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Strandings of a neonate and a pregnant Sowerby's beaked whale (Mesoplodon bidens (Sowerby, 1804)) in Ireland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 August 2022

Seán A. O'Callaghan*
Affiliation:
Atlantic Technological University, Dublin Road, Galway City, Co. Galway, Ireland Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, Merchants Quay, Kilrush, Co. Clare, Ireland
Louise Overy
Affiliation:
Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, Merchants Quay, Kilrush, Co. Clare, Ireland Munster Technological University, Clash West, Tralee, Co. Kerry, Ireland
Lucy Hunt
Affiliation:
Sea Synergy Marine Awareness, Research & Activity Centre, Waterville, Co. Kerry, Ireland
Damian Foxall
Affiliation:
Sea Synergy Marine Awareness, Research & Activity Centre, Waterville, Co. Kerry, Ireland
Maurice Collins
Affiliation:
O'Leary Collins & Associates, The Fairfield, Cahersiveen, Co. Kerry, Ireland
Mick O'Connell
Affiliation:
Atlantic Technological University, Dublin Road, Galway City, Co. Galway, Ireland
*
Author for correspondence: Seán A. O'Callaghan, E-mail: seanocallaghan212@gmail.com
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Abstract

Sowerby's beaked whale is a deep-diving cetacean species specialized to live in the deep waters of the North Atlantic, including offshore Irish waters. Sightings of Sowerby's beaked whales in this area are infrequent and a substantial increase in our knowledge of their presence comes from recent static acoustic monitoring (SAM) and passive acoustic monitoring (PAM). However, most information on this species has been derived from stranding records, which provide opportunistic insights into this elusive species' cryptic life history. Here we report on the live stranding of a 1200 mm long neonate and an adult 5 m female Sowerby's beaked whale in July 2015 and on the stranding of a 4.9 m pregnant female in September 2020 with a 495 mm long male foetus in the south-west of Ireland. These stranding events provide an important insight into the reproductive life history of this species and provide further evidence that Sowerby's beaked whales calve in offshore Irish waters.

Type
Marine Record
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

Introduction

The Sowerby's beaked whale (Mesoplodon bidens (Sowerby, 1804)) is a Mesoplodon species endemic to the North Atlantic (Pitman & Brownell Jr., Reference Pitman and Brownell2020). Sowerby's have the most northern range of all mesoplodonts in the Atlantic, where most records are north of 30°N (Pitman & Brownell Jr., Reference Pitman and Brownell2020). Its distribution in the west extends between Massachusetts, USA and Labrador, Canada and in the east between the Canary Islands, Spain and Norway (Carlström et al., Reference Carlström, Denkinger, Feddersen and Øien1997; Martín et al., Reference Martín, Tejedor, Pérez-Gil, Dalebout, Arbelo and Fernandez2011; Pitman & Brownell Jr., Reference Pitman and Brownell2020). Extralimital stranding records have reportedly been made in the Gulf of Mexico, Mediterranean Sea, Dominican Republic and Brazil, but the majority of published records have been from strandings around Scotland and Ireland in the North-east Atlantic (MacLeod et al., Reference MacLeod, Pierce and Santos2004, Reference MacLeod, Perrin, Pitman, Barlow, Balance, D'Amico, Gerrodette, Joyce, Mullin, Palka and Waring2006; Bachara et al., Reference Bachara, Cermeño and Norman2014; Bittau et al., Reference Bittau, Leone, Gannier, Gannier and Manconi2018). This species is currently classed as least concern under the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) red list (Pitman & Brownell Jr., Reference Pitman and Brownell2020). The population in the eastern Atlantic was estimated to comprise 3518 individuals using aerial survey data (CV = 0.43%, 95% CI 1570–7883; Rogan et al., Reference Rogan, Cañadas, Macleod, Santos, Mikkelsen, Uriarte, Van Canneyt, Vázquez and Hammond2017) while stable isotope evidence from stranded specimens has indicated local site fidelity of whales within the west and east North Atlantic, which suggests the potential for different populations (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Trueman, France, Sparks, Brownlow, Dähne, Davison, Guðmundsson, Khidas, Kitchener, Langeveld, Lesage, Meijer, Ososky, Sabin, Timmons, Vikingsson, Wenzel and Peterson2021).

