground have access to deeper depths, yet make shallower dives. Because vertical distribution of narwhal prey in the water column influences feeding behaviour and dive tactics, regional differences in the spatial and temporal patterns of prey density, as well as differences in prey assemblage, may be shaping winter foraging behaviour of narwhals.[41]

Communication

As in most toothed whales, narwhals use sound to navigate and hunt for food. Narwhals primarily vocalise through "clicks", "whistles" and "knocks", created by air movement between chambers near the blow-hole. These sounds are reflected off the sloping front of the skull and focused by the animal's melon, which can be controlled through surrounding musculature. Echolocation clicks are primarily produced for prey detection and for locating obstacles at short distances. It is possible that individual "bangs" are capable of disorienting or incapacitating prey, making them easier to hunt, but this has not been verified. They also emit tonal signals, such as whistles and pulsed calls, that are believed to have a communication function.[42] Calls recorded from the same pod are more similar than calls from different pods, suggesting the possibility of group or individual-specific calls in narwhals. Narwhals may also adjust the duration and the pitch of their pulsed calls to maximise sound propagation in varying acoustic environments.[43] Other sounds produced by narwhals include trumpeting and squeaking door sounds.[9] The narwhal vocal repertoire is similar to that of the closely related beluga, with comparable whistle frequency ranges, whistle duration and repetition rates of pulse calls, however beluga whistles may have a higher frequency range and more diversified whistle contours.[42]

Breeding and early life

Females start bearing calves when six to eight years old.[9] Adult narwhals mate in April or May when they are in the offshore pack ice. Gestation lasts for 14 months and calves are born between June and August the following year. As with most marine mammals, only a single young is born, averaging 1.6 m (5.2 ft) in length and white or light grey in colour.[9][44] During summer population counts along different coastal inlets of Baffin Island, calf numbers varied from 0.05% to 5% of the total numbering from 10,000 to 35,000 narwhals, indicating that higher calf counts may reflect calving and nursery habitats in favourable inlets.[44]

Newborn calves begin their lives with a thin layer of blubber which thicken as they nurse their mother's milk which is rich in fat. Calves are dependent on milk for around 20 months.[9] This long lactation period gives calves time to learn skills needed for survival during maturation when they stay within two body lengths of the mother.[9][44]

Hybrids have been documented between the narwhal and beluga (specifically a beluga male and a narwhal female), as one, perhaps even as many as three, were killed and harvested during a sustenance hunt. Whether or not these hybrids could breed remains unknown. The unusual dentition seen in the single remaining skull indicates the hybrid hunted on the seabed, much as walruses do, indicating feeding habits different from those of either parent species.[45][46]

Lifespan and mortality

 
A polar bear scavenging a narwhal carcass

Narwhals can live an average of 50 years, however research using aspartic acid racemization from the lens of the eyes suggests that narwhals can live to be as old as 115 ± 10 years and 84 ± 9 years for females and males, respectively.[47] Mortality often occurs when the narwhals suffocate after they fail to leave before the surface of the Arctic waters freeze over in the late autumn.[15][48] As narwhals breathe air, they drown if open water is no longer accessible and the ice is too thick for them to break through. Maximum aerobic swimming distance between breathing holes in ice is less than 1,450 m (4,760 ft) which limits the use of foraging grounds and these holes must be at least 0.5 m (1.6 ft) wide to allow an adult whale to breathe.[49] The last major entrapment events occurred when there was little to no wind. Entrapment can affect as many as 600 individuals, most occurring in narwhal wintering areas such as Disko Bay. In the largest entrapment in 1915 in West Greenland, over 1,000 narwhals were trapped under the ice.[50]

Despite the decreases in sea ice cover, there were several large cases of sea ice entrapment in 2008–2010 in the winter close to known summering grounds, two of which were locations where there had been no previous cases documented.[48] This suggests later departure dates from summering grounds. Sites surrounding Greenland experience advection (moving) of sea ice from surrounding regions by wind and currents, increasing the variability of sea ice concentration. Due to strong site fidelity, changes in weather and ice conditions are not always associated with narwhal movement toward open water. More information is needed to determine the vulnerability of narwhals to sea ice changes. Narwhals can also die of starvation.[15]

Predation and hunting

Major predators are polar bears, which typically wait at breathing holes for young narwhals, and Greenland sharks.[15][51] Killer whales group together to overwhelm narwhal pods in the shallow water of enclosed bays,[52] in one case killing dozens of narwhals in a single attack.[53] To escape predators such as orcas, narwhals may use prolonged submergence to hide under ice floes rather than relying on speed.[49]

 
Beluga and narwhal catches

Humans hunt narwhals; narwhal products traded commercially include the skin, carved vertebrae, teeth and tusk, and the meat. About 1,000 narwhals per year are killed, 600 in Canada and 400 in Greenland. Canadian harvests were steady at this level in the 1970s, dropped to 300–400 per year in the late 1980s and 1990s and rose again since 1999. Greenland harvested more, 700–900 per year, in the 1980s and 1990s.[54]

Tusks are sold with or without being carved in Canada[55][56] and Greenland.[57] An average of one or two vertebrae and one or two teeth per narwhal are carved and sold.[55] In Greenland the skin (muktuk) is sold commercially to fish factories,[57] and in Canada to other communities.[55] One estimate of the annual gross value received from narwhal hunts in Hudson Bay in 2013 was CA$530,000 for 81 narwhals, or CA$6,500 per narwhal. However the net income, after subtracting costs in time and equipment, was a loss of CA$7 per person. Hunts receive subsidies, but they continue mainly to support tradition, rather than for the money and the economic analysis noted that whale watching may be an alternate source of revenue. Of the gross income, CA$370,000 was for skin and meat; to replace beef, pork and chicken which would otherwise be imported, CA$150,000 was received for tusks and carved vertebrae and teeth of males and CA$10,000 was received for carved vertebrae and teeth of females.[55]

Conservation issues

Narwhals are one of the many species of mammals that are threatened by human actions.[58] Estimates of the world population of narwhals range from around 50,000 (from 1996)[37] to around 170,000 (compilation of various sub-population estimates from the years 2000–2017).[4] They are considered to be near threatened[inconsistent] and several sub-populations have evidence of decline. In an effort to support conservation, the European Union established an import ban on tusks in 2004 and lifted it in 2010. The United States has forbidden imports since 1972 under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.[58] Narwhals are difficult to keep in captivity.[27]

