Hubbs' beaked whale

Species of mammal

Hubbs' beaked whale
Size compared to an average human
Conservation status

Data Deficient (IUCN 3.1)[1]
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Ziphiidae
Genus: Mesoplodon
Species:
M. carlhubbsi
Binomial name
Mesoplodon carlhubbsi
Moore, 1963
Hubb's beaked whale range

Hubbs' beaked whale (Mesoplodon carlhubbsi) was initially thought to be an Andrews' beaked whale when discovered by ichthyologist Carl Hubbs; however, it was named in his honor when it was discovered to be a new species. This species has the typical dentition found in the genus, but its main outstanding features are a white "cap" on the head and very extensive scarring. The species is known from 31 strandings, a few at-sea sightings, and observations of two stranded whales that were kept in captivity for 16–25 days.

Taxonomy

Carl Leavitt Hubbs, a noted American ichthyologist, published a description of a whale found alive in the surf near his office at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, in 1945. He believed it to be Andrews' beaked whale (a very similar species found only in the Southern Hemisphere), but Joseph Curtis Moore, an expert on beaked whales at Chicago's Field Museum, reassigned it to a new species, Mesoplodon carlhubbsi, in 1963, naming it in his honor.[3]

Description

Hubbs' beaked whale skull located at the California Academy of Sciences San Francisco.

Hubbs’ beaked whale M. carlhubbsi has a light ventral surface and a midventral portion grading from white to medium gray dorsally. The dorsal surface of the flipper is slightly darker than the adjacent thorax in adult females, with a faint light patch on the distal posterior edge. However, the light patch is more noticeable in adult males. The head of adult male M. carlhubbsi is the most striking feature- black with naturally white areas on the tip of the rostrum and anterior to the blowhole. For females, the tip of the rostrum is distinctly lighter than the rest of the head. Males also have a strong pair of teeth protruding from the mandibular symphysis.

Population and distribution

It is estimated M. carlhubbsi are along the coast of Japan and Pacific coast of North America. The distribution along North America extends from San Diego to Prince Rupert. Southern limit is unknown but the northern limit is Vancouver Island. Distribution is probably not directly related to the character of the water mass but rather follows the distribution of the prey species it feeds on. M. carlhubbsi follows prey items in intermediate and deep-water masses, rather than surface water masses.

Behavior

Stomach contents of stranded M. carlhubbsi contained squid beaks, fish otoliths, and fish bones. Prey species included Gonatus sp., Chauliodus macouni, Icichthys lockingtoni, and Poromitra crassiceps. Researchers assume calving takes place in the summer based on lengths of neonatal specimens, gestational period, and fetal growth in most cetaceans. On October 3 they found a 90 cm fetus which had about 160 cm of growth before birth which gives an estimated time of birth of about mid-May. A few acoustic and other behavioral observations were made of stranded M. carlhubbsi when they were held briefly in captivity. A stereotyped beaked whale echolocation pulse type (termed BW37V) is thought to be made by this species but has not been linked to a sighting, so this attribution is considered provisional.

Conservation

The species has been occasionally killed by Japanese whalers and has been caught in driftnets off California. Recent strandings in Hawaii have occurred, supporting the theory of open ocean habitation by this species.[dubious – discuss] Threats include fishing and harvesting of aquatic resources, pollution, and climate change. M. carlhubbsi are occasionally taken by Japanese whalers and small cetacean fisheries. Incidental catches in drift gillnets occur sporadically off the coast of California. Climate change and severe weather may cause M. carlhubbsi to shift habitat. Also, as with most beaked whales, they may be vulnerable to loud anthropogenic sounds, especially those generated by navy sonar and seismic exploration.

See also

  • Cetaceans portal
  • iconMammals portal
  • Marine life portal

References

  1. ^ Pitman, R.L.; Brownell Jr.; R.L. (2020). "Mesoplodon carlhubbsi". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T13243A50364109. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T13243A50364109.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ Reeves et al. (2002), Guide to the Marine Mammals of the World, p. 288.