Sightings in addition to both static acoustic monitoring (SAM) and passive acoustic monitoring data (PAM), indicate this species resides within deep-water habitats along the continental shelf, Mid-Atlantic Ridge and within canyon systems (MacLeod et al., Reference MacLeod, Pierce and Santos2004; Kowarski et al., Reference Kowarski, Delarue, Martin, O'Brien, Meade, Cadhla O and Berrow2018; Clarke et al., Reference Clarke, Feyrer, Moors-Murphy and Stanistreet2019; Pitman & Brownell Jr., Reference Pitman and Brownell2020). Information on the species' life history is limited, but stomach content and dive tag analyses indicate it preys on meso-bathypelagic fish, cephalopod and crustacean species at depths of between 670–1386 m (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Neves, Prieto, Silva, Cascão, Oliveira, Cuz, Medeiros, Barreiros, Porteiro and Clarke2011; Spitz et al., Reference Spitz, Cherel, Bertin, Kiszka, Dewez and Ridoux2011; Breen et al., Reference Breen, Pirotta, Allcock, Bennison, Boisseau, Bouch, Hearty, Jessop, Kavanagh, Taite and Rogan2020; Pitman & Brownell Jr., Reference Pitman and Brownell2020; Visser et al., Reference Visser, Oudejans, Keller, Madsen and Johnson2022).

One necropsied Sowerby's beaked whale that stranded in Ireland had blue whiting (Micromesistius poutassou (Risso, 1827)), whiting (Merlangius merlangus (Linnaeus, 1758)), lanternfish (three Myctophids sp.) and Trisopterus sp. present (Hernandez-Milian & Rogan, Reference Hernandez-Milian and Rogan2011). The gestation period is believed to be 12 months, where calves weigh 185 kg and are between 2.28–2.7 m at birth (Mead, Reference Mead1984; Reidenberg & Laitman, Reference Reidenberg, Laitman, Perrin, Würsig and Thewissen2009; Bachara et al., Reference Bachara, Laria and Lopez2016). They appear to be physically mature at 5.05–5.5 m in total length (Reidenberg & Laitman, Reference Reidenberg, Laitman, Perrin, Würsig and Thewissen2009).

Sowerby's are one of six species of beaked whale that have been recorded in Irish waters from the 1800s as strandings, as well as limited sightings since 2000 and extensive acoustic records since 2015 (Bruton et al., Reference Bruton, Cotton and Enright1989; Kowarski et al., Reference Kowarski, Delarue, Martin, O'Brien, Meade, Cadhla O and Berrow2018; Richardson et al., Reference Richardson, Jessopp, Hunt and Kavanagh2018). The Sowerby's beaked whale was first recorded in Ireland as a stranding in Brandon Bay, Co. Kerry on 9 March 1864 (Andrews, Reference Andrews1867) and 32 strandings have been recorded up to 13 September 2021 (IWDG, 2022). Strandings occurred between February and November predominantly along Atlantic coasts with a peak between July–September (N = 17) (IWDG, 2022). In total, Sowerby's strandings have consisted of 14 males, 11 females and seven unsexed whales (IWDG, 2022). When measurements were available, males ranged from 2.4–4.9 m in length (3.9 m mean, N = 10) while females ranged from 3.6–5.5 m (4.59 m mean, N = 10) (IWDG, 2022). Four live strandings have occurred (IWDG, 2022). Seventy-five per cent (N = 24) of Sowerby's beaked whale strandings have been recorded since 2004 (IWDG, 2022). It is the third most reported stranded beaked whale species in Ireland (five species have been identified stranded to date) after the most numerous, Cuvier's beaked whale (Ziphius cavirostris (Cuvier, 1823)) and the northern bottlenose whale (Hyperoodon ampullatus (Forster, 1770)) (IWDG, 2022). As of March 2022, Sowerby's consisted of 14.95% of all recorded Irish beaked whale strandings when species identification was possible (N = 214) (IWDG, 2022).