 
Male narwhal captured and satellite tagged

Inuit are able to hunt this whale species legally, as discussed above. Narwhals have been extensively hunted the same way as other sea mammals, such as seals and whales, for their large quantities of fat. Almost all parts of the narwhal; the meat, skin, blubber and organs are consumed. Muktuk, the name for raw skin and attached blubber, is considered a delicacy. One or two vertebrae per animal are used for tools and art.[55][8] The skin is an important source of vitamin C which is otherwise difficult to obtain in the Arctic Circle. In some places in Greenland, such as Qaanaaq, traditional hunting methods are used and whales are harpooned from handmade kayaks. In other parts of Greenland and Northern Canada, high-speed boats and hunting rifles are used.[8]

During growth, the narwhal accumulates metals in its internal organs. One study found that various metals are lightly concentrated in the blubber and densely concentrated in the liver and the kidneys. Zinc and cadmium are found in higher concentration in the kidney compared to the liver; the inverse is true for lead, copper and mercury. Certain metals were correlated with size and sex. During growth, it was found that mercury accumulated in the liver, kidney, musculature, and blubber, and cadmium also settled in the blubber.[59]

Narwhals are one of the most vulnerable Arctic marine mammals to climate change[37][60] due to altering sea ice coverage in their environment, especially in their northern wintering grounds such as the Baffin Bay and Davis Strait regions. Satellite data collected from these areas shows the amount of sea ice has been markedly reduced.[61] Narwhals' ranges for foraging are believed to be patterns developed early in their life which increase their ability to gain necessary food resources during winter. This strategy focuses on strong site fidelity rather than individual level responses to local prey distribution and this results in focal foraging areas during the winter. As such, despite changing conditions, narwhals will continue returning to the same areas during migration.[61] Despite its vulnerability to sea ice change, the narwhal has some flexibility when it comes to sea ice and habitat selection. It evolved in the late Pliocene and so is moderately accustomed to periods of glaciation and environmental variability.[62]

An indirect danger for narwhals associated with changes in sea ice is the increased exposure in open water. In 2002 there was an increase in narwhal catches by hunters in Siorapaluk that did not appear to be associated with increased effort,[63] implying that climate change may be making the narwhal more vulnerable to harvesting. Scientists urge assessment of population numbers with the assignment of sustainable quotas for stocks and the collaboration of management agreements to ensure local acceptance. Seismic surveys associated with oil exploration have also disrupted normal migration patterns which may also be associated with increased sea ice entrapment.[64]

Cultural depictions

In legend

 
The head of an Inuit lance made from a narwhal tusk with a meteorite-iron point (British Museum)

In Inuit legend, the narwhal's tusk was created when a woman with harpoon rope tied around her waist was dragged into the ocean after the harpoon had stuck into a large narwhal. She was then transformed into a narwhal; her hair, which she was wearing in a twisted knot, became the spiraling narwhal tusk.[65]

Some medieval Europeans believed narwhal tusks to be the horns from the legendary unicorn.[66][67] As these horns were considered to have magic powers, such as neutralising poisons and curing melancholia, Vikings and other northern traders were able to sell them for many times their weight in gold.[68] The tusks were used to make cups that were thought to negate any poison that may have been slipped into the drink. A narwhal tusk exhibited at Warwick Castle is according to legend the rib of the mythical Dun Cow.[69] In 1555, Olaus Magnus published a drawing of a fish-like creature with a horn on its forehead, correctly identifying it as a "Narwal".[66] During the 16th century, Queen Elizabeth I received a narwhal tusk that was said to be worth 10,000 pounds sterling[70]—the 16th-century equivalent cost of a castle (approximately £2.4–4.0 million in 2023, using the retail price index[68])–from Martin Frobisher, who proposed that the tusk was from a "sea-unicorne". The tusks were staples of the cabinet of curiosities.[66]

In literature and art

 
Image of narwhal from Brehms Tierleben (1864–1869)

The narwhal was one of two possible explanations offered by Professor Pierre Aronnax in regards to the naval phenomena damaging ships in Jules Verne's 1870 novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea; Aronnax comes to this conclusion by presuming that "we do know all the living species"; he was unwilling to speculate wildly to the American press. Verne writes: "The common narwhal or sea unicorn often attains a length of 18.3 m (60 ft)." For the narwhal to have caused the damage to the various vessels, Aronnax stated that its size and strength would have to increase by five or ten times;

"The narwhal is armed with a kind of ivory sword, or halberd, as some naturalists call it...Some of these tusks have been found embedded in the bodies of whales, which the narwhal always attacks with success; others have been extracted, not without difficulty, from the bottoms of ships that they had pierced right through, as a gimlet pierces a barrel...Now, suppose the weapon to be ten times stronger, and the animal ten times more powerful; launch it at a speed of 20 miles (32 km) an hour, multiply its mass by the square of its speed, and you will obtain an impact capable of producing the damage in question."

[71]

Herman Melville wrote a section on the narwhal (written as "narwhale") in his 1851 novel Moby-Dick, in which he claims a narwhal tusk hung for "a long period" in Windsor Castle after Sir Martin Frobisher had given it to Queen Elizabeth. Another claim he made was that the Danish kings made their thrones from narwhal tusks.[72]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Ford, John; Ford, Deborah (March 1986). "Narwhal: Unicorn of the Arctic Seas". National Geographic. Vol. 169, no. 3. pp. 354–363. ISSN 0027-9358. OCLC 643483454.
  • M. P. Heide-Jorgensen. "Narwhal", in Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals, Perrin, Wursig and Thewissen eds. ISBN 0-12-551340-2
  • Groc, Isabelle. "Hunt for the sea unicorn", New Scientist feature article, Issue 2956, 15 February 2014 [1]

