Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T22:44:51.389Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Records of kogiid whales in Namibia, including the first record of the dwarf sperm whale (Kogia sima)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 March 2013

S.H. Elwen*
Affiliation:
Mammal Research Unit, University of Pretoria, C/o Iziko South African Museum, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa Namibian Dolphin Project, Walvis Bay, Namibia
T. Gridley
Affiliation:
Mammal Research Unit, University of Pretoria, C/o Iziko South African Museum, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa Namibian Dolphin Project, Walvis Bay, Namibia
J-P. Roux
Affiliation:
Lüderitz Marine Research, Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources, Shark Island, Lüderitz, Namibia Animal Demography Unit, Zoology Department, University of Cape Town, South Africa
P.B. Best
Affiliation:
Mammal Research Unit, University of Pretoria, C/o Iziko South African Museum, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa
M.J. Smale
Affiliation:
Port Elizabeth Museum at Bayworld, PO Box 13147, Humewood, 6013, South Africa Department of Zoology, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, PO Box 77000, Port Elizabeth, 6031, South Africa
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: S.H. Elwen, Mammal Research Unit, University of Pretoria, C/o Iziko South African Museum, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa email: [email protected]
Get access

Abstract

Dwarf (Kogia sima) and pygmy (K. breviceps) sperm whales occur in pelagic waters around southern Africa. Here we report the first record of K. sima from Namibia and provide information on the basic morphometrics and diet of that record and of two recent strandings of K. breviceps. All known records (N = 29) of K. breviceps from Namibia are also collated. Eight families of cephalopod were identified in the stomach contents of the K. sima but no fish remains and few crustacean parts were present. Nine and ten families of cephalopod were identified in the stomachs of the two K. breviceps specimens respectively. This report expands the known range of K. sima by more than 1000 km from previous published records in the region. The sparsely populated nature of the Namibian coast and bias of records towards centres of human habitation suggest Kogia strandings are under reported. The low number of stranded specimens of K. sima from Namibia and west South Africa, in comparison to K. breviceps suggests that K. sima occur rarely or at very low densities in the area influenced by the Benguela current ecosystem. Specimens from Namibia are valuable due to uncertainties about taxomony of kogiids in the region.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2013

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Ansorge, I.J. and Lutjeharms, J.R.E. (2007) The cetacean environment off southern Africa. In Best, P.B. (ed.) Whales and dolphins of the southern African subregion. Cape Town: Cambridge University Press, pp. 113.Google Scholar
Baird, R.W., Nelson, D., Lien, J. and Nagorsen, D.W. (1996) The status of the pygmy sperm whale, Kogia breviceps, in Canada. Canadian Field Naturalist 110/3, 525532.Google Scholar
Baird, R.W. (2005) Sightings of dwarf (Kogia sima) and pygmy (K. breviceps) sperm whales from the main Hawaiian Islands. Pacific Science 59, 461466.Google Scholar
Ballance, L.T. and Pitman, R.L. (1998) Cetaceans of the western tropical Indian Ocean: distribution, relative abundance, and comparisons with cetacean communities of two other tropical ecosystems. Marine Mammal Science 14, 429459.Google Scholar
Best, P.B. (ed.) (2007) Whales and dolphins of the southern African subregion. Cape Town: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Brabyn, M. and McLean, I. (1992) Oceanography and coastal topography of herd-stranding sites for whales in New Zealand. Journal of Mammalogy 73, 469476.Google Scholar
Cadona Maldonado, M. and Mignucci Giannoni, A (1999) Pygmy and dwarf sperm whales in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, with a review of Kogia in the Caribbean. Caribbean Journal of Science 35, 2937.Google Scholar
