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PacMam Podcast
Cindy Elliser
123 episodes
6 days ago
Become a Paid Subscriber: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pacific-mammal-research/subscribe Cindy and Kat from Pacific Mammal Research (PacMam) talk about marine mammals, research, and environmental news in this fun podcast! Become a Paid Subscriber - get ad-free episodes and bonus mini-episodes/content available to subscribers only: https://anchor.fm/pacific-mammal-research/subscribe. Your support helps us continue our research and education programs!
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Natural Sciences
Science
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All content for PacMam Podcast is the property of Cindy Elliser and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Become a Paid Subscriber: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pacific-mammal-research/subscribe Cindy and Kat from Pacific Mammal Research (PacMam) talk about marine mammals, research, and environmental news in this fun podcast! Become a Paid Subscriber - get ad-free episodes and bonus mini-episodes/content available to subscribers only: https://anchor.fm/pacific-mammal-research/subscribe. Your support helps us continue our research and education programs!
Show more...
Natural Sciences
Science
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PacMam Podcast: New species of killer whales?
PacMam Podcast
1 hour 7 minutes 3 seconds
1 year ago
PacMam Podcast: New species of killer whales?

Globally there is currently one speices of Killer whale, Orcinus Orca. However they are divided into many different ecotypes based on their foraging, physical, behavioral and cultural differences. There has long been varying amounts of evidence that some of these ecotypes deserve status as at least a sub-species, if not fully separate species. However none have to date been recognized, mostly due to lack of a multitude of clear evidence. But that has changed with the Resident (fish eating) and Bigg's (aka transients, mammal eating) killer whales in the Eastern North Pacific. A new paper brings together multiple lines of evidence to propose that these two ecotypes are different from one another and every other orca population in the world. Enough to warrent them their own species status (suggested O. ater and O. rectipinnus). Join us to learn about the convincing evidence, the process still to come for the possible confirmation of this new designation, and what that means for conservation.


Paper is open access: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/epdf/10.1098/rsos.231368

Information about how they choose the names: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/feature-story/lost-skulls-and-latin-how-scientists-chose-names-newly-identified-killer-whale-species

Information with info graphics: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/feature-story/new-research-reveals-full-diversity-killer-whales-two-species-come-view-pacific-coast

PacMam Podcast
Become a Paid Subscriber: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pacific-mammal-research/subscribe Cindy and Kat from Pacific Mammal Research (PacMam) talk about marine mammals, research, and environmental news in this fun podcast! Become a Paid Subscriber - get ad-free episodes and bonus mini-episodes/content available to subscribers only: https://anchor.fm/pacific-mammal-research/subscribe. Your support helps us continue our research and education programs!