External links

  • Flower, W.H. (1911). "Narwhal" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). p. 243.
  • Biology and ecology of narwhals, NOAA
  • Narwhal Discoveries
  • Voices in the Sea – Sounds of the Narwhal 9 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine

narwhal, other, uses, disambiguation, narwhal, monodon, monoceros, also, known, narwhale, medium, sized, toothed, whale, that, lives, year, round, arctic, waters, around, greenland, canada, russia, living, species, whale, family, monodontidae, along, with, bel. For other uses see Narwhal disambiguation The narwhal Monodon monoceros also known as a narwhale is a medium sized toothed whale that lives year round in Arctic waters around Greenland Canada and Russia It is one of two living species of whale in the family Monodontidae along with the beluga whale and the only species in the genus Monodon The narwhal males are distinguished by a long straight helical tusk which in actuality is an oversized canine tooth On the other hand females rarely possess this feature an example of sexual dimorphism The narwhal was one of many species described by Carl Linnaeus in his publication Systema Naturae in 1758 Narwhal 1 Temporal range Quaternary recent 2 3 Size compared to an average humanConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 4 CITES Appendix II CITES 5 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaInfraorder CetaceaFamily MonodontidaeGenus MonodonLinnaeus 1758Species M monocerosBinomial nameMonodon monocerosLinnaeus 1758The frequent solid and rare striped occurrence of narwhal populationsLike the beluga narwhals are medium sized whales For both sexes excluding the male s tusk the total body size can range from 3 95 to 5 5 m 13 to 18 ft the males are slightly larger than the females The average weight of an adult narwhal is 800 to 1 600 kg 1 800 to 3 500 lb At around 11 to 13 years old the males become sexually mature females become sexually mature at about 5 to 8 years old Narwhals do not have a dorsal fin and their neck vertebrae are jointed like those of most other mammals not fused as in dolphins and most whales Found primarily in Canadian Arctic and Greenlandic and Russian waters the narwhal is a uniquely specialised Arctic predator In winter it feeds on demersal prey mostly flatfish under dense pack ice During the summer narwhals eat mostly Arctic cod and Greenland halibut with other fish such as polar cod making up the remainder of their diet 6 Each year they migrate from bays into the ocean as summer comes In the winter the male narwhals occasionally dive up to 1 500 m 4 920 ft in depth with dives lasting up to 25 minutes Narwhals like most toothed whales communicate with clicks whistles and knocks Narwhals can live up to 50 years inconsistent and often die by suffocation after being trapped due to the formation of sea ice Other causes of death specifically among young whales are starvation and predation by orcas As previous estimates of the world narwhal population were below 50 000 narwhals are categorised by the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN as nearly threatened More recent estimates list higher populations upwards of 170 000 thus lowering the status to least concern 4 Narwhals have been harvested for hundreds of years by Inuit in northern Canada and Greenland for meat and ivory and a regulated subsistence hunt continues Contents 1 Taxonomy and etymology 2 Description 2 1 Tusk 2 2 Vestigial teeth 3 Genome 4 Distribution 5 Behaviour 5 1 Social 5 2 Migration 5 3 Diet 5 4 Diving 5 5 Communication 5 6 Breeding and early life 5 7 Lifespan and mortality 5 8 Predation and hunting 6 Conservation issues 7 Cultural depictions 7 1 In legend 7 2 In literature and art 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksTaxonomy and etymology nbsp Illustration of a narwhal lower image and a beluga upper image its closest related speciesThe narwhal was one of many species originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae 7 Its name is derived from the Old Norse word nar meaning corpse in reference to the animal s greyish mottled pigmentation like that of a drowned sailor 8 and its summertime habit of lying still at or near the surface of the sea called logging 9 The scientific name Monodon monoceros is derived from Greek one tooth one horn 8 The narwhal is most closely related to the beluga whale Together these two species comprise the only extant members of the family Monodontidae sometimes referred to as the white whales The Monodontidae are distinguished by their medium size at around 4 m 13 1 ft in length pronounced melons acoustic sensory organ short snouts and the absence of a true dorsal fin 10 Although the narwhal and the beluga are classified as separate genera with one species each there is some evidence that they may very rarely interbreed The complete skull of an anomalous whale was discovered in West Greenland c 1990 It was described by marine zoologists as unlike any known species but with features midway between a narwhal and a beluga consistent with the hypothesis that the anomalous whale was a narwhal beluga hybrid 11 in 2019 this was confirmed by DNA and isotopic analysis 12 The white whales dolphins Delphinidae and porpoises Phocoenidae together comprise the superfamily Delphinoidea which are of likely monophyletic origin Genetic evidence suggests the porpoises are more closely related to the white whales and that these two families constitute a separate clade which diverged from the rest of Delphinoidea within the past 11 million years 13 Fossil evidence shows that ancient white whales lived in tropical waters They may have migrated to Arctic and sub Arctic waters in response to changes in the marine food chain during the Pliocene 14 Description nbsp Complete skeleton at the Zoological Museum of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of SciencesNarwhals are medium sized whales and are around the same size as beluga whales Total length in both sexes excluding the tusk of the male can range from 3 95 to 5 5 m 13 to 18 ft 15 Males at an average length of 4 1 m 13 5 ft are slightly larger than females with an average length of 3 5 m 11 5 ft Typical adult body weight ranges from 800 to 1 600 kg 1 760 to 3 530 lb 15 Male narwhals attain sexual maturity at 11 to 13 years of age when they are about 3 9 m 12 8 ft long Females become sexually mature at a younger age between 5 and 8 years old when they are around 3 4 m 11 2 ft long 15 The pigmentation of narwhals is a mottled pattern with blackish brown markings over a white background They are darkest when born and become whiter with age white patches develop on the navel and genital slit at sexual maturity Old males may be almost pure white 8 15 16 Narwhals do not have a dorsal fin they instead possess a shallower dorsal ridge This is possibly an evolutionary adaptation to make swimming under ice easier to facilitate rolling or to reduce surface area and heat loss 17 Their neck vertebrae are jointed like those of