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Mesoplodon bidens (Sowerby, 1804)

North Atlantic Beaked Whale; Physeter bidens; Sowerbys beaked whale

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Mesoplodon bidens

Sowerby's Beaked Whale

Order: Cetacea
Family: Ziphiidae

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Image of Mesoplodon bidens
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Most stranded Sowerby's beaked whales have been found on the coast of the British Isles, and the North Sea may be the center of the species ' distribution . We know very little about this whale, including what it eats and details of its growth, reproduction, and social organization. Adults are slightly more than 5 m in length and have bluish-gray or slate gray backs; calves are reported to be about 2.4 m long at birth. Stranded whales have been heard making cow-like vocalizations. At sea, this whale can be identified by its long snout. Adult males have distinctive, tall teeth that slant out and up from the sides of the jaw about a third of the way back from the front end of the mouth.

Also known as:
North Sea Beaked Whale, Dauphin de Dale, Dauphin de Havre

Length:
Range: 5.5 m males; 5.1 m females

References:

True, F.W., 1913.  Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections , 60(25):1.

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Mammal Species of the World

Distribution of Mesoplodon bidens

Skull of Mesoplodon bidens
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Mesoplodon bidens (Sowerby, 1804)

English: Sowerby's beaked whale, North Atlantic beaked whale
German: Sowerby-Zweizahnwal
Spanish: Zifio de Sowerby, ballena picuda de Sowerby
French: Mésoplodon de Sowerby; Baleine à bec de Sowerby

Family Ziphiidae



Mesoplodon bidens © Wurtz-Artescienza (see links )


1. Description

Adults are bluish grey or slate coloured, with grey to white flanks and belly. Young are generally paler and have fewer scars than the adults. The two flattened, triangular tusks of adult males erupt from the lower jaw, at about 37% of mandible length from the tip of the rostrum (Macleod and Herman, 2004; Jefferson et al. 2008). The largest specimen was 5.5 m long (Reidenberg and Laitman, 2009).

M. bidens has one of the most northerly distributions of all the beaked whales, which should help with identification. However, parts of its range overlap with other Mesoplodon species, especially Gervais' beaked whale, Blainville's beaked whale, and True's beaked whale, and it is likely to be difficult to distinguish it from these with any certainty at sea (Carwardine, 1995), however documented sightings are reported (Hooker and Baird, 1999). back to the top of the page


2. Distribution

Sowerby's beaked whale occurs in the temperate North Atlantic, the distribution range being delimited clockwise from Massachusetts to the Labrador Sea, Iceland, northern Norway south to the Azores, Madeira and the Canary Islands (Jefferson et al. 2008). There are no records off the NW African continent (K. van Waeebeek, pers. comm.).

Distribution of Mesoplodon bidens (Taylor et al. 2008; © IUCN; enlarge map ): temperate and
subarctic waters in the eastern and western North Atlantic (Pitman, 2002).

According to C.D. MacLeod (pers. comm.) Sowerby's beaked whale is known mainly from approx. 150 strandings, an exceptionally high number for the genus. In the western North Atlantic, 11 strandings were reported (Lien and Barry, 1990). Most records stem from the eastern North Atlantic, especially around Britain. However, Carlstroem et al. (1997) observed two Sowerby's beaked whales at 71° 30'N, 04°00'E in the Norwegian Sea. Kinze et al. (1998) reported a stranding from the Danish North Sea coast and Smeenk (1995) found a stranded specimen on the Dutch coast.

Sowerby's beaked whale is unlikely to live in the Baltic Sea, where the water is too shallow (Carwardine, 1995). There is one stranding report from Italy (Carwardine, 1995), but the species is only vagrant in the Mediterranean (Jefferson et al. 2008). Stray specimens have also been recorded from Florida (C.D. MacLeod, pers. comm.). Although there are more recorded strandings of this whale on British and European coasts, its range appears to be generally offshore throughout the cooler parts of the North Atlantic.

