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Species:
Sperm Whale Physeter
macrocephalus

Quick
Facts:
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Population:
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750,000
individuals
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Location:
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Oceans
worldwide
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Size:
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50
feet long
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Weight:
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Up
to 40 tons
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Diet:
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Giant
squid, fish, octupus & skate
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The Sperm Whale is the
largest of the toothed whales. Its massive
head can be about 20 feet long or one-third
of its body length.
Prized by 19th century
whaling fleets, 'spermaceti' oil fills a Sperm
whale's head; it was once used as a valuable
lubricant in industrial machinery.
Ambergris, a strange substance
found in large lumps in the lower intestine
of Sperm whales, is formed around squid beaks
that remain in the stomach. It is still used
today in the making of expensive perfumes.
The Sperm whale's ivory-like
teeth were often sought by whalers who used
them to produce elaborate carvings known as
'scrimshaw.'
Sperm whales are the
world's deepest diving mammal, able to reach
depths of up to one mile.
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Description
& Characteristics:
Best known for its leviathan role in the story, Moby
Dick, the unmistakable Sperm whale cruises deep waters
in all the world's oceans. Swimming in schools of 20 to
25 individuals (mostly females and their young), these
whales are commonly found in submarine trenches at the
edge of the continental shelf but may occur inshore where
water is deeper than 600 feet. Typically, only the bulls
(adult males) are found in the Antarctic where they migrate
in the summer to feed. Despite their importance to the
whaling industry during the 19th and early 20th centuries,
Sperm whale populations remain quite healthy, especially
in the southern oceans.
Although the Sperm whale is easily identified it rarely
shows much of its body above the water. The largest of
the Antarctic toothed cetaceans, Sperm whales have an
enormous square head and a robust dark grey or brownish
grey body with corrugations in the skin giving it a shrivelled
prune-like appearance. The narrow lower jaw is filled
with 20-25 large conical teeth (which fit into sockets
in the upper jaw). Sperm whales have no dorsal fin but
two-thirds of the way down the back there is a marked
dorsal hump, followed by a series of distinctive knuckles
reaching to the broad, triangular and deeply notched tail
flukes.
Sperm Whales feed on squid, fish and octopuses caught
on amazingly deep ocean dives. When feeding, they consume
about one ton of food each day. Like other toothed whales,
the Sperm Whale uses echolocation as a means of navigation
and identifying prey. By emitting a series of high-pitched
clicks and sensing them as they bounce back, the whales
are able to tell what is around them. This is crucial
in hunting giant squid some which reach 500 pounds and
are found in absolute darkness at depths of nearly 4000
or 5000 feet.
Sperm
whale pairing and calving occurs during the winter months
in temperate and tropical waters. During
breeding season pods made up of females and their young
are joined by the more solitary males returning from distant
feeding forays in the polar latitudes. Mothers give birth
after a 15 to 16 month pregnancy to calves measuring up
to 13 feet and weighing one ton. While the adult males
head out on their own to feed, the calves will nurse on
their mother's fat-rich milk for several months, gaining
size rapidly. Mother and calf will stay together for a
year or more, establishing strong familial bonds within
the pod.
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