land mammals instead of being fused together as in most whales allowing a great range of neck flexibility Both these characteristics are shared by the closely related beluga whale 9 The tail flukes of female narwhals have front edges that are swept back and those of males have front edges that are more concave and lack a sweep back This is thought to be an adaptation for reducing drag caused by the tusk 18 Tusk Main article Tusk nbsp This narwhal skull has rare double tusks Usually the canine tooth only on the left side of the upper jaw becomes a tusk Rarely males develop two tusks This specimen however was of a female Zoologisches Museum Hamburg collected in 1684 The most conspicuous characteristic of the male narwhal is a single long tusk which is in fact a canine tooth 19 20 that projects from the left side of the upper jaw through the lip and forms a left handed helical spiral The tusk grows throughout life reaching a length of about 1 5 to 3 1 m 4 9 to 10 2 ft It is hollow and weighs around 10 kg 22 lb About one in 500 males has two tusks occurring when the right canine also grows out through the lip Only about 15 per cent of females grow a tusk 21 which typically is smaller than a male tusk with a less noticeable spiral 22 23 24 Scientists have long speculated on the biological function of the tusk Proposed functions include use of the tusk as a weapon for opening breathing holes in sea ice in foraging as an acoustic organ and as a secondary sex character The leading theory has long been that the narwhal tusk serves as a secondary sex character of males for nonviolent assessment of hierarchical status on the basis of relative tusk size 25 However detailed analysis reveals that the tusk is a highly innervated sensory organ with millions of nerve endings connecting seawater stimuli in the external ocean environment with the brain 26 27 28 29 The rubbing of tusks together by male narwhals is thought to be a method of communicating information about characteristics of the water each has travelled through rather than the previously assumed posturing display of aggressive male to male rivalry 28 In August 2016 drone videos of narwhals surface feeding in Tremblay Sound Nunavut showed that the tusk was used to tap and stun small Arctic cod making them easier to catch for feeding 30 31 The tusk cannot serve a critical function for the animal s survival as females which generally do not have tusks typically live longer than males Therefore the general scientific consensus is that the narwhal tusk is a sexual trait much like the antlers of a stag the mane of a lion or the feathers of a peacock 32 Vestigial teeth The tusks are surrounded posteriorly ventrally and laterally by several small vestigial teeth which vary in morphology and histology 19 These teeth can sometimes be extruded from the bone but mainly reside inside open tooth sockets in the narwhal s snout alongside the tusks 19 33 The varied morphology and anatomy of small teeth indicate a path of evolutionary obsolescence 19 leaving the narwhal s mouth toothless 33 GenomeA 2 3 GB genome sequence has been assembled from multiple Illumina libraries The genome consists of 37 9 repetitive elements and encodes 21 785 protein coding genes similar to many other mammals The genome will help to place the narwhal both into the evolutionary context of other whales but also will help to understand the evolution and embryonic development of features such as the tusk and its sexual dimorphism 34 Distribution nbsp Narwhals in the Creswell Bay at Somerset IslandThe narwhal is found predominantly in the Atlantic and Russian areas of the Arctic Ocean Individuals are commonly recorded in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago 30 such as in the northern part of Hudson Bay Hudson Strait Baffin Bay off the east coast of Greenland and in a strip running east from the northern end of Greenland round to eastern Russia 170 East Land in this strip includes Svalbard Franz Joseph Land and Severnaya Zemlya 8 The northernmost sightings of narwhal have occurred north of Franz Joseph Land at about 85 North latitude 8 BehaviourSocial Narwhals normally congregate in groups of about five to ten and sometimes up to 20 individuals outside the summer Groups may be nurseries with only females and young or can contain only post dispersal juveniles or adult males bulls but mixed groups can occur at any time of year 15 In the summer several groups come together forming larger aggregations which can contain from 500 to over 1 000 individuals 15 At times a bull narwhal may rub its tusk with another bull a display known as tusking 27 35 and thought to maintain social dominance hierarchies 35 However this behaviour may exhibit tusk use as a sensory and communication organ for sharing information about water chemistry sensed in tusk microchannels 26 27 Migration Narwhals exhibit seasonal migrations with a high fidelity of return to preferred ice free summering grounds usually in shallow waters In summer months they move closer to coasts often in pods of 10 100 In the winter they move to offshore deeper waters under thick pack ice surfacing in narrow fissures in the sea ice or leads 36 As spring comes these leads open up into channels and the narwhals return to the coastal bays 37 Narwhals from Canada and West Greenland winter regularly in the pack ice of Davis Strait and Baffin Bay along the continental slope with less than 5 open water and high densities of Greenland halibut 38 Feeding in the winter accounts for a much larger portion of narwhal energy intake than in the summer 38 36 Diet Narwhals have a relatively restricted and specialized diet Their prey is predominantly composed of Greenland halibut polar and Arctic cod cuttlefish shrimp and armhook squid Additional items found in stomachs have included wolffish capelin skate eggs and sometimes rocks accidentally ingested when whales feed near the bottom 15 38 36 35 Due to the lack of well developed dentition in the mouth narwhals are believed to feed by swimming towards prey until it is within close range and then sucking it with considerable force into the mouth It is thought that the beaked whales which have similarly reduced dentition also suck up their prey 39 The distinctive tusk is used to tap and stun small prey facilitating a catch 30 31 Narwhals have a very intense summer feeding society One study tested 73 narwhals of different ages and genders to see what they ate The individuals were from the Pond Inlet and had their stomach contents tested from June 1978 until September 1979 The study found in 1978 that the Arctic cod Boreogadus saida made up about 51 of the diet of the narwhals with the next most common animal being the Greenland halibut Reinhardtius hippoglossoides consisting of 37 of the weight of their diet A year later the percentages of both animals in the diet of narwhals had changed Arctic cod represented 57 and Greenland halibut 29 in 1979 The deep water fish halibut redfish Sebastes marinus and polar cod Arctogadus