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| Ecology and Behavior |
| Groups of two to five individuals are most commonly seen. Sei whales are fast swimmers, possibly the fastest of all cetaceans. When slow moving sei whales surface, their blowholes and dorsal fin are often visible above the water at the same time. Feeding sei whales tend to dive and surface in very predictable series, often remaining visible just below the surface between breaths.
Calving occurs in midwinter, in low latitude portions of the species' range. |
| Feeding and Prey |
| Sei whales skim copepods and other small prey types, rather than lunging and gulping, like other rorquals. This may largely explain the relative fineness of the baleen fringes and the shortness of the throat pleats in this species. |
| Threats and Status |
| After blue and fin whales, the sei whale was next in the line of fire of the modern whalerâs harpoon. The heaviest period of exploitation was between the 1950s and 1970s. Whaling took place in the North Pacific and North Atlantic oceans, but most hunting was in the Southern Hemisphere. Although fully protected by the IWC since 1985, a few were taken in the North Atlantic by Iceland in the last few decades of the 20th century. Sources of mortality other than direct exploitation include probable vessel strikes. Current global abundance of the sei whale is considered to be about 80,000.
IUCN & ESA Status = Endangered (IUCN); Endangered (ESA). |
| References |
HORWOOD, J. 2002. Sei whale Balaenoptera borealis. Pp. 1069-1071 in W. F. Perrin, B. Wursig and J. G. M. Thewissen, eds. Encyclopedia of marine mammals. Academic Press.
GAMBELL, R. 1985. Sei whale Balaenoptera borealis Lesson, 1828. 155-170 in S. H. Ridgway and R. Harrison, eds. Handbook of marine mammals, Volume 3: The sirenians and baleen whales. Academic Press.
HORWOOD, J. 1987. The sei whale: Population biology, ecology, and management. Croom Helm.
MIZROCH, S. A., D. W. RICE, AND J. M. BREIWICK. 1984. The sei whale, Balaenoptera borealis. Marine Fisheries Review 46:25-29.
PERRY, S. L., D. P. DEMASTER, AND G. K. SILBER. 1999. The status of endangered whales. Marine Fisheries Review 61(1):1-74. |
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