Caldwell, D.K. and Caldwell, M.C. (1989) Pygmy sperm whale Kogia breviceps (de Blainville, 1838): dwarf sperm whale Kogia simus Owen, 1866. In Ridgway, S. and Harrison, R. (eds) Handbook of marine mammals. Volume 4. River dolphins and larger toothed whales. London: Academic Press, pp. 235260.Google Scholar
Chivers, S., LeDuc, R., Robertson, K., Barros, N. and Dizon, A. (2005) Genetic variation of Kogia spp. with preliminary evidence for two species of Kogia sima . Marine Mammal Science 21, 619634.Google Scholar
Clarke, M.R. (1980) Cephalopoda in the diet of sperm whales of the Southern Hemisphere and their bearing on sperm whale biology. Discovery Reports 37, 1324.Google Scholar
Clarke, M.R. (1986) A handbook for the identification of cephalopod beaks. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Clarke, M.R. (1996) Cephalopods as prey. III Cetaceans. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London 351B, 10531065.Google Scholar
Cooper, J. (1979) Length–mass relationships, water content and energy values of two species of squid, Loligo reynaudi and Todaropsis eblanae off the south-western Cape. Fisheries Bulletin of South Africa 11, 4345.Google Scholar
de Boer, M.N., Baldwin, R., Burton, C.L.K., Eyre, E.L., Jenner, K.C.S., Jenner, M.N.M., Keith, S.G., McCabe, K.A., Parsons, E.C.M., Peddemors, V.M., Rosenbaum, H.C., Rudolph, P. and Simmonds, M. (2002) Cetaceans in the Indian Ocean Sanctuary: a review. Paper SC/54/O5 presented to the IWC Scientific Committee.Google Scholar
de Bruyn, P.J.N., Bester, M.N., Kirkman, S.P., Mecenero, S., Roux, J.P. and Klages, N.T.W. (2005) Cephalopod diet of the Cape fur seal Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus, along the Namibian coast: variation due to location. African Zoology 40, 261270.Google Scholar
Elwen, S.H., Findlay, K.P., Kiszka, J. and Weir, C.R. (2011) Cetacean research in the southern African subregion: a review of previous studies and current knowledge. African Journal of Marine Science 33, 469493.Google Scholar
Findlay, K.P., Best, P.B., Ross, G.J.B. and Cockcroft, V.G. (1992) The distribution of small odontocete cetaceans off the coasts of South Africa and Namibia. South African Journal of Marine Science 12, 237270.Google Scholar
Geraci, J.R. and Lounsbury, V.J. (1993) Marine mammals ashore—a field guide for strandings. Galveston, TX: Texas A&M Sea Grant Publications, 305 pp.Google Scholar
Hart, K.M., Mooreside, P. and Crowder, L.B. (2006) Interpreting the spatio-temporal patterns of sea turtle strandings: going with the flow. Biological Conservation 129, 283290.Google Scholar
Kiszka, J., Ersts, P.J. and Ridoux, V. (2010) Structure of a toothed cetacean community around a tropical island (Mayotte, Mozambique Channel). African Journal of Marine Science 32, 543551.Google Scholar
Lipinksi, M.R. (1992) Cephalopods and the Benguela ecosystem: trophic relationships and impact. South African Journal of Marine Science 12, 791802.Google Scholar
Lipinski, M.R., Payne, A.I.L. and Rose, B. (1992) The importance of cephalopods as prey for hake and other groundfish in South African waters. South African Journal of Marine Science 12, 651662.Google Scholar
MacLeod, C., Bannon, S., Pierce, G., Schweder, C., Learmonth, J. and Reid, R. (2005) Climate change and the cetacean community of north-west Scotland. Biological Conservation 124, 477483.Google Scholar
Maldini, D., Mazzuca, L. and Atkinson, S. (2005) Odontocete stranding patterns in the main Hawaiian Islands (1937–2002): how do they compare with live animal surveys? Pacific Science 59, 5567.Google Scholar
McLellan, W.A., Friedlander, A.S., Mead, J.G., Potter, C.W. and Pabst, D.A. (2002) Analysing 25 years of bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) strandings along the Atlantic coast of the USA: do historic records support the coastal migratory stock hypothesis? Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 4, 297304.Google Scholar
Nesis, K.N. (1987) Cephalopods of the world. Neptune City, NJ: TFH Publications.Google Scholar
Plön, S. (2004) The status and natural history of pygmy (Kogia breviceps) and dwarf (K. sima) sperm whales off Southern Africa. PhD thesis. Department of Zoology & Entomology, Rhodes University, South Africa.Google Scholar
Pompa, S., Ehrlich, P. and Ceballos, G. (2011) Global distribution and conservation of marine mammals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108, 1360013605.Google Scholar