glacialis were found primarily in the diet of the males which means that the narwhals can dive deeper than 500 m 1 640 ft below sea level The study found that the dietary needs of the narwhal did not differ among genders or ages 40 Diving source source source source Upside down swimming behaviour of narwhals nbsp Narwhal tail fluke When in their wintering waters narwhals make some of the deepest dives recorded for a marine mammal diving to at least 800 m 2 620 ft over 15 times per day with many dives reaching 1 500 m 4 920 ft Dives to these depths last around 25 minutes including the time spent at the bottom and the transit down and back from the surface 41 Dive times can also vary in time and depth based on local variation between environments as well as seasonality For example in the Baffin Bay wintering grounds narwhals farther south appear to be spending most of their time diving to deeper depths along the steep slopes of Baffin Bay suggesting differences in habitat structure prey availability or innate adaptations between subpopulations Curiously whales in the deeper northern wintering ground have access to deeper depths yet make shallower dives Because vertical distribution of narwhal prey in the water column influences feeding behaviour and dive tactics regional differences in the spatial and temporal patterns of prey density as well as differences in prey assemblage may be shaping winter foraging behaviour of narwhals 41 Communication Main article Animal communication See also Whale vocalization As in most toothed whales narwhals use sound to navigate and hunt for food Narwhals primarily vocalise through clicks whistles and knocks created by air movement between chambers near the blow hole These sounds are reflected off the sloping front of the skull and focused by the animal s melon which can be controlled through surrounding musculature Echolocation clicks are primarily produced for prey detection and for locating obstacles at short distances It is possible that individual bangs are capable of disorienting or incapacitating prey making them easier to hunt but this has not been verified They also emit tonal signals such as whistles and pulsed calls that are believed to have a communication function 42 Calls recorded from the same pod are more similar than calls from different pods suggesting the possibility of group or individual specific calls in narwhals Narwhals may also adjust the duration and the pitch of their pulsed calls to maximise sound propagation in varying acoustic environments 43 Other sounds produced by narwhals include trumpeting and squeaking door sounds 9 The narwhal vocal repertoire is similar to that of the closely related beluga with comparable whistle frequency ranges whistle duration and repetition rates of pulse calls however beluga whistles may have a higher frequency range and more diversified whistle contours 42 Breeding and early life Females start bearing calves when six to eight years old 9 Adult narwhals mate in April or May when they are in the offshore pack ice Gestation lasts for 14 months and calves are born between June and August the following year As with most marine mammals only a single young is born averaging 1 6 m 5 2 ft in length and white or light grey in colour 9 44 During summer population counts along different coastal inlets of Baffin Island calf numbers varied from 0 05 to 5 of the total numbering from 10 000 to 35 000 narwhals indicating that higher calf counts may reflect calving and nursery habitats in favourable inlets 44 Newborn calves begin their lives with a thin layer of blubber which thicken as they nurse their mother s milk which is rich in fat Calves are dependent on milk for around 20 months 9 This long lactation period gives calves time to learn skills needed for survival during maturation when they stay within two body lengths of the mother 9 44 Hybrids have been documented between the narwhal and beluga specifically a beluga male and a narwhal female as one perhaps even as many as three were killed and harvested during a sustenance hunt Whether or not these hybrids could breed remains unknown The unusual dentition seen in the single remaining skull indicates the hybrid hunted on the seabed much as walruses do indicating feeding habits different from those of either parent species 45 46 Lifespan and mortality nbsp A polar bear scavenging a narwhal carcassNarwhals can live an average of 50 years however research using aspartic acid racemization from the lens of the eyes suggests that narwhals can live to be as old as 115 10 years and 84 9 years for females and males respectively 47 Mortality often occurs when the narwhals suffocate after they fail to leave before the surface of the Arctic waters freeze over in the late autumn 15 48 As narwhals breathe air they drown if open water is no longer accessible and the ice is too thick for them to break through Maximum aerobic swimming distance between breathing holes in ice is less than 1 450 m 4 760 ft which limits the use of foraging grounds and these holes must be at least 0 5 m 1 6 ft wide to allow an adult whale to breathe 49 The last major entrapment events occurred when there was little to no wind Entrapment can affect as many as 600 individuals most occurring in narwhal wintering areas such as Disko Bay In the largest entrapment in 1915 in West Greenland over 1 000 narwhals were trapped under the ice 50 Despite the decreases in sea ice cover there were several large cases of sea ice entrapment in 2008 2010 in the winter close to known summering grounds two of which were locations where there had been no previous cases documented 48 This suggests later departure dates from summering grounds Sites surrounding Greenland experience advection moving of sea ice from surrounding regions by wind and currents increasing the variability of sea ice concentration Due to strong site fidelity changes in weather and ice conditions are not always associated with narwhal movement toward open water More information is needed to determine the vulnerability of narwhals to sea ice changes Narwhals can also die of starvation 15 Predation and hunting Major predators are polar bears which typically wait at breathing holes for young narwhals and Greenland sharks 15 51 Killer whales group together to overwhelm narwhal pods in the shallow water of enclosed bays 52 in one case killing dozens of narwhals in a single attack 53 To escape predators such as orcas narwhals may use prolonged submergence to hide under ice floes rather than relying on speed 49 nbsp Beluga and narwhal catchesHumans hunt narwhals narwhal products traded commercially include the skin carved vertebrae teeth and tusk and the meat About 1 000 narwhals per year are killed 600 in Canada and 400 in Greenland Canadian harvests were steady at this level in the 1970s dropped to 300 400 per year in the late 1980s and 1990s and rose again since 1999 Greenland harvested more 700 900 per year in the 1980s and 1990s 54 Tusks are sold with or without being carved in