Showing posts with label Dolphin family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dolphin family. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 October 2025

Delphinids: Killer Whales

Orca / killer whale
The dolphin family is scientifically defined as including all the species more closely related to the common dolphin than they are to porpoises. The great majority are what we'd normally think of as "dolphins" but four species are so much larger that, instead, we tend to call them "whales". Three, including the two species of pilot whale, are of roughly similar size to each other, but the fourth is noticeably larger still.

It's the biggest "dolphin" of all: the orca or killer whale (Orcinus orca).

That it is a dolphin has never been seriously doubted from a scientific perspective. It is one of just three species of dolphin to be listed as such in the first catalogue of scientific names in 1758 - and one of the other two is a porpoise, and so has since been moved elsewhere. On the other hand, it has been recognised as belonging to a distinct subfamily with the dolphins since 1846, and modern genetic studies confirm that its ancestors diverged from those of most other dolphins unusually early. 

Sunday, 7 September 2025

Delphinids: Pilot Whales

Long-finned pilot whale
The term "dolphin" is not, strictly speaking, a scientific one. It refers, in common parlance, to any small cetacean, often even including porpoises. Even ignoring the porpoises, however, not all dolphins are members of the dolphin family, technically referred to as "delphinids". This is because some freshwater animals are not closely related to the dolphins proper (or, indeed, to the porpoises). We call them "dolphins" because they're about the right size, a similar shape, and... well, we don't have a better word, at least for them all collectively.

But it works the other way, too. Not all members of the dolphin family are commonly called "dolphins". With the exception of the melon-headed whale, which it's hard to think of as anything other than a dolphin, this is because they're too big. We call them "whales" - another term that doesn't map to anything scientifically - since that's what we call any large cetacean.

Sunday, 24 August 2025

Delphinids: Right Whale Dolphins

Northern right whale dolphin
Dolphins are familiar animals. We see them at aquaria and boat trips to see them in the wild are relatively common. In recent decades, there has been a rise in 'swimming with dolphins' tourist experiences, which studies have shown to be good in the short term for humans, but less so in the long term for the dolphins. Either way, we know a fair amount about them, both culturally and scientifically and, depending on the part of the world you live in, there may be many different species that you can see.

Some dolphin species, however, are less well-known than others. I've covered some already, but perhaps the most obscure are the right whale dolphins. 

Sunday, 10 August 2025

Delphinids: Newest and Largest Dolphins

Fraser's dolphin
One of the largest features at the British Natural History Museum is a full-scale model of a blue whale, occupying a large chunk of one of the mammal halls. This was installed in 1938 by Francis Fraser, a Scottish zoologist with a lifelong interest in cetaceans. Eighteen years later, still working at the museum, he was put in charge of reorganising their collection of cetacean skeletons and came across one that hadn't been closely examined since it had arrived in 1895.

It had been donated by Charles Hose, a colonial administrator and amateur naturalist who had found the skeleton on a beach near a river mouth in Sarawak (then a British Protectorate). Hose hadn't been quite sure what it was, and simply labelled it "white porpoise ? Lagenorhynchus sp." before sending it on. When Fraser examined it, however, he soon realised that it couldn't possibly be what Hose had guessed and that it was, instead, an animal previously unknown to science.

Sunday, 13 July 2025

Delphinids: Dolphins in the Irrawaddy

Irrawaddy dolphin
While we normally think of dolphins as being sea-dwelling animals, there are no fewer than eight species referred to as such that are commonly found in rivers. Six of these, however, are not true members of the "dolphin family", or Delphinidae, their ancestors having split off from that group even before those of some of our modern whales did. Of the two exceptions, one is entirely freshwater, and lives in South America. The other is more varied in its habitat and lives in Asia.

The Irrawaddy dolphin (Orcaella brevirostris) was first described in 1866, from a specimen caught, not in a river, but off the northeast coast of India. We now know that this is at the far western edge of its range, and that it is also found all along the coast from northeast India, around the Malaysian Peninsula, to as far east as southern Vietnam. It is also found further south, around Borneo and along the north coasts of Sumatra and Java. In 1999, a very small population was discovered in the Philippines, living in a couple of isolated bays very far from the remainder of the animal's range, presumably the result of some having been swept away in a storm decades or even centuries before.

Sunday, 15 June 2025

Delphinids: The Freshwater Dolphins of Brazil

Tucuxi
In this series so far, I have generally been referring to the Delphinidae as the "dolphin family". That's a literal translation of the name and serves to distinguish it from, say, the porpoise family. However, as I mentioned in the first post, not all animals commonly referred to as "dolphins" belong in the family. Thus, when zoologists want to distinguish the family from those other animals, but want to avoid saying "delphinids", the more common term is "Oceanic dolphins". Oceans are, after all, where they are found.

With, it turns out, one exception.

The tucuxi (Sotalia fluviatilis) is unique among Oceanic dolphins is being an exclusively freshwater animal. It lives in the Amazon River and its major tributaries, mostly in Brazil, but also further upstream into Colombia, Peru, and Ecuador. Indeed, it was first formally described, by Paul Gervais in 1853, from an animal sighted in Peru, about 2,500 km (1,500 miles) from the mouth of the Amazon... and they are known to get further upriver than that, until they are stopped by features such as waterfalls.

Sunday, 25 May 2025

Delphinids: Dolphins of the Deep Seas

Rough-toothed dolphin
To our human eyes, it's easy to distinguish the major habitat types on land. There are pine forests, tropical jungles, open prairies, deserts, mountains, and so on. When it comes to the sea, however, it's less obvious. Most maps show the sea as a solid mass of blue which is, of course, what most of it looks like from the surface. But there are different environments and habitats within it, even if they aren't necessarily arranged in quite the same way.

