Stenella coeruleoalba

Description: 

Physical Description & Behaviour

Striped dolphins are small pelagic dolphins and live in tropical to warm waters around the world. They are well-studied and known to be very social and acrobatic. They perform a variety of aerial behaviours, such as breaching and “roto-tailing” where they make high jumps while rapidly rotating their tail before entering the water surface. They occur in schools of several hundred to several thousand animals and sometimes approach moving vessels to bow-ride.

Striped dolphin © M. Camm

Striped dolphins have a characteristic slender body shape combined with a relatively long beak, which is well separated from their forehead, and they have a curved dorsal fin. The longest documented individual was about 2.5 meters in length and weighed 156 kg.

The name “coeruleoalba” refers to the pattern of blue and white stripes along the lateral and dorsal sides of their body. Their underbelly is usually white and their primary feature is a black stripe that runs along their full length and to their flippers respectively. There is also a dark blue patch around the eyes.

Striped dolphins feed on a variety of small pelagic and bentho-pelagic fish and squid.

 

Distribution & Abundance

The striped dolphin is well-documented in the western and eastern North and tropical Pacific as well as in the entire temperate and tropical Atlantic bordered by the Gulf Stream.

Due to their warm-water origin, they are rare in the ASCOBANS area and are most likely to be encountered southwest of the British Isles and in the English Channel. The SCANS II Project estimated that only about 160 individuals were present in the Agreement area in 2005.

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ Assessment

  • LC (least concern)

 

Threats

Incidental catches have been reported in various fisheries throughout their range; recently there is concern of increasing bycatch occurring in the Bay of Biscay. They also suffer from marine pollution and habitat degradation, as other marine mammal species do. In the 1990s, large numbers of striped dolphins mass-stranded in the Mediterranean due to a measles-like viral infection.

Western North Pacific populations have experienced heavy mortalities from Japanese striped dolphin drive and hand-harpoon fisheries. Annual catches have reached 21,000 individuals in some years. Although it has been tried, striped dolphins have not been successfully maintained in captivity.

 

More information on the striped dolphin can be found at
http://www.cms.int/reports/small_cetaceans/data/S_ceoruleoalba/s_coeruleoalba.htm.

 

 

 

 

Assessment information
CMS InstrumentsASCOBANS, CMS, ACCOBAMS, Western African Aquatic Mammals, Pacific Islands Cetaceans
IUCN StatusVulnerable
Geographic range
Countries France (Status: Increase), Ireland (Status: Increase), Portugal (Status: Unknown), Spain (Status: Unknown), United Kingdom (Status: Increase)
Common names
EnglishStriped Dolphin
Taxonomy
ClassMammalia
OrderCetacea
FamilyDelphinidae
Scientific name Stenella coeruleoalba
Population size and trend
Population Size interval Size quality Estimated population size Size reference Size notes
Trend interval Trend quality Trend Trend reference Trend notes
Northern East AtlanticPoor67,414 (CODA Survey)* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] The population size estimate is based on data collected during SCANS-II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCAN-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated population size is for the whole survey area and not just for the Northern East Atlantic. The separate estimate for this region is not available. All sightings occurred during the CODA survey.
NoneIncrease Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Central East AtlanticPoor67,414 (CODA Survey)* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] The population size estimate is based on data collected during SCANS-II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCAN-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated population size is for the whole survey area and not just for the Central East Atlantic. The separate estimate for this region is not available. All sightings occurred during the CODA survey.
NoneUnkown Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Bay of BiscayPoor67,414 (CODA Survey)* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] The population size estimate is based on data collected during SCANS-II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCAN-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated population size is for the whole survey area and not just for the Bay of Biscay. The separate estimate for this region is not available. All sightings occurred during the CODA survey.
NoneUnkown Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Northern North SeaPoor67,414 (CODA Survey)* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] The population size estimate is based on data collected during SCANS-II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCAN-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated population size is for the whole survey area and not just for the Bay of Biscay. The separate estimate for this region is not available. All sightings occurred during the CODA survey.
NoneIncrease Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
English ChannelPoor67,414 (CODA Survey)* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] The population size estimate is based on data collected during SCANS-II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCAN-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated population size is for the whole survey area and not just for the English Channel. The separate estimate for this region is not available. All sightings occurred during the CODA survey.
NoneIncrease Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Irish SeaPoor67,414 (CODA Survey)* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] The population size estimate is based on data collected during SCANS-II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCAN-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated population size is for the whole survey area and not just for the Irish Sea. The separate estimate for this region is not available. All sightings occurred during the CODA survey.
NoneIncrease Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Other details
Additional notesA SCANS-II report can be found here: http://biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/scans2/inner-furtherInfo.html and here http://biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/scans2/documents/final/SCANS-II_final_report.pdf. A CODA report can be found here: ttp://biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/coda/documents/CODA_Final_Report_11-2-09.pdf. The notes in the Threat section (Related Content) refer to the level of importance needed to address causes of mortality (identified from post-mortem examinations) of cetaceans in the ASCOBANS Agreement Area. This information also comes from this report: Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the ASCOBANS Area (AC18_6-05_ProjectReportTrendAnalysis_Corr.pdf).

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