This species has infrequently been observed alive in Irish waters on at least 21 occasions between 2000–2017 (Ó Cadhla et al., Reference Ó Cadhla, Mackey, Aguilar de Soto, Rogan and Connolly2004; Wall, Reference Wall2013; ORCA, 2016; Rogan et al., Reference Rogan, Breen, Mackey, Cañadas, Scheidat, Geelhoed and Jessopp2018; Berrow et al., Reference Berrow, Meade, Marrinan, McKeogh and O'Brien2018a, Reference Berrow, O'Brien, Meade, Delarue, Kowarski, Martin, Moloney, Wall, Gillespie, Leaper, Gordon, Lee and Porter2018b; Breen et al., Reference Breen, Pirotta, Allcock, Bennison, Boisseau, Bouch, Hearty, Jessop, Kavanagh, Taite and Rogan2020; NBDC, 2021). Sightings were concentrated along the north Porcupine Bank, located ~150–250 km west of Ireland, but extended into the Rockall Trough, Rockall Plateau and Porcupine Seabight. Group sizes ranged from 1–6 individuals with mixed sex associations along with juveniles and calves reported (Berrow et al., Reference Berrow, Meade, Marrinan, McKeogh and O'Brien2018a). Sightings were made in the months of May, June, August, September and November. Breen et al. (Reference Breen, Pirotta, Allcock, Bennison, Boisseau, Bouch, Hearty, Jessop, Kavanagh, Taite and Rogan2020) estimated the depth of Sowerby's beaked whales foraging on the shelf edge of the Porcupine Bank to be between 324–840 m.

Acoustic detections of Sowerby's were made during all SAM deployment months (March–December) during the ObSERVE Acoustic project in 2015 and 2016 (Berrow et al., Reference Berrow, O'Brien, Meade, Delarue, Kowarski, Martin, Moloney, Wall, Gillespie, Leaper, Gordon, Lee and Porter2018b). Sowerby's beaked whales were detected on 58.4% of days and the highest average recordings were in May at the northern stations on the Porcupine Bank and Rockall Trough (Kowarski et al., Reference Kowarski, Delarue, Martin, O'Brien, Meade, Cadhla O and Berrow2018). This confirmed earlier reports that Sowerby's were found to be more common than other beaked whale species at higher latitudes, especially during the spring months (Kowarski et al., Reference Kowarski, Delarue, Martin, O'Brien, Meade, Cadhla O and Berrow2018; Barile et al., Reference Barile, Berrow and O'Brien2021). Northern areas of the shelf edge, such as the Rockall Trough are exposed to oceanographic factors including the North Atlantic current, continuous shelf edge current, persistent eddy systems and upwelling areas, which appear to influence the presence of beaked whales, including Sowerby's beaked whales (Barile et al., Reference Barile, Berrow and O'Brien2021). The nearly year-round acoustic presence and a rate of 1.3 strandings per year over the last 17 years indicate that offshore Irish waters represent an important habitat for this species within the North-east Atlantic.

Materials and methods

Cetacean strandings in Ireland are responded to by trained volunteers once reported to the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group (IWDG) where photographs, total length measurements and opportunistic tissue samples are taken.

On 3 July 2015 a neonate Sowerby's beaked whale (Case 1) was recorded live stranded at Cloghane, Co. Kerry (Figure 1, Table 1). It was refloated by responders with LO but was not seen again. An adult female Sowerby's beaked whale was also located stranded dead ~1.56 km south of where the neonate had initially stranded on the same day (Figure 1, Table 1).

Fig. 1. Location of the case 1 live stranded neonate and adult female Sowerby's beaked whale stranded at Cloghane, Brandon Bay, Co. Kerry on 3 July 2015 and the location of the case 2 pregnant female at Lohar Strand, Ballinskelligs Bay, Co. Kerry on 4 September 2020.

Table 1. Adult female, neonate and foetus Sowerby's beaked whale stranding summary data from southwest Ireland

On 4 September 2020 an adult female Sowerby's beaked whale (Case 2) stranded at Lohar Beach, Ballinskelligs Bay, Co. Kerry in the south-west of Ireland (Figure 1, Table 1). It was photographed, measured and sampled on 5 September 2020 by LH. SAO'C took blubber thickness measurements following Pugliares et al. (Reference Pugliares, Bogomolni, Toughey, Herzig, Harry and Moore2007) with LH and DF on 6 September. A gross necropsy was conducted by SAO'C on 9 September to gather additional samples and examine the whale's internal anatomy with assistance from DF following the methodology used by the Irish small cetacean necropsy project and Pugliares et al. (Reference Pugliares, Bogomolni, Toughey, Herzig, Harry and Moore2007).

