Pacific pilot whale - meaning and definition. What is Pacific pilot whale
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What (who) is Pacific pilot whale - definition

SPECIES OF OCEANIC DOLPHINS
Shortfin pilot whale; Globicephala macrorhynchus; Globicephala macrorhyncus; Short-Finned Pilot Whale; Pacific Pilot Whale; Pacific pilot whale; Short-finned Pilot; Short-finned pilot; Pacfic Pilot Whale; Shot-finned Pilot Whale; Short-finned Pilot Whale; Short-finned pilot whales
  • Highland beach]].
  • Bubbles, the pilot whale, performing at [[Marineland of the Pacific]], 1962
  • A short-finned pilot whale comes up to the surface of the water.
  • Short-finned pilot whales at [[Tenerife]]
  • Along the western coast of [[Tenerife]], [[Canary Islands]]
  • Illustration
  • A Japanese meal with short-finned pilot [[whale meat]] includes a skewer of fried whale meat (''left'') and a bowl with grilled meat over rice, topped with pickled ginger (''right'').
  • Short-finned pilot whales [[spy hopping]] off of [[Guam]]

pilot whale         
  • Jaw of the extinct species ''[[Globicephala etruriae]]''
  • Pilot whales near [[Cape Breton Island]]
  • Killed pilot whales in [[Hvalba]], Faroe Islands
  • Pilot whale pod near Ireland
  • A pilot whale [[spyhopping]]
  • Pilot whale in the [[Gulf of California]]
  • Long-finned pilot whale skeleton
GENUS OF DOLPHINS IN THE ORDER CETACEA
Globicephala; Pilot whales; Pilot Whales; Pilot Whale; Whales, pilot; Caaing Whale; Vocalizations of pilot whales
¦ noun a black toothed whale with a square bulbous head. [Genus Globicephala: two species.]
whalesong         
  • Process in a dolphin echolocation: in green the sounds generated by the dolphin, in red from the fish.
SOUNDS PRODUCED BY WHALES
Whale songs; Whalesong; Whale song; Whale noises; Whales singing; Whale sounds; Whale call; Cetacean sound; Dolphin sound; Whale communication; Whale sound; Whale vocalisation; Vocalizations of whales
The peculiar clicking and whooshing sounds made by a PEP modem such as the Telebit Trailblazer as it tries to synchronise with another PEP modem for their special high-speed mode. This sound isn't anything like the normal two-tone handshake between conventional modems and is instantly recognizable to anyone who has heard it more than once. It sounds, in fact, very much like whale songs. This noise is also called "the moose call" or "moose tones".
Whale vocalization         
  • Process in a dolphin echolocation: in green the sounds generated by the dolphin, in red from the fish.
SOUNDS PRODUCED BY WHALES
Whale songs; Whalesong; Whale song; Whale noises; Whales singing; Whale sounds; Whale call; Cetacean sound; Dolphin sound; Whale communication; Whale sound; Whale vocalisation; Vocalizations of whales
Whales use a variety of sounds for communication and sensation.Communication and behavior of whales, R Payne.

Wikipedia

Short-finned pilot whale

The short-finned pilot whale (Globicephala macrorhynchus) is one of the two species of cetaceans in the genus Globicephala, which it shares with the long-finned pilot whale (G. melas). It is part of the oceanic dolphin family (Delphinidae).

It has a worldwide distribution with a global population of about 700,000, and there may be 3 or 4 distinct populations—two in the Pacific and one in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Its range is moving northward due to global warming. In the Pacific, males average 4–6 m (13–20 ft) and females 3–5 m (9.8–16.4 ft). It generally has a stocky build with black to dark gray or brown skin, and can be distinguished from its counterpart by shorter flippers, fewer teeth, and a shorter beak. It is thought to pursue fast-moving squid typically at a depth of 700 m (2,300 ft), but the maximum recorded depth is 1,018 m (3,340 ft).

The short-finned pilot whale has been reported as being highly playful and social. It typically travels in pods of 10–30 members, usually family, but has been observed moving in groups of several hundred. Like killer whales, it has a matrilineal social hierarchy with an elder female at the head and a sizable post-reproductive lifespan. It is polygynous; females often outnumber males 8:1 in a pod.

Pods are known to mass strand, possibly due to sheer accident, biosonars confused by geomagnetic anomalies, injury from loud military sonar, or disease. It was historically whaled, and is still whaled today by Japan and the Lesser Antilles, but it is protected by several international treaties.