Roeleveld, M.A.C. (1998) The status and importance of cephalopod systematics in southern Africa. In Cephalopod biodiversity, ecology and evolution. South African Journal of Marine Science 20, 116.Google Scholar
Roeleveld, M.A.C., Lipinksi, M.R., Augustyn, C.J. and Stewart, B.A. (1992) The distribution and abundance of cephalopods on the continental slope of the eastern South Atlantic. In Payne, A.I.L., Brink, K.H., Mann, K.H. and Hillborn, R. (eds) Benguela trophic functioning. South African Journal of Marine Science 12, 739752.Google Scholar
Ross, G.J.B. (1979a) Records of pygmy and dwarf sperm whales, genus Kogia, from southern Africa, with biological notes and some comparisons. Annals of the Cape Provincial Museum of Natural History 11, 259327.Google Scholar
Ross, G.J.B. (1979b) The smaller cetaceans of the south-east coast of southern Africa. PhD thesis. Zoology Department, University of Port Elizabeth, Port Elizabeth. 415 pp.Google Scholar
Salvadeo, C., Lluch Belda, D., Gomez Gallardo, A., Urban Ramirez, J. and MacLeod, C. (2010) Climate change and a poleward shift in the distribution of the Pacific white sided dolphin in the northeastern Pacific. Endangered Species Research 11, 1319.Google Scholar
Sekiguchi, K., Klages, N.T.W. and Best, P.B. (1992) Comparative analysis of the diets of smaller odontocete cetaceans along the coast of southern Africa. In Payne, A.I.L., Brink, K.H., Mann, K.H. and Hillborn, R. (eds) Benguela trophic functioning. South African Journal of Marine Science 12, 843861.Google Scholar
Smale, M.J. (1983) Resource partitioning by top predatory teleosts in the Eastern Cape coastal waters (South Africa). PhD thesis. Rhodes University, South Africa.Google Scholar
Smale, M.J. (1996) Cephalopods as prey. IV. Fishes. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London 351B, 10671081.Google Scholar
Smale, M.J., Clarke, M.R., Klages, N.T. and Roeleveld, M.A.C. (1993) Octopod beak identification—resolution at a regional level (Cephalopoda, Octopoda: Southern Africa). South African Journal of Marine Science 13, 269293.Google Scholar
Smale, M.J. and Cliff, G. (1998) Cephalopods in the diets of four shark species (Galeocerdo cuvier, Sphyrna leweni, S. zygaena and S. mokarran) from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. South African Journal of Marine Science 20, 241253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Waerebeek, K., Ofori-Danson, P.K. and Debrah, J. (2009) The cetaceans of Ghana, a validated faunal checklist. West African Journal of Applied Ecology 15, 6189.Google Scholar
Veitch, J., Penven, P. and Shillington, F. (2009) The Benguela: a laboratory for comparative modelling studies. Progress in Oceanography 83, 296302.Google Scholar
Wedepohl, P.M., Lutjeharms, J.R.E. and Meeuwis, J.M. (2000) Surface drift in the south-east Atlantic Ocean. South African Journal of Marine Science 22, 7179.Google Scholar
Weir, C.R. (2007) Occurrence and distribution of cetaceans off northern Angola, 2004/05. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 9, 225239.Google Scholar
Weir, C.R. (2010) A review of cetacean occurrence in West African waters from the Gulf of Guinea to Angola. Mammal Review 40, 239.Google Scholar
Weir, C.R. (2011) Distribution and seasonality of cetaceans in tropical waters between Angola and the Gulf of Guinea. African Journal of Marine Science 33, 115.Google Scholar
Weir, C., MacLeod, C. and Calderan, S. (2009) Fine scale habitat selection by white beaked and common dolphins in the Minch (Scotland, UK): evidence for interspecific competition or coexistence? Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 89, 951960.Google Scholar
Willis, P. and Baird, R. (1998) Status of the dwarf sperm whale, Kogia simus, with special reference to Canada. The Canadian Field Naturalist 112, 114125.Google Scholar
Witt, M.J., Penrose, R. and Godley, B.J. (2006) Spatio-temporal patterns of juvenile marine turtle occurrence in waters of the European continental shelf. Marine Biology 151, 873885.Google Scholar
Wright, A.J. (2005) Lunar cycles and sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) strandings on the North Atlantic coastlines of the British Isles and eastern Canada. Marine Mammal Science 21, 145149.Google Scholar