Mammals of Korea: a review of their taxonomy, distribution and conservation status
Author
Jo, Yeong-Seok
Author
Baccus, John T.
Author
Koprowski, John L.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-11-19
4522
1
1
216
journal article
27944
10.11646/zootaxa.4522.1.1
58e0c7c5-75ec-4b1b-beb0-d01527f710f9
1175-5326
2610198
C24EFA8A-A5A0-4B06-A0A9-632F542B9529
Eschrichtius robustus
(
Lilljeborg, 1861
)
—Gray Whale
Balaenoptera robusta
Lilljeborg, 1861 p.602
;
Type
locality-
Graso Island
,
Uppland
,
Sweden
.
Agaphelus glaucus
Cope, 1868 p.225
;
Type
locality-
Monterey Bay
,
California
.
Rhachianectes glaucus
:
Andrews, 1914 p.232
;
Kishida, 1924 p.320
;
Kuroda, 1938 p.12
.
Eschrichtius gibbosus
:
Ellerman & Morrison-Scott, 1951 p.713
;
Won, 1958 p.434
;
Won, 1967 p.81
;
Won, 1968 p.233
.
E. robustus
:
Kim
et al
., 2000 p.66
;
Kim, 2004 p.225
.
Range:
The Korean stock almost became extirpated with the harvest of five gray whales in 1964 (
Park 1987
). The possible extinction of the Korean stock in the 1970s was debated (
Bowen 1975
;
Brownell & Chun 1977
). However, the re-discovery of gray whales in the 1990s ensured the survival of the Korean stock, with no more than 200 individuals surviving in the West Pacific Ocean (
Reeves & Kenney 2003
). Historically
E. robustus
migrated through
Ulsan
twice a year, from late November to the end of January and from mid-March to mid-May (
Fig. 81
). This whale is commonly observed in the East Sea, but no recent observations have been reported in the waters of
Korea
.
Remarks:
Pre-whaling genetic bottleneck in gray whales has been suggested (
Alter
et al
. 2007
). Gray whales feed in Arctic and subarctic benthic environments, and marine biologists assume gray whales have a sensitivity to changes in climate, and climatic events such as the Medieval Warm Period (ca. 900–1200 AD) or Little Ice Age (ca. 1300–1850 AD) could have caused population declines. The poorly understood relationship between populations of the gray whale and climate-driven ecosystem features such as sea ice, freshwater input to near-shore benthic ecosystems, and prey preference could have caused the distinction of this species from other taxa (
Perryman
et al
. 2002
,
Moore
et al
. 2003
). A recent genetic study supported the hypothesis that gray whales experienced a recent, major population decline (
Alter
et al.
2007
). The small F
ST
value (0.1125) between eastern and western individuals supports the monotypic status of the species (
Alter
et al
. 2012
). Because of differences in haplotype frequencies between eastern and western lineages (among 36 haplotypes, three were unique to the western population, 26 to the eastern, and seven were shared), the Korean stock could be a distinct subspecies due to its isolation and lack of gene flow (LeDuc
et al
. 2012).
Conservation status:
Ever since
R. C. Andrews (1914)
reported a ‘Korean stock’ of gray whales, Koreans have favored the gray whale like national whale because of the word ‘Korean’ stock. The South Korean government designated this species with a migration route in the East Sea a Natural Monument in 1962 and a Protected Marine Species in 2007. CITES listed the gray whale on Appendix I. The North Korean government classified this species as ‘Rare’ (MAB
National Committee of DPR
Korea
2002
).