Results

The Case 1 neonate Sowerby's beaked whale calf which live stranded in 2015 was unsexed but measured 1200 mm in length (LO pers. obs; O'Connell & Berrow, Reference O'Connell and Berrow2018). It displayed visible neonatal folds, its dorsal fin was slightly curved to the right and its head was kept well above the water when surfacing in a jerking manner, noted as ‘rocketship’ surfacing behaviour (Hill et al., Reference Hill, Dietrich and Cappiello2017). Its folds appeared irregular and wrinkled (Figure 2). The adult female, recorded two days later, appeared to be in a good overall nutritional condition and measured 5 m long but lacerations and bruising along its ventral side suggested that it had live stranded (Figure 3). No necropsy was undertaken on this whale, and it was buried where it was found.

Fig. 2. The neonate Sowerby's beaked whale live stranded at Cloghane, Co. Kerry on 3 July 2015. Photograph by Louise Overy.

Fig. 3. The adult female Sowerby's beaked whale stranded at Cloghane, Co. Kerry photographed on 5 July 2015 displaying evidence of live-stranding. Photographs by Louise Overy.

When examined externally, the Case 2 female Sowerby's beaked whale in 2020 was 4.9 m long and appeared emaciated with the rib cage, left scapula, lumbar/thoracic vertebrae and skull shape clearly visible (Figure 4). It was in a fresh decomposition condition following O'Connell & Berrow (Reference O'Connell and Berrow2013). It had a blubber thickness of 31 mm on the dorsal, 23 mm lateral and 27 mm ventral sides. Hypostatic congestion was noted on the female's lungs which suggested that it had live stranded (Davison pers. comm; Davison et al., Reference Davison, Brownlow, McGovern, Dagleish, Perrett, Dale, Koylass and Foster2015). The stranding occurred during a period of large spring tides which deposited the carcass above the high tide line. The beak was fractured which was most likely attributed to the boulders in the stranding area.

Fig. 4. The extremely poor nutritional condition evident externally for the female Sowerby's beaked whale from a head on perspective (A) and along the dorsal side (B) stranded at Lohar Strand, Ballinskelligs Bay, Co. Kerry on 6 September 2020. Photographs by Seán A. O'Callaghan.

There was no evidence of recent feeding or marine debris present within its examined stomach chambers. A light orange/brown substance was present in the large intestine which may have been bile. One skin lesion was apparent on the whale's skin left abdomen which might be attributed to a parasitic sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus (Linnaeus, 1758)) but a Phyllobothrium species was present in its blubber layer in low numbers. The uterus was found to be enlarged and filled with transparent amniotic fluid when initially examined. When it was opened and handled, the foetus' head came into view so it was kept in situ until suitable photographs could be taken to document the record appropriately (Figure 5).

Fig. 5. The male foetus Sowerby's beaked whale on 9 September 2020 when initially found (A) and when removed from the uterus (B). Photographs by Seán O'Callaghan (A) and Damian Foxall (B).

The foetus was identified as being male (Figure 5). It was 495 mm in total length when measured in a straight-line distance, 210 mm in girth and weighed 1.5 kg (Table 2). Evidence of skin colouration was noted around the beak, eyes and dorsal side of the head where the epidermis was more developed than elsewhere on the body which remained pink in colour (Figure 5). The epidermis sloughed off while the foetus was handled gently. It appeared that tooth buds were developing in the lower jaw on inspection. The foetus was preserved in 35% formaldehyde and donated to the collections of the National Museum of Ireland – Natural History on 11 September 2020 (acquisition number NH:2020:11.1).

