Never heard of an Omura’s whale? There’s a good reason. Until recently, no one had laid eyes on one in the wild.
Before 2003, the Omura’s whale was thought to be simply a dwarf
version of another type of whale. Then Japanese scientists studying the
whale’s DNA and bodily characteristics decided it ought to be its own
species, and named it after the late cetologist Hideo Omura. Still, all
they had to work with were carcasses caught by whalers or washed up on
the beach. They gleaned what information they could from the animals’
ear wax and stomach contents, but no one had ever seen Balaenoptera omurai swimming or eating or interacting. Pretty much all scientists knew was that it lived in the western Pacific.
Imagine the surprise, then, of researchers in a boat in the Indian
Ocean when they spied some Omura’s whales in the distance. During
a survey of marine mammals off Madagascar’s coast, New England Aquarium
scientist Salvatore Cerchio and his colleagues saw whales with markings
that seemed to match B. omurai. They used biopsy darts to snag
tissue samples from 18 of the whales as they swam by. DNA analysis
confirmed it: the animals were the elusive Omura’s whales.
Over the next few years, the scientists returned and recorded every
detail they could about this population. Since they were the first
humans to observe Omura’s whales in nature, everything they learned about the animals was new:
They’re lopsided
After 44 sightings, along with underwater video of three individuals,
the scientists had a much better idea of what Omura’s whales look like.
Adults are 8 to 12 meters long, and calves are half that size. (The
researchers estimated these numbers by waiting until the whales swam
close by, then comparing their length to the boat itself, which was
about one whale long.) The animals are mostly dark gray but have a big
white patch on their right lower jaw, as if wearing a lobster bib that
got pushed over to one side.
They’re enthusiastic eaters
Like the other rorquals—the group that B. omurai belongs
to—Omura’s whale likes to “lunge feed.” This means just what it sounds
like. A whale gapes its mouth wide open, then plows through a patch of
food. Rorquals have grooves on the undersides of their throats that act
like pleats, allowing the mouth to stretch. The researchers didn’t see
any fish during these lunge feedings, so they think the whales may have
been eating zooplankton (assorted ultra-small animals that drift in the
ocean).
They don’t get out much
The scientists also didn’t see any evidence that Omura’s whales make
migrations. Based on the calves they glimpsed, they think at least some
females are using this area to mate and have babies. And based on the
DNA samples, they know the whales here have low genetic
diversity—they’re all pretty similar to each other. So the Madagascar
Omura’s whales may be a small, local population that stays put.
On the other hand, there are Omura’s whales in an entirely different
part of the world from where they’d been found before. So while
individual whales may not travel much, the species as a whole is much
more widespread than it had seemed.
They’re loners
The scientists most often saw whales swimming alone. A handful
of times, they saw a mother with her calf. Only twice did they see adult
whales swimming together, and those hangouts lasted ten minutes or
less.
But they sing together
A microphone hanging from the boat captured recordings of Omura’s
whales singing. Their calls were distinctive, with a consistent rhythmic
pattern. Although the whales didn’t swim close together, they often
traveled in loose aggregations—say, a half-dozen animals within a few
hundred meters of each other. This was close enough for their songs to
overlap. The microphone sometimes captured choruses of multiple whales
singing at the same time.
The researchers think vocal communication may be a major part of the
whales’ lives, as it is in related species like the humpback. The song
of the Omura’s whale might be a display that males use to show off.
Either that, or the whales are saying, “What are these weird
floating animals we’ve never seen before?”
SOURCE:
Discovermagazine




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