AB

Aquatic Biology

Aquatic Biology is a gold Open Access journal and a multidisciplinary forum for research on the biology of organisms in marine, brackish and fresh waters. SEDAO (Sexuality and Early Development in Aquatic Organisms), an international journal that covered all aspects of reproduction and early development in marine, brackish and freshwater organisms, was incorporated into AB in late 2015.

Online: ISSN 1864-7790

Print: ISSN 1864-7782

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/ab

Impact Factor0.8 (JCR 2025 release)

Article Acceptance Rate35% (2024)

Average Time in Review157 days

Total Annual Downloads153.538 (2025)

Volume contents
Aquat Biol 11:213-224 (2011)

Shark predation and tooth wear in a population of northeastern Pacific killer whales

ABSTRACT: The cosmopolitan killer whale Orcinus orca feeds on a wide variety of prey types over its global range, but in at least some regions, genetically distinct and ecologically specialised lineages of killer whales coexist sympatrically. In coastal waters of the northeastern Pacific, 2 such lineages have been well described: the so-called ‘residents’ prey on teleost fish, especially salmonids and the other (‘transients’) on marine mammals. A third lineage in this region (‘offshores’) appears from chemical tracers to be ecologically distinct from residents and transients, but its diet is very poorly known. Here we describe 2 encounters with offshore killer whales during which multiple predation events involving sharks were observed. Using DNA analysis of tissue samples collected from these predation events, we identified the prey species as Pacific sleeper shark Somniosus pacificus and determined that a minimum of 16 individuals were consumed over the 2 encounters. This represents the first confirmed prey species of offshore killer whales based on field observations of foraging and the first record of any Somniosus species in the prey of Orcinus. We also show quantitatively that apical tooth wear is far greater in offshores than in resident and transient killer whales, and propose that such wear is at least in part due to abrasion from dermal denticles embedded in shark skin. Further studies are needed to determine whether offshore killer whales are as specialised ecologically as resident and transient killer whales, and whether sharks play a dominant role in their diet.

KEYWORDS

John K. B. Ford (Co-author)

  • Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Pacific Biological Station, Nanaimo, British Columbia V9T 6N7, Canada

Graeme M. Ellis (Co-author)

  • Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Pacific Biological Station, Nanaimo, British Columbia V9T 6N7, Canada

Craig O. Matkin (Co-author)

  • North Gulf Oceanic Society, Homer, Alaska 99603, USA

Michael H. Wetklo (Co-author)

  • Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Pacific Biological Station, Nanaimo, British Columbia V9T 6N7, Canada

Lance G. Barrett-Lennard (Co-author)

  • Vancouver Aquarium, Vancouver, British Columbia V6G 3E2, Canada

Ruth E. Withler (Co-author)