Canada 55 56 and Greenland 57 An average of one or two vertebrae and one or two teeth per narwhal are carved and sold 55 In Greenland the skin muktuk is sold commercially to fish factories 57 and in Canada to other communities 55 One estimate of the annual gross value received from narwhal hunts in Hudson Bay in 2013 was CA 530 000 for 81 narwhals or CA 6 500 per narwhal However the net income after subtracting costs in time and equipment was a loss of CA 7 per person Hunts receive subsidies but they continue mainly to support tradition rather than for the money and the economic analysis noted that whale watching may be an alternate source of revenue Of the gross income CA 370 000 was for skin and meat to replace beef pork and chicken which would otherwise be imported CA 150 000 was received for tusks and carved vertebrae and teeth of males and CA 10 000 was received for carved vertebrae and teeth of females 55 Conservation issuesNarwhals are one of the many species of mammals that are threatened by human actions 58 Estimates of the world population of narwhals range from around 50 000 from 1996 37 to around 170 000 compilation of various sub population estimates from the years 2000 2017 4 They are considered to be near threatened inconsistent and several sub populations have evidence of decline In an effort to support conservation the European Union established an import ban on tusks in 2004 and lifted it in 2010 The United States has forbidden imports since 1972 under the Marine Mammal Protection Act 58 Narwhals are difficult to keep in captivity 27 nbsp Male narwhal captured and satellite taggedInuit are able to hunt this whale species legally as discussed above Narwhals have been extensively hunted the same way as other sea mammals such as seals and whales for their large quantities of fat Almost all parts of the narwhal the meat skin blubber and organs are consumed Muktuk the name for raw skin and attached blubber is considered a delicacy One or two vertebrae per animal are used for tools and art 55 8 The skin is an important source of vitamin C which is otherwise difficult to obtain in the Arctic Circle In some places in Greenland such as Qaanaaq traditional hunting methods are used and whales are harpooned from handmade kayaks In other parts of Greenland and Northern Canada high speed boats and hunting rifles are used 8 During growth the narwhal accumulates metals in its internal organs One study found that various metals are lightly concentrated in the blubber and densely concentrated in the liver and the kidneys Zinc and cadmium are found in higher concentration in the kidney compared to the liver the inverse is true for lead copper and mercury Certain metals were correlated with size and sex During growth it was found that mercury accumulated in the liver kidney musculature and blubber and cadmium also settled in the blubber 59 Narwhals are one of the most vulnerable Arctic marine mammals to climate change 37 60 due to altering sea ice coverage in their environment especially in their northern wintering grounds such as the Baffin Bay and Davis Strait regions Satellite data collected from these areas shows the amount of sea ice has been markedly reduced 61 Narwhals ranges for foraging are believed to be patterns developed early in their life which increase their ability to gain necessary food resources during winter This strategy focuses on strong site fidelity rather than individual level responses to local prey distribution and this results in focal foraging areas during the winter As such despite changing conditions narwhals will continue returning to the same areas during migration 61 Despite its vulnerability to sea ice change the narwhal has some flexibility when it comes to sea ice and habitat selection It evolved in the late Pliocene and so is moderately accustomed to periods of glaciation and environmental variability 62 An indirect danger for narwhals associated with changes in sea ice is the increased exposure in open water In 2002 there was an increase in narwhal catches by hunters in Siorapaluk that did not appear to be associated with increased effort 63 implying that climate change may be making the narwhal more vulnerable to harvesting Scientists urge assessment of population numbers with the assignment of sustainable quotas for stocks and the collaboration of management agreements to ensure local acceptance Seismic surveys associated with oil exploration have also disrupted normal migration patterns which may also be associated with increased sea ice entrapment 64 Cultural depictionsIn legend nbsp The head of an Inuit lance made from a narwhal tusk with a meteorite iron point British Museum In Inuit legend the narwhal s tusk was created when a woman with harpoon rope tied around her waist was dragged into the ocean after the harpoon had stuck into a large narwhal She was then transformed into a narwhal her hair which she was wearing in a twisted knot became the spiraling narwhal tusk 65 Some medieval Europeans believed narwhal tusks to be the horns from the legendary unicorn 66 67 As these horns were considered to have magic powers such as neutralising poisons and curing melancholia Vikings and other northern traders were able to sell them for many times their weight in gold 68 The tusks were used to make cups that were thought to negate any poison that may have been slipped into the drink A narwhal tusk exhibited at Warwick Castle is according to legend the rib of the mythical Dun Cow 69 In 1555 Olaus Magnus published a drawing of a fish like creature with a horn on its forehead correctly identifying it as a Narwal 66 During the 16th century Queen Elizabeth I received a narwhal tusk that was said to be worth 10 000 pounds sterling 70 the 16th century equivalent cost of a castle approximately 2 4 4 0 million in 2023 using the retail price index 68 from Martin Frobisher who proposed that the tusk was from a sea unicorne The tusks were staples of the cabinet of curiosities 66 In literature and art nbsp Image of narwhal from Brehms Tierleben 1864 1869 The narwhal was one of two possible explanations offered by Professor Pierre Aronnax in regards to the naval phenomena damaging ships in Jules Verne s 1870 novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea Aronnax comes to this conclusion by presuming that we do know all the living species he was unwilling to speculate wildly to the American press Verne writes The common narwhal or sea unicorn often attains a length of 18 3 m 60 ft For the narwhal to have caused the damage to the various vessels Aronnax stated that its size and strength would have to increase by five or ten times The narwhal is armed with a kind of ivory sword or halberd as some naturalists call it Some of these tusks have been found embedded in the bodies of whales which the narwhal always attacks with success others have been extracted not without difficulty from the bottoms of ships that they had pierced right through as a gimlet pierces a barrel Now suppose the weapon