Subspecies: The Hawaiian or Gray's spinner dolphin (S. l. longirostris) inhabits the waters of the Hawaiian archipelago and the eastern spinner dolphin (S. l. orientalis) is found in the eastern tropical Pacific.
The eastern spinner has been declared 'depleted' under the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972.
Estimated population:
In
2002 a survey estimated the number of spinner dolphins surrounding the
Hawaiian islands to be about 2,805. The eastern tropical pacific
population has declined 80 percent in 20 years from 2 million to
400,000.
Ways to identify this species:
Spinner
dolphins are named for their mid-air spins where they propel themselves
out of the water, flipping their bodies in a rapid log-rolling fashion.
This slender species is mainly dark grey with a white under-belly;
possesses a long, thin beak; and has a distinct stripe connecting the
long, pointed flippers to the eyes.
Biology
- The spinner dolphin weighs 100 - 165lbs and measures 4.25ft - 6.89ft.
- Dolphins
return to the surface regularly to breathe through a blowhole on the
top of their head. A dolphin can refill its lungs in less than 1/5 of a
second and the exhaled air leaves the blowhole at speeds of 100mph.
While sleeping, the dolphin shuts down half of its brain because
breathing is under voluntary control.
- Spinner dolphins have
45 to 65 sharp-pointed teeth that enable them to feed on species such
as lantern fish, shrimp and squid. Hawaiian spinners feed at night in
the open ocean and come into shore to rest, avoid predation, care for
their young and reproduce, during the day.
- Females reach sexual maturity at 5-12 years of age and normally give birth to one calf every 2-3 years.
- Although it is not known exactly how long dolphins live, it is thought they live over 20 years.
- Dolphins
are known as playful and expressive mammals, often exhibiting emotions
through flapping or slapping their fins, leaping out of the water, and
playing with floating objects discarded into the open ocean such as
plastic bags.
- Spinners can travel in schools of thousands of individuals.
Threats
- The tuna fishery has been the main reason for eastern population declines.
- The
Hawaiian spinner population has not been drastically affected by this
fishery; however, it remains threatened by potential entanglements in
marine debris, collisions with vessels, acoustic disturbance, habitat
degradation and human disturbance through aquatic activity in spinner
habitats.