Neha Patil (Editor)

Gray's beaked whale

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Artiodactyla

Family
  
Ziphiidae

Scientific name
  
Mesoplodon grayi

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Infraorder
  
Genus
  
Mesoplodon

Higher classification
  
Mesoplodont whale

Gray's beaked whale wwwbeakedwhaleresourcecomimagesgraysgraysjpg

Similar
  
Strap‑toothed whale, Andrews' beaked whale, Hector's beaked whale, Spade‑toothed whale, Mesoplodont whale

Gray s beaked whale 05042014


Gray's beaked whale (Mesoplodon grayi), sometimes known as Haast's beaked whale, the Scamperdown whale, or the southern beaked whale, is one of the better-known members of the genus Mesoplodon. This species is fairly gregarious and strands relatively frequently for a beaked whale. It is notable for being the only beaked whale, other than Shepherd's beaked whale (not a mesoplodont), that has upper teeth. In Maori Language, this species is either named as Hakurā or Iheihe.

Contents

Gray's beaked whale Gray39s Beaked Whale Mesoplodon grayi Marine Mammal Researchcom

Gray s beaked whale breaching underwater 06042014


Taxonomy

Gray's beaked whale Gray39s beaked whale photo Mesoplodon grayi G40225 ARKive

The species was first described in 1876 by Julius von Haast, director of the Canterbury Museum, Christchurch, New Zealand. He named it after the British taxonomist John Edward Gray, a zoologist at the British Museum. His description was based on three skulls he had received in May 1875 from a William Hood, Esq., who had retrieved them from three specimens that were part of a group of 28 individuals that had stranded on Waitangi Beach, Chatham Island, in the summer of 1874-75.

Description

Gray's beaked whale Gray39s Beaked Whale Australian Museum

Gray's beaked whale is a fairly slender member of the genus. The melon on the whale bulges towards the blowhole and slopes down towards the beak. The beak itself is very long and pointed for a beaked whale, and has a relatively straight mouth line. In both sexes there are 17–22 rows of small teeth located towards the back of the mouth, which barely protrude past the gum. In males, there are two small, triangular teeth present halfway down the mouth. The overall coloration is dark on top and light below, and both sexes have a white beak. Females are lighter on top and have additional white marking near the genitals. Adult males often carry linear scars that probably result from fighting, and both males and females may display circular scars from cookiecutter shark bites. M. grayi are 5.5 to 6.0 m (18.0 to 19.7 ft) long and weigh around 1,100 kilograms (2,400 pounds). They are believed to be around 2.4 meters (7 feet 10 inches) long when born.

Behavior

Gray's beaked whale is very gregarious. It has a tendency to strand in large groups, once involving 28 individuals. Other strandings involved five to eight animals. The upper teeth may be used in holding prey, but it is not clear why only this species has them.

Gray's beaked whale Gray39s Beaked Whale photos

Gray's beaked whale is said to be the most common species of whale to beach in New Zealand. Two whales that stranded themselves on Opape Beach in the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand, in December 2010 were initially thought to be Gray's beaked whales, but later found to be the incredibly rare spade-toothed whale.

Population and distribution

Gray's beaked whale FileHead of stranded Gray39s beaked whalejpg Wikimedia Commons

This species typically lives in the Southern Hemisphere between 30 and 45 degrees, and is typically observed at depths of 2,000 m (6,600 ft). Many strandings have occurred off New Zealand, but others have happened off Australia, South Africa, South America, and the Falkland Islands. This species has been sighted in groups off the coast of Madagascar and in the Antarctic area. Oddly, one specimen stranded off the Netherlands, in a different hemisphere and several thousand miles away from all other strandings. No population estimates exist, but they are believed to be rather common.

Conservation

Gray's beaked whale Gray39s beaked whale Whales Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand

These whales have not been hunted deliberately and they have not been entangled in fishing gear. Gray's beaked whale is included in the Memorandum of Understanding Concerning the Conservation of the Manatee and Small Cetaceans of Western Africa and Macaronesia (Western African Aquatic Mammals MoU) and the Memorandum of Understanding for the Conservation of Cetaceans and Their Habitats in the Pacific Islands Region (Pacific Cetaceans MoU)

Specimens

  • MNZ MM002134 Gray's Beaked Whale Mesoplodon grayi, collected Black Reef, Cape Kidnappers, Hawke Bay, New Zealand, 18 March 1993.
  • References

    Gray's beaked whale Wikipedia