M. bidens is the most northerly recorded mesoplodont species in the North Atlantic, followed by M. mirus . The distribution of Mesoplodon species may relate to variations in water temperature (MacLeod, 2000). back to the top of the page


3. Population size

unknown. back to the top of the page


4. Biology and Behaviour

Habitat : Although it is one of the most commonly stranded Mesoplodon species, there have been few sightings at sea, and it is poorly known. De Buffrénil (1995b and references therein) mentions that two sightings north of Scotland and west of the Orkney Islands were in waters several hundreds of meters deep. Hooker and Baird (1999) observed groups of Sowerby's beaked whales in the Gully, a submarine canyon off eastern Canada, on four occasions ,in water depths of between 550 and 1500 m.

Behaviour : Hooker and Baird (1999) observed Sowerby's beaked whales to dive for between 12 and 28 minutes. Blows were either invisible or relatively inconspicuous. During all surfacings the long beak projected from the water well before the rest of the head or back was visible. While surfacing behaviour was generally unremarkable, one individual tail-slapped repeatedly.

Schooling : According to De Buffrénil (1995b and references therein) stranded animals usually occur singly. In those cases where two animals stranded together, these were mother-calf pairs. However, at least occasional formation of larger groups is supported by two strandings of M. bidens in Newfoundland; one in 1986 with 6 individuals and a second stranding in 1987 which involved 3 whales (Lien et al. 1990). Hooker and Baird (1999) found that group size in the Gully varied from 3 to 10 individuals. A mixed-composition group was observed on one occasion, consisting of at least two female-calf pairs and 2 to 4 adult males (based on the presence of visible teeth and extensive scarring). Another group consisted of three quite heavily scarred and therefore presumably male animals.

Food : Stomachs of freshly killed M. bidens primarily contained bottom-dwelling deep-water (greater than 400m) fish of between 100 and 200mm length (Gannon et al. 1998). Ostrom et al. (1993) evaluated the diet of Sowerby's beaked whales based on isotopic comparisons among north-western Atlantic cetaceans and found that the species feeds mostly on small, offshore squid. back to the top of the page


5. Migration

Little is known about migration; most northerly animals may migrate with advancing and retreating ice, and some populations may move towards the coasts during summer. Year-round strandings are recorded, but most occur from July to September. Animals probably live some distance offshore (Carwardine, 1995; de Buffrénil, 1995b and references therein).

According to Mead (1989) there does not seem to be any seasonality in the European stranding records. The only country for which enough records exist (n =41) to allow an analysis of seasonality is the United Kingdom. Strandings have been reported in every month except February, with a tendency towards a broad peak in the summer (July-September). According to C.D. MacLeod et al. (pers. comm.) most strandings of Sowerby's beaked whales on eastern coasts of the UK occurred in late summer and autumn which may coincide with a southward movement. back to the top of the page


6. Threats

Occasionally, individuals were caught incidentally in fishing gear (De Buffrénil, 1995b), e.g. in Newfoundland small-scale fishery (Jefferson et al. 1993). A number have been incidentally killed by whalers off Newfoundland, Iceland and in the Barents Sea (Jefferson et al. 2008).
Waring et al. (2001) report that for 1989-1998 observed by-catch rates in pelagic drift gillnets along the US East Coast amount to 24 Sowerby's beaked whales. These were caught exclusively in the area from Georges Canyon to Hydrographers Canyon along the continental shelf break and (continental) slope during July-October. Catches of other beaked whale species were significantly lower. back to the top of the page


7. Remarks

Range states (Taylor et al. 2008) :
Belgium; Canada; Canary Islands (Spain), Denmark; France; Germany; Gibraltar; Iceland; Ireland; The Netherlands; Norway; Portugal; Spain; Sweden; United Kingdom; United States of America (USA).

The species is categorised as "Data Deficient" by (the) IUCN and is not listed by CMS. Listed in CITES Appendix II. back to the top of the page


8. Sources

see " Genus Mesoplodon - Beaked whales: Introduction and Sources "

© Boris Culik (2010) Odontocetes. The toothed whales: " Mesoplodon bidens ". UNEP/CMS Secretariat, Bonn, Germany. http://www.cms.int/reports/small_cetaceans/index.htm
© Illustrations by Maurizio Würtz, Artescienza.
© Maps by IUCN.

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