Whales
Whales
Whales
For the first time, scientists have filmed and studied the elusive “type D” killer whales in the
wild.
At the bottom of the world, in some of the roughest seas, live mysterious killer whales that
look very different from other orcas.
Now, for the first time, scientists have located and studied these animals in the wild. The
orcas are “highly likely” to be a new species, says Robert Pitman, a researcher with the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The scientific team made the finding in January about 60 miles off the coast of Cape Horn,
Chile, at the very tip of South America—a region with the “world’s worst weather,” Pitman
adds.
These orcas, referred to as type D killer whales, were previously known from amateur
photographs, fishermen’s descriptions, and one mass stranding—but never encountered in
their natural state by cetacean experts. Unlike the other known types of orcas, they have a
more rounded head, a pointier and narrower dorsal fin, and a very small white eye patch.
They’re also several feet shorter in length, Pitman says. (See exclusive underwater video of
type D orcas.)
a killer whale
The newfound orca, known as the type D or subantarctic killer whale, is very likely a new
species, as it has a unique appearance: a rounded head, pointed dorsal fin, and small eye
patch.
a killer whale
A "typical" orca—the kind that is found around the world—is bigger in stature, has a larger
eye patch, and a less pointed dorsal fin.
The team, which set sail in the vessel Australis, ventured to an area where fishermen had
recently spotted the animals, and dropped anchor for more than a week. Finally, a pod of
about 25 killer whales approached the ship.
The scientists filmed the predators below and above water, and took a small piece of skin
and blubber from one, using a common, harmless research technique. They will soon study
the orca’s DNA, which will establish once and for all whether or not it’s a new species. (The
team is currently waiting on an export permit to take the sample out of Chile.)
The orcas congregated about the boat for a couple hours, seemingly curious about these
humans and their vessel. Though they intently inspected a hydrophone the researchers put
in the water, the animals did not make any vocalizations.
Photo evidence
Type D orcas were only first recorded when a group of more than a dozen stranded in New
Zealand in 1955. More than half a century later, in 2005, Pitman saw photographs collected
by Paul Tixier, a French scientist doing research off a remote archipelago in the southern
Indian Ocean known as the Crozet Islands.
The photos clearly showed these animals were the same type of killer whale that washed up
way back in 1955. “I looked at the photos and my jaw dropped,” Pitman says. “There they
were, 50 years on.”
These orcas have been known to steal fish off the lines of toothfish fisherman near the
Crozet Islands and Chile, and sometimes take up to one-third of their catch, Pitman says.
The two researchers collaborated with others using photographs and descriptions to author
the first study on type D killer whales, published in the journal Polar Biology in 2010. But
Pitman was still determined to find one in the wild.
“By collecting the first biopsy samples ever obtained on this form of killer whale, Pitman's
expedition [promises to] increase our knowledge on genetics, evolution, feeding
preferences, and resource partitioning in type Ds, and in killer whales as a whole,” says
Tixier, who is now a researcher at Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia, an in email
interview.
There are, indeed, other “ecotypes” of orcas, some of which may be different species,
including four varieties near Antarctica alone. Type A killer whales look similar to typical
orcas (which are found worldwide), but mainly feed on minke whales; type Bs are smaller
and many eat seals; type Cs go after fish. (Watch a rare video of young orcas hunting sea
turtles.)
But type D killer whales are even more odd in appearance. “This is by far the most different-
looking one,” Pitman says.
One or many?
Killer whales are still officially considered to be one species, Orcinus orca, but some of the
various types are quite likely to be distinct and deserving of their own scientific name, says
John Ford, a researcher with Fisheries and Oceans Canada and the University of British
Columbia.
But it requires a formal scientific process, which includes extensive measurements, DNA
analysis, and the like.
“There are good grounds for considering other killer whales separate species as well, but
where to draw that lines is very difficult,” Ford says.
An orca helps herd a school of herring in the deep waters of the Andfjorden in Norway. (See
more of orcas.)
Pitman suggests that a good common name for the orcas would be the subantarctic killer
whale. That aptly describes their habitat, in the offshore waters near Antarctica—but
doesn’t include the coldest waters. (Related: Read why orcas are in danger due to ocean
pollution.)
The region where they are found, between latitude 40 and 60, has some of the most
inhospitable weather on the planet, with strong winds and frequent storms that have earned
them the nicknames of the “roaring 40s” and the “furious 50s.”
Their choice of home, combined with the fact that they live in the open ocean, explains why
the killer whales are so little known.
“If you’re a large animal trying to hide from science, that’s exactly where you’d want to do
it,” Pitman says.