Killer whales, like bottlenose dolphins, are currently divided into ecotypes. For example, there are offshore, resident, and transient orcas, which exhibit different behavior and feeding habits. The offshore ecotype “are genetically different from their kin, the marine mammal-eating transient killer whales and fish-eating resident killer whales.” Recent research shows that these ecotypes and other orca groups from around the world represent distinct species and possibly up to two distinct subspecies. More via GenomeWeb Daily News:
Killer whale “ecotypes,” which vary in their choice of prey, behavior, and appearance, represent distinct species, according to a paper appearing online yesterday in Genome Research.
An international research team including researchers from Roche’s 454 Life Sciences and Roche Applied Sciences, used highly parallel pyrosequencing to assess the complete mitochondrial genomes of nearly 150 killer whales from the North Atlantic, North Pacific, and southern oceans. In so doing, they identified dozens of mitochondrial haplotypes that point to the existence of at least three killer whale species.
“We recommend that three named ecotypes be elevated to full species, and that two additional types be recognized as subspecies pending additional data,” lead author Phillip Morin, a geneticist affiliated with the National Marine Fisheries Service’s Southwest Fisheries Science Center and the University of California at San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and colleagues wrote.
Killer whales are currently classified as just one species, Orcinus orca. Nevertheless, researchers have identified several so-called killer whale ecotypes that have slightly different size and color patterns, behaviors, prey preferences, and social organizations.
More via NOAA:
“Offshore killer whales differ in size, shape and behavior from other two killer whales eco-types,” said Marilyn Dahlheim, a researcher from the Alaska Fisheries Science Center. Offshore killer whales are shyer, moving evasively and unpredictably when approach by boats, she explained. They are smaller and they tend to live in larger groups—up to 75 or 100 individuals.
Although the ranges of the three eco-types occasionally overlap, offshore killer whales have never been seen to intermix with resident or transient killer whales.
Offshore killer whales most likely subsist on fish. They have, for instance, been seen with salmon in their mouths. Scientists have observed many other foraging behaviors which also support the idea that they are fish-eaters. Scientists have watched offshore killer whales in the company of sea lions, gray whales, fin whales and dolphins. In no case did the offshore killer whales target these animals as prey, nor did the other marine mammals act as if the offshore killer whales were a predatory threat.
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