Animal diversity web https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Mesoplodon_carlhubbsi/ Whale and dolphin conservation https://us.whales.org/whales-dolphins/species-guide/hubbs-beaked-whale/ NOAA Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary https://olympiccoast.noaa.gov/living/marinelife/mammals/specieslist/spp_hubbsbeaked.html IUCN Database https://www.iucnredlist.org

Bibliography

Griffiths, E.T., Keating, J.L., Barlow, J. and Moore, J.E. 2019. Description of a new beaked whale echolocation pulse type in the California Current. Marine Mammal Science 35: 1058–1069

Mead, J.G., W.A. Walker, and W.J. Houck. Biological observations on Mesoplodon carlhubbsi (Cetacea: Ziphiidae). Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology. 344

Lynn, S. K. and D. L. Reiss. 1992. Pulse sequence and whistle production by two captive beaked whales, Mesoplodon species. Marine Mammal Science 8:299–305

Taylor, B.L., R. Baird, J. Barlow, S.M. Dawson, J. Ford, J.G. Mead, G. Notarbartolo di Sciara, P. Wade, and R.L. Pitman. 2008. Mesoplodon carlhubbsi. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Available from https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/13243/3425482

External links

  • Cetaceans of the World
  • CMS
  • Whale & Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Extant Cetacea species
Parvorder Mysticeti (Baleen whales)
Balaenidae
Balaena
  • Bowhead whale (B. mysticetus)
Eubalaena
(Right whales)
  • Southern right whale (E. australis)
  • North Atlantic right whale (E. glacialis)
  • North Pacific right whale (E. japonica)
Balaenopteridae
(Rorquals)
Balaenoptera
  • Common minke whale (B. acutorostrata)
  • Antarctic minke whale (B. bonaerensis)
  • Sei whale (B. borealis)
  • Bryde's whale (B. brydei)
  • Pygmy Bryde's whale (B. edeni)
  • Blue whale (B. musculus)
  • Omura's whale (B. omurai)
  • Fin whale (B. physalus)
  • Rice's whale (B. ricei)
Eschrichtius
  • Gray whale (E. robustus)
Megaptera
  • Humpback whale (M. novaeangliae)
Cetotheriidae
Caperea
  • Pygmy right whale (C. marginata)
Parvorder Odontoceti (Toothed whales)
Delphinidae
(Oceanic dolphins)
Cephalorhynchus
  • Commerson's dolphin (C. commersonii)
  • Chilean dolphin (C. eutropia)
  • Heaviside's dolphin (C. heavisidii)
  • Hector's dolphin (C. hectori)
Delphinus
  • Common dolphin (D. delphis)
Feresa
  • Pygmy killer whale (F. attenuata)
Globicephala
(Pilot whales)
  • Short-finned pilot whale (G. macrorhynchus)
  • Long-finned pilot whale (G. melas)
Grampus
  • Risso's dolphin (G. griseus)
Lagenodelphis
  • Fraser's dolphin (L. hosei)
Lagenorhynchus
  • White-beaked dolphin (L. albirostris)
  • Atlantic white-sided dolphin (L. acutus)
  • Peale's dolphin (L. australis)
  • Hourglass dolphin (L. cruciger)
  • Pacific white-sided dolphin (L. obliquidens)
  • Dusky dolphin (L. obscurus)
Lissodelphis
(Right whale dolphins)
  • Northern right whale dolphin (L. borealis)
  • Southern right whale dolphin (L. peronii)
Orcaella
  • Irrawaddy dolphin (O. brevirostris)
  • Australian snubfin dolphin (O. heinsohni)
Orcinus
