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| Ecology and Behavior |
| Southern right whales have been well-studied on their winter breeding grounds, especially at Peninsula Valdes, Argentina, and in Australia and South Africa. Researchers have used callosity patterns to identify individuals on these grounds, and have learned much about the right whale's behavior, communication, and reproduction. Right whales often seem slow and lumbering, but can be surprisingly quick and active. They often breach, and slap their flippers and flukes on the surface. Southern right whales often raise their flukes on a dive.
Most of the breeding in Argentina takes place in August and September, but mating has been observed in most months of the year. Male right whales have huge testes and long penises, two characteristics predicted in species in which males compete for females primarily through sperm competition, rather than by direct aggression in shallow water. |
| Feeding and Prey |
| Surface and subsurface skim feeding is the rule in this species. Southern right whales prey on copepods and krill, apparently sometimes feeding near the bottom. |
| Threats and Status |
| After North Atlantic right whale stocks began to be reduced, European and American whaling activity shifted to the Southern Hemisphere. Heavy exploitation there left stocks badly depleted. Unauthorized catches by the Russians in the late 20th century added to the depletion. Fisheries interactions, as well as potential vessel disturbance and collisions, continue to threaten the southern right whale. Although there are only thought to be about 7,500-8,000 animals left, this species is not as seriously endangered as the northern species, and some populations appear to be recovering.
IUCN & ESA Status:Lower Risk/Conservation Dependent (IUCN); Endangered (ESA). |
| References |
P. B. BEST, J. L. BANNISTER, R. L. BROWNELL Jr., AND G. P. DONOVAN (eds). 2001. Right whales worldwide status. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, Special Issue 2, 309 pp.
CUMMINGS, W. C. 1985. Right whales Eubalaena glacialis (Muller, 1776) and Eubalaena australis (Desmoulins, 1822). Pp. 275-304 in S. H. Ridgway and R. Harrison, eds. Handbook of marine mammals, Vol. 3 The sirenians and baleen whales. Academic Press.
ROSENBAUM, H. C., ET AL. 2000. World-wide genetic differentiation of Eubalaena Questioning the number of right whale species. Molecular Ecology 9:1793-1802.
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| Relevant OBIS-SEAMAP Datasets (# sets:
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