to be ten times stronger and the animal ten times more powerful launch it at a speed of 20 miles 32 km an hour multiply its mass by the square of its speed and you will obtain an impact capable of producing the damage in question 71 Herman Melville wrote a section on the narwhal written as narwhale in his 1851 novel Moby Dick in which he claims a narwhal tusk hung for a long period in Windsor Castle after Sir Martin Frobisher had given it to Queen Elizabeth Another claim he made was that the Danish kings made their thrones from narwhal tusks 72 See alsoList of cetaceans Hai Kun class submarinePortals nbsp Cetaceans nbsp Mammals nbsp Marine lifeReferences Mead J G Brownell R L Jr 2005 Order Cetacea In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press pp 723 743 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 E T Newton 1891 The vertebrata of the Pliocene deposits of Britain Memoirs of the Geological Survey of the United Kingdom Memoirs of the Geological Survey Great Britain 1891 Monodon monoceros Linnaeus 1758 narhwal PBDB org a b c Lowry L Laidre K Reeves R 2017 Monodon monoceros IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T13704A50367651 en Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 14 January 2022 Finley K J Gibb E J 1 December 1982 Summer diet of the narwhal Monodon monoceros in Pond Inlet northern Baffin Island Canadian Journal of Zoology 60 12 3353 3363 doi 10 1139 z82 424 ISSN 0008 4301 Linnaeus C 1758 Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis Tomus I Editio decima reformata in Latin Holmiae Laurentii Salvii p 824 a b c d e f g Heide Jorgensen M P amp Laidre K L 2006 Greenland s Winter Whales The beluga the narwhal and the bowhead whale Ilinniusiorfik Undervisningsmiddelforlag Nuuk Greenland ISBN 978 87 7975 299 3 a b c d e f g The Narwhal Unicorn of the Seas PDF Fisheries and Oceans Canada 2007 Retrieved 10 July 2013 Brodie Paul 1984 Macdonald D ed The Encyclopedia of Mammals New York Facts on File pp 200 203 ISBN 978 0 87196 871 5 Heide Jorgensen M P Reeves R R July 1993 Description of an Anomalous Monodontid Skull from West Greenland A Possible Hybrid Marine Mammal Science 9 3 258 268 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1993 tb00454 x Skovrind Mikkel Castruita Jose Alfredo Samaniego Haile James Treadaway Eve C Gopalakrishnan Shyam Westbury Michael V Heide Jorgensen Mads Peter Szpak Paul Lorenzen Eline D 2019 Hybridization between two high Arctic cetaceans confirmed by genomic analysis Scientific Reports 9 1 7729 7729 doi 10 1038 s41598 019 44038 0 PMC 6586676 PMID 31221994 Waddell V G Milinkovitch M C Berube M amp Stanhope M J 2000 Molecular Phylogenetic Examination of the Delphinoidea Trichotomy Congruent Evidence from Three Nuclear Loci Indicates That Porpoises Phocoenidae Share a More Recent Common Ancestry with White Whales Monodontidae Than They Do with True Dolphins Delphinidae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 15 2 314 318 doi 10 1006 mpev 1999 0751 PMID 10837160 Jorge Velez Juarbe amp Nicholas D Pyenson 2012 Bohaskaia monodontoides a new monodontid Cetacea Odontoceti Delphinoidea from the Pliocene of the western North Atlantic Ocean Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32 2 476 484 doi 10 1080 02724634 2012 641705 S2CID 55606151 a b c d e f g h i j Macdonald D W Barrett P 1993 Mammals of Europe New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 09160 0 Monodon monoceros Fisheries and Aquaculture Department Species Fact Sheets Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Archived from the original on 16 February 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2007 Dietz Rune Shapiro Ari D Bakhtiari Mehdi Orr Jack Tyack Peter L Richard Pierre Eskesen Ida Gronborg Marshall Greg 19 November 2007 Upside down swimming behaviour of free ranging narwhals BMC Ecology 7 14 doi 10 1186 1472 6785 7 14 ISSN 1472 6785 PMC 2238733 PMID 18021441 Fontanella Janet E Fish Frank E Rybczynski Natalia Nweeia Martin T Ketten Darlene R 2010 Three dimensional geometry of the narwhal Monodon monoceros flukes in relation to hydrodynamics Marine Mammal Science 27 4 889 898 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2010 00439 x hdl 1912 4924 a b c d Nweeia Martin T Eichmiller Frederick C Hauschka Peter V Tyler Ethan Mead James G Potter Charles W Angnatsiak David P Richard Pierre R et al 2012 Vestigial tooth anatomy and tusk nomenclature for Monodon monoceros The Anatomical Record 295 6 1006 16 doi 10 1002 ar 22449 PMID 22467529 S2CID 22907605 Nweeia Martin 20 June 2014 Narwhal Tusk Research Narwhal Tusk Research Narwhal org Retrieved 20 June 2014 Lambert K 18 August 2008 How Narwhals work Retrieved 10 July 2013 Narwhal Biology NarwhalTusks com Retrieved 10 July 2013 Narwhal American Cetacean Society Archived from the original on 21 May 2013 Retrieved 10 July 2013 Narwhal Whale Tusk Narwhal Whales Retrieved 10 July 2013 Best R C 1981 The tusk of the narwhal Monodon monoceros L interpretation of its function Mammalia Cetacea Canadian Journal of Zoology 59 12 2386 2393 doi 10 1139 z81 319 a b Nweeia MT et al 2014 Sensory ability in the narwhal tooth organ system The Anatomical Record 297 4 599 617 doi 10 1002 ar 22886 PMID 24639076 S2CID 6028832 a b c d Broad William 13 December 2005 It s Sensitive Really The New York Times a b Vincent James 19 March 2014 Scientists suggest they have the answer to the mystery of the narwhal s tusk Independent co uk Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2014 Nweeia Martin 20 June 2014 Narwhal Tusk Research About the Tusk Narwhal Tusk Research Narwhal org Retrieved 20 June 2014 a b c Waddell Dave 16 May 2017 Drone shot video may have just solved 400 year debate over what narwhal tusks are used for National Post Retrieved 17 May 2017 a b Ravetch Adam 12 May 2017 How narwhals use their tusks World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 17 May 2017 Kelley T C Stewart R E A Yurkowski D J Ryan A Ferguson S H 2014 Mating ecology of beluga Delphinapterus leucas and narwhal Monodon monoceros as estimated by reproductive tract metrics Marine Mammal Science 31 2 479 500 doi 10 1111 mms 12165 a b For a dentist the narwhal s smile is a mystery of evolution Smithsonian Insider 18 April 2012 Retrieved 6 September 2016 Westbury Michael V Petersen Bent Garde Eva Heide Jorgensen Mads Peter Lorenzen Eline D 31 May 2019 Narwhal Genome Reveals Long Term Low Genetic Diversity despite Current Large Abundance Size iScience 15 592 599 Bibcode 2019iSci 15 592W doi 10 1016 j isci 2019 03 023 ISSN 2589 0042 PMC 6546971 PMID 31054839 a b c The Biology and Ecology of Narwhals noaa gov National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 15 January 2009 a b c Laidre K L amp Heide Jorgensen M P 2005 Winter feeding intensity of narwhals Marine Mammal Science 21 1 45 57 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2005 tb01207 x S2CID 35707989 a b c Laidre K L Stirling I Lowry L Wiig O Heide Jorgensen M P amp Ferguson S 2008 Quantifying the sensitivity of arctic