Rough-toothed Dolphin

Rough-toothed Dolphin

Taxobox
name = Rough-toothed Dolphin
status = DD
status_system = iucn2.3


image_caption = Rough-toothed Dolphin, from the NOAA



image2_caption = Size comparison against an average human
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Mammalia
subclassis = Eutheria
ordo = Cetacea
subordo = Odontoceti
familia = Delphinidae
genus = "Steno"
species = "S. bredanensis"
binomial = "Steno bredanensis"
binomial_authority = G. Cuvier in Lesson, 1828
range_

range_map_caption = Rough-toothed Dolphin range
The Rough-toothed Dolphin ("Steno bredanensis") is a fairly large dolphin that can be found in deep warm and tropical waters around the world.

Naming and discovery

The species was first described by Georges Cuvier in 1823. The genus name "Steno", of which this species is the only member, comes from the Greek for 'narrow', referring to the animal's beak - which is a diagnostic characteristic of the species. The specific name honours van Breda, who studied Cuvier's writings. The common name refers to the thin lines of enamel that run vertically down the dolphin's teeth.

Physical description

The characteristic feature of this dolphin is its conical head and slender nose. The flippers are set back further along the body than in other similar dolphins (at sea this dolphin may be confused with the Spinner, Spotted and Bottlenose Dolphins.) The dorsal fin is pronounced.

The lips, throat and belly are pinky-white. The flanks are a light grey and the back and dorsal fin a much darker grey. The dolphin grows up to about 2.5m in length and weighs about 150kg.

The species is social. Group sizes are commonly as large as fifty and groups as large as 100 have been reported. The dolphin has not been observed to bow-ride but does "skim" - swim with their heads and chin above the surface of the water.

Population and distribution

The distribution and population of the Rough-toothed Dolphin is poorly understood. Most of the research activity concerning the dolphin has been directed in the eastern Pacific Ocean where a population estimate of 150,000 has been obtained. There have been numerous reports from other warm seas, usually as a result of by-catches. Populations of unknown sizes exist in the Mediterranean and Caribbean Seas and the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans. Live sightings are almost universally made far off-shore beyond the continental shelf.

Conservation

The population is not believed to be threatened by human activities. A small number of individuals have been harpooned by Japanese whalers. Others have been caught in seine nets by trawlers fishing for tuna.

References

* Database entry includes justification for why this species is listed as data deficient
*"Steno bredanensis" pp. 269-280, by J Maigret in "Handbuch der Säugetiere Europas. Band 6: Meeressäuger Teil 1A: Wale und Delphine 1" Niethammer J, Krapp F, (Eds.) (1995).

External links

* [http://www.wdcs.org Whale & Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS)]
* [http://sailhawaii.com/steno.html Rough-toothed Dolphins in Hawaii]


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