While for some dolphin species the only real limitation is pack ice preventing them from surfacing to breathe, most have more specific requirements. Temperature is the most obvious, with some species preferring tropical or subarctic seas, but the depth of the underlying water is also significant. Species such as common and bottlenose dolphins are most comfortable over the continental shelves, where nutrients well up from the sea bed to feed the fish and squid on which they prey. Rather more species prefer shallow waters, close to the coast. Here, the water is shallow enough for light to reach the bottom, allowing seaweed or coral to grow, which benefits a different kind of fish than those further out.

Sunday, 4 May 2025

Delphinids: Small Dolphins of Shallow Southern Seas

Commerson's dolphin
While related, dolphins and porpoises are regarded as distinct types of animals. Each is placed in its own family, with the two separating at least 15 million years ago. However, telling the two apart is not always easy, at least on a superficial look at their external anatomy. Porpoises are, generally speaking, smaller than dolphins and they have a blunt nose rather than a 'beak'. The problem is that we can say exactly the same about some species that really are dolphins.

In 1766, naturalist Philibert Commerson accompanied explorer Louis-Antoine de Bougainville on what would become the first successful French circumnavigation of the globe. While passing through the Straits of Magellan the following year, he spotted an unusual-looking dolphin close to the ship and sent a description of it back to France. (As a side note, later on in the voyage, it was discovered, much to the crew's shock, that Commerson's assistant was secretly a woman; she is now remembered as the first woman to circumnavigate the globe).

Sunday, 20 April 2025

Delphinids: White-sided Dolphins

Atlantic white-sided dolphin
The taxonomy of dolphins is far from settled, with exactly how we should classify some species having been an open question for years. There is a good chance that the scientific names I am using for some species in this series will not still be in use in a decade, as old genera are split and the family tree re-arranged. Such is the case, for example, with the dolphins of the genus Lagenorhynchus.

The genus was named by John Edward Gray in 1846 for a specimen of a previously unknown species sent to him for analysis at the British Museum, after having been caught somewhere off the coast of Norfolk. It translates as "bottle-nose", for the shape of the beak... which is, perhaps, unfortunate, given that the animal we refer to in English as the "bottlenose dolphin" is something else entirely. Over the centuries since, five new species have been added to the genus, giving us the six we recognise today.

Sunday, 23 March 2025

Delphinids: Humpback Dolphins

Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin
The genus Stenella, to which many of the closest relatives of the well-known bottlenose and common dolphins belong is, genetically speaking, a mess. A combination of interbreeding and rapid speciation have made it very difficult to determine how its family tree should be constructed or if, indeed, there is even a clear pattern to find. 

Our best evidence suggests that it probably isn't a "real" group, in the sense of one consisting of a common ancestor and all of its descendants. That's because three other genera of dolphin appear to be descended from that common ancestor, forming part of the same cluster of what we might describe as "typical-looking" dolphins. The common and bottlenose dolphins form two of these interspersed groups, while the third is represented by the humpback dolphins.

As it turns out, their classification has also had to undergo significant revision in recent years, albeit for different reasons.

Sunday, 2 March 2025

Delphinids: Spotted, Striped, and Spinning Dolphins

Pantropical spotted dolphin
The closest relatives of the common and bottlenose dolphins, which are perhaps the most familiar species to the western public, are those in the genus Stenella. Or at least, that might be true, because there has been a lot of confusion about the genus over the years.

It was first created in 1866 as a subgenus within Steno, the "narrow-beaked" dolphins, and contained just one species. It became a full genus in 1934,and by the end of the 20th century was agreed to contain five species - all of which had, in fact, been named before 1866. Since then, our understanding of genetics has greatly improved, and it has become clear that these various species cannot be so neatly arranged on a family tree as we might like.

Sunday, 9 February 2025

Delphinids: Common and Bottlenose Dolphins

Common dolphin
When the genus Delphis was first named in 1758 at the dawn of taxonomy, it included three species of small to medium-sized toothed cetacean. By the time the dolphin family, Delphinidae, was named in 1821, one of those species (the porpoise) had been moved elsewhere, but five new ones had been added. Many more followed, but, from the mid-18th century onwards, naturalists began to notice subtle differences between animals that were probably more mysterious to them than land-dwelling mammals, and many species of dolphin began to be separated out into newly created genera.

So much so in fact, that by the time we reach the 21st century, only one species remains in the genus originally created to contain all dolphins and dolphin-like animals. That species is, of course, the one that we believe Linnaeus happened to be thinking of when he named the genus, and therefore is the defining (or 'type') species not only for its genus but for the dolphin family as a whole. This is the aptly named common dolphin (Delphinus delphis).

Sunday, 26 January 2025

Delphinid Dolphins

Of all mammal groups, those that have undergone the most dramatic change from their original form are perhaps the cetaceans. The most thoroughly adapted of all mammals to life in the water, there is little else they could possibly be mistaken for. The cetaceans have been considered a distinct order of mammals since the dawn of taxonomy in 1758, and today are divided into fourteen living families. The largest of these families, in terms of the number of species, is the dolphin family.

Technically known as the Delphinidae, this was named by John Edward Gray in 1821 as part of one of the earliest formal lists of mammal families. Gray's original definition basically included all toothed cetaceans other than narwhals and sperm whales, encompassing four genera, only one of which is still placed in the family today - Delphinus, from which it takes its name. He didn't list how many species he thought that genus contained, but it would certainly have included the two named by Linnaeus in 1758, and probably at least three others that had been described in the interim. Over the following decades, the number expanded considerably, with Gray himself identifying several of them, notably when he catalogued the observations and specimens collected by the Ross Expedition of 1839-43.