marine mammals to climate induced habitat change Ecological Applications 18 2 S97 S125 doi 10 1890 06 0546 1 PMID 18494365 S2CID 23765771 a b c Laidre K 2004 Deep ocean predation by a high Arctic cetacean ICES Journal of Marine Science 61 1 430 440 doi 10 1016 j icesjms 2004 02 002 Animal Bytes Narwhal Seaworld org Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 21 April 2013 Finley K J Gidd E J 1982 Summer diet of the narwhal Monodon monoceros in Pond Inlet northern Baffin Island Canadian Journal of Zoology 60 12 3353 3363 doi 10 1139 z82 424 a b Laidre K L Heide Jorgensen M P Dietz R Hobbs R C amp Jorgensen O A 2003 Deep diving by narwhals Monodon monoceros differences in foraging behavior between wintering areas PDF Marine Ecology Progress Series 261 269 281 Bibcode 2003MEPS 261 269L doi 10 3354 meps261269 a b Marcoux M 2011 1 Narwhal communication and grouping behaviour a case study in social cetacean research and monitoring PhD Montreal McGill University Lesage V Barrette C Kingsley M C S Sjare B 1999 The effect of vessel noise on the vocal behavior of belugas in the St Lawrence River estuary Canada Marine Mammal Science 15 65 84 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1999 tb00782 x a b c Evans Ogden Lesley 6 January 2016 Elusive narwhal babies spotted gathering at Canadian nursery New Scientist Retrieved 6 September 2016 First Ever Beluga Narwhal Hybrid Found in the Arctic Live Science 20 June 2019 Skovrind M l Castruita J A S Haile J et al 2019 Hybridization between two high Arctic cetaceans confirmed by genomic analysis Scientific Reports 9 1 7729 Bibcode 2019NatSR 9 7729S doi 10 1038 s41598 019 44038 0 PMC 6586676 PMID 31221994 Garde E Heide Jorgensen M P Hansen S H Nachman G Forchhammer M C 2007 Age Specific Growth and Remarkable Longevity in Narwhals Monodon monoceros from West Greenland as Estimated by Aspartic Acid Racemization Journal of Mammalogy 88 1 49 58 doi 10 1644 06 MAMM A 056R 1 a b Laidre K Heide Jorgensen M P Stern H amp Richard P 2011 Unusual narwhal sea ice entrapments and delayed autumn freeze up trends PDF Polar Biology 35 149 154 doi 10 1007 s00300 011 1036 8 S2CID 2290952 a b Williams Terrie M Noren Shawn R Glenn Mike 2011 Extreme physiological adaptations as predictors of climate change sensitivity in the narwhal Mondon monceros Marine Mammal Science 27 2 334 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2010 00408 x S2CID 21839019 Porsild M 1918 On Savssat A crowding of Arctic animals at holes in the sea ice Geogr Rev 6 3 215 228 doi 10 2307 207815 hdl 2027 hvd 32044106197593 JSTOR 207815 S2CID 164155407 William F Perrin Bernd Wursig J G M Hans Thewissen eds 2009 Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals Academic Press pp 929 30 ISBN 978 0080919935 Morell V 30 January 2012 Killer whale menu finally revealed Science Retrieved 24 June 2015 Invasion of the Killer Whales Killer Whales Attack Pod of Narwhal Public Broadcasting System 19 November 2014 Retrieved 23 October 2016 Wittig Lars 18 June 2016 Meta population modelling of narwhals in East Canada and West Greenland 2017 bioRxiv 10 1101 059691 a b c d e Hoover C Bailey M Higdon J Ferguson SH Sumalia R March 2013 Estimating the Economic Value of Narwhal and Beluga Hunts in Hudson Bay Nunavut The Arctic Institute of North America 66 1 16 Greenfieldboyce Nell 19 August 2009 Inuit Hunters Help Scientists Track Narwhals NPR org National Public Radio Retrieved 24 October 2016 a b Heide Jorgensen Mads Peter January 1994 Distribution exploitation and population status of white whales Delphinapterus leucas and narwhals Monodon monoceros in West Greenland Meddelelser om Gronland Bioscience 39 135 149 a b Lowry L Laidre K Reeves R 2017 Monodon monoceros IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T13704A50367651 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T13704A50367651 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Wagemann R Snow N B Lutz A Scott D P 1983 Heavy Metals in Tissues and Organs of the Narwhal Monodon monoceras Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 40 S2 s206 s214 doi 10 1139 f83 326 Borenstein Seth 25 April 2008 Narwhals more at risk to Arctic warming than polar bears Associated Press Retrieved 27 April 2008 a b Laidre KL Heide Jorgensen MP 2011 Life in the lead extreme densities of narwhals Monodon monoceros in the offshore pack ice Marine Ecology Progress Series 423 269 278 Bibcode 2011MEPS 423 269L doi 10 3354 meps08941 Laidre K L Heide Jorgensen M P 2005 Arctic sea ice trends and narwhal vulnerability PDF Biological Conservation 121 2005 509 517 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2004 06 003 ISSN 0006 3207 Nielsen M R 2009 Is climate change causing the increasing narwhal Monodon monoceros catches in Smith Sound Greenland Polar Research 28 2 238 245 Bibcode 2009PolRe 28 238N doi 10 1111 j 1751 8369 2009 00106 x S2CID 140711336 Heide Jorgensen M P Hansen R G Westdal K Reeves R R amp Mosbech A 2013 Narwhals and seismic exploration Is seismic noise increasing the risk of ice entrapments Biological Conservation 158 50 54 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2012 08 005 Bastian Dawn E Mitchell Judy K 2004 Handbook of Native American Mythology ABC CLIO pp 54 55 ISBN 978 1 85109 533 9 a b c Shepard Odell 2013 The Lore of the Unicorn CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 176 ISBN 978 1 4565 6952 5 Daston Lorraine and Park Katharine 2001 Wonders and the Order of Nature 1150 1750 New York Zone Books ISBN 0 942299 91 4 a b Officer L H Williamson S H 2014 Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1270 to Present MeasuringWorth Narwhal Tusk Warwick Castle Archived from the original on 27 July 2019 Retrieved 27 July 2019 Sherman Josepha 2015 Storytelling An Encyclopedia of Mythology and Folklore Routledge p 476 ISBN 9781317459385 Retrieved 18 September 2023 Verne J 1870 Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea PDF Pierre Jules Hetzel p 10 Archived from the original PDF on 13 January 2015 Retrieved 22 March 2014 Melville H 1851 Moby Dick Or The Whale Richard Bentley p 635 Further readingFord John Ford Deborah March 1986 Narwhal Unicorn of the Arctic Seas National Geographic Vol 169 no 3 pp 354 363 ISSN 0027 9358 OCLC 643483454 M P Heide Jorgensen Narwhal in Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals Perrin Wursig and Thewissen eds ISBN 0 12 551340 2 Groc Isabelle Hunt for the sea unicorn New Scientist feature article Issue 2956 15 February 2014 1 External links nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Monodon monoceros nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monodon monoceros Flower W H 1911 Narwhal Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed p 243 Biology and ecology of narwhals NOAA Narwhal Discoveries Voices in the Sea Sounds of the Narwhal Archived 9 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Narwhal amp oldid 1196794299, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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