Orcinus orca

Description: 

Orcas are the largest member of the dolphin family and one of the most impressive marine predators. Attitudes toward killer whales have fortunately improved in recent decades. Although the species has long been idolized in many aboriginal maritime cultures, other societies feared, damned and commonly persecuted them.

Killer whale © M. Camm

 

Physical Description & Behaviour

The orca’s social organization is probably the best described of any cetacean and there is high diversity within this taxon. Evidence from genetic studies shows that orca populations have diverged, primarily as a result of feeding specialization. There are distinct mammal-eating and fish-eating populations. The main division is between “residents” – stable populations strongly associated with coastal habitats, predominantly feeding on fish – and “transients” – highly migratory populations in the high seas, specialized on hunting marine mammals, such as seals and other cetaceans. This differentiation has long been known e.g. for the Pacific coast off Canada. Recently, however, two distinct types of killer whales have also been described the North Atlantic.

Killer whales usually travel in groups of about 50 individuals. Resident societies can be arranged into a number of family groupings called pods based on their maternal genealogy. Highly organized clans of killer whales are known to have their own vocal communication dialects. In recent years orcas have become the focus of many commercial whale-watching operations in several regions.
Killer whales are familiar to most people due to their unmistakable black-and-white colour pattern, including a large white eye patch. Adult males can weigh twice as much as females, about 6 tons, and can reach up to 9 meters in length. Males also have proportionally larger flippers, tails and a remarkable tall dorsal fin.

The diet of killer whales comprises an extremely diverse array of prey species. Transients are known to prey on more than 35 marine mammal species, such as mysticetes, odontocetes, pinnipeds and sirenians. Fish-feeding populations prey predominantly on gregarious salmon, herring, cod and tuna. Large numbers of killer whales gather each autumn in the Norwegian Tysk Fjord to prey on spawning herring.

 

Distribution & Abundance

Killer whales are a truly cosmopolitan species, distributed throughout the world’s oceans and in all climatic zones.

They are common around the northern part of the British Isles, along the Norwegian coast and throughout the eastern North Atlantic. They occasionally enter the North Sea and Skagerrak. The killer whales occurring in the ASCOBANS area are likely to be part of a wider North Atlantic population but their precise relationships are not known and neither is their abundance. Sighting surveys in the eastern north Atlantic (mainly from Iceland to the Faeroes) suggest that a population of between 3,500 and 12,500 individuals is present (Reid et al. 2003).

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ Assessment

  • DD (data deficient)

 

Threats

Historically, killer whales have been the target of direct hunts in several regions, e.g. in Japan and Norway. Nowadays, killer whales are known to be in conflict with fisheries as they compete for many commercial fish species. They have been harassed or shot in Alaska and other regions to prevent them from taking fish from long-line fisheries. Since the 1960s, orcas have been captured live to be displayed in aquaria all over the world. The improved success of captive breeding in recent decades has reduced the need for live capture from wild populations.

Other conservation concerns include the direct effects of marine pollution (oil spills and toxic pollution). Also, as they are at a high level in the food chain, orcas are susceptible to bioaccumulation. Other potential human-induced impacts include underwater noise, habitat degradation and climate change.

 

More information on the killer whale can be found at
http://www.cms.int/reports/small_cetaceans/data/o_orca/o_orca.htm.

 

 

Assessment information
CMS InstrumentsASCOBANS, CMS, ACCOBAMS, Western African Aquatic Mammals, Pacific Islands Cetaceans
IUCN StatusData Deficient
Geographic range
Countries France (Status: Unknown), Ireland (Status: Unknown), Norway (Status: Unknown), Portugal (Status: Unknown), Spain (Status: Unknown), United Kingdom (Status: Unknown)
Common names
EnglishKiller Whale
Taxonomy
ClassMammalia
OrderCetacea
FamilyDelphinidae
Scientific name Orcinus orca
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 AtlanticNone50,000* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] There are no population abundance estimates from the SCANS II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys, which provide the species information for the ASCOBANS area. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCANS-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated abundance is for the global population of Killer Whales. There are no individual estimates for each region.
NoneUnkown Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Central East AtlanticNone50,000* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] There are no population abundance estimates from the SCANS II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys, which provide the species information for the ASCOBANS area. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCANS-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated abundance is for the global population of Killer Whales. There are no individual estimates for each region.
NoneUnkown Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Northern North SeaNone3,100* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] There are no population abundance estimates from the SCANS II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys, which provide the species information for the ASCOBANS area. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCANS-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated abundance is only for the Norwegian coastal waters population of Killer Whales, and not for the whole northern north sea.
NoneUnkown Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
English ChannelNone50,000* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] There are no population abundance estimates from the SCANS II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys, which provide the species information for the ASCOBANS area. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCANS-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated abundance is for the global population of Killer Whales. There are no individual estimates for each region.
NoneUnkown Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more]
Irish SeaNone50,000* Project Report: Review of Trend Analyses in the AS [more] There are no population abundance estimates from the SCANS II (2005) and CODA (2007) surveys, which provide the species information for the ASCOBANS area. See the previous Trend Analysis document for more details. SCANS-II and CODA reports can be found in the additional notes section. *Note: the estimated abundance is for the global population of Killer Whales. There are no individual estimates for each region.
NoneUnkown 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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