Table 2. Morphometric measurements from the male Sowerby's beaked whale foetus in Case 2

Discussion

Other records of pregnant and neonate Sowerby's beaked whales have been reported elsewhere in the North-east Atlantic, which suggests that the species mates and calves across their range. A 540 mm male foetus was uncovered from a 4.85 m female Sowerby's beaked whale which became stranded in a shallow reef and was killed after being harpooned near Vila Franca do Campo at São Miguel Island, the Azores, Portugal on 24 September 1981, while two other individuals from the same group continued along the coast (Reiner, Reference Reiner1986). Another prematurely born calf was recorded as a 1250 mm female in Asturias, northern Spain, on 6 June 2016 (Table 2; Bachara et al., Reference Bachara, Laria and Lopez2016). A mother/calf pair also live stranded at Durness in Scotland on 30 September 2014, the female was lactating and the neonate male appeared to have milk in its stomach (Brownlow et al., Reference Brownlow, Davison and ten Doeschate2015). Mead (Reference Mead1984) reported 1570 mm to be the longest foetus length. The size of the Case 1 neonate in Ireland (1200 mm) and its swimming and surfacing behaviour suggests it was prematurely born prior to live stranding.

It seems likely that the apparently poor nutritional condition of the Case 1 neonate at Cloghane was a result of maternal separation, but no genetic testing was carried out between the neonate and the female which stranded dead 2 days after the neonate (given samples from the neonate do not exist) to confirm whether these two events were related. The Case 2 pregnant whale did not display any immediately obvious abnormalities apart from its very poor nutritive condition. While a gross necropsy was performed, without further investigation by a vet or pathologist, it was not possible to determine the underlying cause for the poor condition of this animal.

Between 1 August–31 October 2020, an unusual mortality event (UME) occurred involving 20 separate beaked whale stranding events, comprising 35 individual animals across six European countries (Hoare, Reference Hoare2020; Ijsseldijk pers. comm; Dolman et al., Reference Dolman, Berrow, Brownlow, Deaville, Evans, Fernandez, Gordon, Haelters, Ijsseldijk, Miller, Morell, Plön, Renell, Simmonds, Stockin, Virgili and Wickson2021; SMASS, 2021; IWDG, 2022). Three beaked whale species were recorded stranded across the eastern Atlantic, from the Faroe Islands, Scotland, Ireland, England, the Netherlands and Belgium, including northern bottlenose whales (N = 24), Cuvier's beaked whales (N = 2), Sowerby's beaked whales (N = 7) and one stranding not identified to species level (Hoare, Reference Hoare2020; Ijsseldijk pers. comm; Dolman et al., Reference Dolman, Berrow, Brownlow, Deaville, Evans, Fernandez, Gordon, Haelters, Ijsseldijk, Miller, Morell, Plön, Renell, Simmonds, Stockin, Virgili and Wickson2021; SMASS, 2021; IWDG, 2022). The pregnant individual in Case 2 stranded during the 2020 UME, and is included in the above strandings for Sowerby's beaked whales (Ijsseldijk pers. comm; Dolman et al., Reference Dolman, Berrow, Brownlow, Deaville, Evans, Fernandez, Gordon, Haelters, Ijsseldijk, Miller, Morell, Plön, Renell, Simmonds, Stockin, Virgili and Wickson2021; SMASS, 2021; IWDG, 2022). Four UMEs involving beaked whales have occurred in European waters since 1994, three of which have taken place since 2008 (in 2008, 2018 and 2020; Dolman et al., Reference Dolman, Berrow, Brownlow, Deaville, Evans, Fernandez, Gordon, Haelters, Ijsseldijk, Miller, Morell, Plön, Renell, Simmonds, Stockin, Virgili and Wickson2021). These events suggest there is an increasing trend and magnitude of stranding events involving beaked whales in this region, especially given the world's largest beaked whale mortality event happened in 2018 involving 100 individuals (Brownlow et al., Reference Brownlow, Davison, ten Doeschate, Berrow, Dagleish, Deaville, van Geel, Hantke, Jepson, Onoufriou, Risch, Rocchi and Dale2019; Dolman et al., Reference Dolman, Berrow, Brownlow, Deaville, Evans, Fernandez, Gordon, Haelters, Ijsseldijk, Miller, Morell, Plön, Renell, Simmonds, Stockin, Virgili and Wickson2021). Beaked whale species are known to be sensitive to anthropogenic noise which has been attributed to abnormal stranding events elsewhere in the world (Bernaldo de Quirós et al. Reference Bernaldo de Quirós, Fernandez, Baird, Brownell, Aguilar de Soto, Allen, Arbelo, Arregui, Costidis, Fahlman, Frantzis, Gulland, Iñíguez, Johnson, Komnenou, Koopman, Pabst, Roe, Sierra, Tejedor and Schorr2019).