  • Orca or killer whale (O. orca)
Peponocephala
  • Melon-headed whale (P. electra)
Pseudorca
  • False killer whale (P. crassidens)
Sotalia
  • Tucuxi (S. fluviatilis)
  • Guiana dolphin (S. guianensis)
Sousa
(Humpback dolphins)
  • Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin (S. chinensis)
  • Indian Ocean humpback dolphin (S. plumbea)
  • Australian humpback dolphin (S. sahulensis)
  • Atlantic humpback dolphin (S. teuszii)
Stenella
  • Pantropical spotted dolphin (S. attenuata)
  • Clymene dolphin (S. clymene)
  • Striped dolphin (S. coeruleoalba)
  • Atlantic spotted dolphin (S. frontalis)
  • Spinner dolphin (S. longirostris)
Steno
  • Rough-toothed dolphin (S. bredanensis)
Tursiops
(Bottlenose dolphins)
  • Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (T. aduncus)
  • Burrunan dolphin (T. australis)
  • Tamanend's bottlenose dolphin (T. erebennus)
  • Common bottlenose dolphin (T. truncatus)
Monodontidae
Delphinapterus
  • Beluga whale (D. leucas)
Monodon
  • Narwhal (M. monoceros)
Phocoenidae
(Porpoises)
Neophocoena
(Finless porpoises)
  • Indo-Pacific finless porpoise (N. phocaenoides)
  • Yangtze finless porpoise (N. asiaeorientalis)
Phocoena
  • Spectacled porpoise (P. dioptrica)
  • Harbour porpoise (P. phocoena)
  • Vaquita (P. sinus)
  • Burmeister's porpoise (P. spinipinnis)
Phocoenoides
  • Dall's porpoise (P. dalli)
Physeteridae
Physeter
  • Sperm whale (P. macrocephalus)
Kogiidae
Kogia
  • Pygmy sperm whale (K. breviceps)
  • Dwarf sperm whale (K. simus)
Iniidae
Inia
  • Araguaian river dolphin (I. araguaiaensis)
  • Bolivian river dolphin (I. boliviensis)
  • Amazon river dolphin (I. geoffrensis)
Lipotidae
Lipotes
  • Baiji (L. vexillifer)
Platanistidae
Platanista
  • Ganges river dolphin (P. gangetica)
  • Indus river dolphin (P. minor)
Pontoporiidae
Pontoporia
  • La Plata dolphin (P. blainvillei)
Ziphiidae
(Beaked whales)
Berardius
  • Arnoux's beaked whale (B. arnuxii)
  • Baird's beaked whale (B. bairdii)
  • Sato's beaked whale (B. minimus)
Hyperoodon
(Bottlenose whales)
  • Northern bottlenose whale (H. ampullatus)
  • Southern bottlenose whale (H. planifrons)
Indopacetus
  • Tropical bottlenose whale (I. pacificus)
Mesoplodon
(Mesoplodont whales)
  • Sowerby's beaked whale (M. bidens)
  • Andrews' beaked whale (M. bowdoini)
  • Hubbs' beaked whale (M. carlhubbsi)
  • Blainville's beaked whale (M. densirostris)
  • Ramari's beaked whale (M. eueu)
  • Gervais's beaked whale (M. europaeus)
  • Ginkgo-toothed beaked whale (M. ginkgodens)
  • Gray's beaked whale (M. grayi)
  • Hector's beaked whale (M. hectori)
  • Deraniyagala's beaked whale (M. hotaula)
  • Strap-toothed whale (M. layardii)
  • True's beaked whale (M. mirus)
  • Perrin's beaked whale (M. perrini)
  • Pygmy beaked whale (M. peruvianus)
  • Stejneger's beaked whale (M. stejnegeri)
  • Spade-toothed whale (M. traversii)
Tasmacetus
  • Shepherd's beaked whale (T. shepherdi)
Ziphius
  • Cuvier's beaked whale (Z. cavirostris)
Taxon identifiers
Mesoplodon carlhubbsi
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
  • Israel