Beaked whale strandings provide important access to rare specimens, which can help to understand their biology and ecology, which highlights the value of coordinating and monitoring long-term stranding datasets to understand spatial and temporal trends. Additionally, the value of empirical data and samples from such rare species emphasizes the need to respond to strandings such as beaked whales with fully trained personnel to conduct necropsies and assess potential underlying conditions or traumas to better understand the species’ life history and potential pressures they face.

Conclusion

These two Sowerby's beaked whale stranding records as well as the offshore sightings of both juveniles and calves suggest that Irish waters represent an important calving area for this species. However, additional knowledge of this offshore species life history is required to understand and protect the species better. Increased conservation efforts should be made to evaluate and ensure that this species receives appropriate protection from anthropogenic effects in this area in light of the increasing beaked whale mortality events in Ireland, the apparent increasing frequency of Irish offshore and adjacent international waters being used by military vessels (such as the live fire missile exercises conducted by Russia in February 2022 and by France in June 2022) and because this range-restricted species is likely to be affected by climate change in the years to come.

Acknowledgements

With thanks to Nick Davison from the Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme (SMASS) for comments on the condition of the pregnant female whale and for permission to note the Scottish beaked whale strandings between August–October in 2020 from the SMASS stranding database. Thanks also to Dr Lonneke Ijsseldijk of Utrecht University for comments on the 2020 Dutch beaked whale strandings and Stephanie Levesque for access to the IWDG Irish stranding records. Thanks to Dr Amy Geraghty from the National Museum of Ireland – Natural History for preparing and preserving the foetus for the museum's collections. Support given by Poppy and Tabitha Overy during the neonate live stranding was very much appreciated by LO. Thanks also to the anonymous reviewers whose comments were especially useful in improving the quality of this study.

Author contributions

SOC conceptualised, analysed and wrote the manuscript. LH collected field data with DF and edited the manuscript. MC assisted in the collection and preservation of the foetus. LO gathered data from the 2015 neonate stranding and assisted in editing. MOC gathered and analysed all Irish beaked whale strandings up to the point of the 2020 pregnant individual.

Financial support

No funding was available to undertake the fieldwork or the production of this manuscript.

Conflict of interest

Nothing to declare.

Consent for publication

Granted by those involved in the publication.

Availability of data and materials

The Irish data that supported the findings of this study are available from the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group (IWDG) on request.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Location of the case 1 live stranded neonate and adult female Sowerby's beaked whale stranded at Cloghane, Brandon Bay, Co. Kerry on 3 July 2015 and the location of the case 2 pregnant female at Lohar Strand, Ballinskelligs Bay, Co. Kerry on 4 September 2020.

Figure 1

Table 1. Adult female, neonate and foetus Sowerby's beaked whale stranding summary data from southwest Ireland

Figure 2

Fig. 2. The neonate Sowerby's beaked whale live stranded at Cloghane, Co. Kerry on 3 July 2015. Photograph by Louise Overy.

Figure 3

Fig. 3. The adult female Sowerby's beaked whale stranded at Cloghane, Co. Kerry photographed on 5 July 2015 displaying evidence of live-stranding. Photographs by Louise Overy.

Figure 4

Fig. 4. The extremely poor nutritional condition evident externally for the female Sowerby's beaked whale from a head on perspective (A) and along the dorsal side (B) stranded at Lohar Strand, Ballinskelligs Bay, Co. Kerry on 6 September 2020. Photographs by Seán A. O'Callaghan.

Figure 5

Fig. 5. The male foetus Sowerby's beaked whale on 9 September 2020 when initially found (A) and when removed from the uterus (B). Photographs by Seán O'Callaghan (A) and Damian Foxall (B).

Figure 6

Table 2. Morphometric measurements from the male Sowerby's beaked whale foetus in Case 2