Revised taxonomy of eastern North Pacific killer whales (Orcinus orca): Bigg’s and resident ecotypes deserve species status Author Morin, Phillip A. 0000-0002-3279-1519 Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA Phillip.Morin@noaa.gov Author McCarthy, Morgan L. 0000-0002-9695-6060 Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA & Section for Molecular Ecology and Evolution, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, 1350 Copenhagen, Denmark. Author Fung, Charissa W. 0009-0007-4956-675X University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V 6 T 1 Z 4, Canada Author Durban, John W. 0000-0002-0791-8370 Marine Mammal Institute, Oregon State University, Newport, OR 97365, USA Author Parsons, Kim M. 0000-0003-4580-3651 Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, Seattle, WA 98112, USA Author Perrin, William F. Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA Author Taylor, Barbara L. 0000-0001-7620-0736 Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA Author Jefferson, Thomas A. 0000-0001-6817-2747 Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA Author Archer, Frederick I. 0000-0002-3179-4769 Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA text Royal Society Open Science 2024 231368 2024-03-27 11 3 1 23 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.231368 journal article 10.1098/rsos.231368 f64e42ba-1c83-4568-b2bf-6a5ea79f79ee 11029509 Orcinus rectipinnus ( Cope in Scammon, 1869 ) Etymology In Latin, recti means right or upright, and pinna means fin, feather or wing, most likely referring to the tall, erect dorsal fin of males. Figure 7. Photographs of neotype skulls for (a) Orcinus rectipinnus (USNM 594671) and (b) Orcinus ater (USNM 594672). Synonymy Orca rectipinna Cope in Scammon, 1869: 22 ; original designation. Common name We propose continued use of the common name, ‘Bigg’s killer whale’, for this species, to honour Dr. Michael A. Bigg (1939–1990), who pioneered the study of North Pacific killer whales in the 1970s. This ecotype was formerly known as the ‘transient killer whale’. Type specimen USNM 594671 No type specimen is extant from the original description (Cope in Scammon [125]), so we have designated a neotype. The neotype is the skull of a physically mature male (total length 731 cm, CBL of cranium 1124 mm) in the U.S. National Museum of Natural History Marine Mammal Collection, deposited under museum number USNM 594671. The skull was previously in the NOAA National Marine Mammal Laboratory collection as NMML 0082. It is illustrated in figure 7 a . mtDNA control region haplotype (160 bp) ‘T’ (SWFSC ID 39064 in 142]) unambiguously identifies this specimen as a Bigg’s killer whale. Morphological analysis of this specimen was included in Fung [103]. Detailed measurements of the type specimen are in electronic supplementary material, table S2. Type locality The neotype was collected by J.E. Eckberg on 22 September 1966 , near San Francisco , CA , USA . Diagnosis Bigg’s killer whales differ from residents in growing to somewhat larger sizes, and having a widerbased, more triangular dorsal fin that is more pointed at the tip. The dorsal fin also tends to be less falcate (even in females). The saddle patch behind the dorsal fin extends further forward than it does in residents, usually to well past the mid-point of the dorsal fin base, and may appear larger compared to that of residents [40,79]. Virtually all saddle patches are closed (with no significant invasion of black), and many are rounded, with their forward extensions not ending in a point. These correspond to the ‘smooth’ or ‘bump’ patch types of Baird and Stacey [22]. Bigg’s killer whales have longer and more robust skulls than residents, with the following measurements showing significantly greater average values: condylobasal length, postorbital width, occipital width, width of rostrum at base and length of mandible [103]. While individual measures show modal differences with some overlap, canonical variate analysis of both cranial measures and measures of mandibular morphology yields distinct clusters for the two ecotypes ([103]; figure 2 ). Genetic analyses of mtDNA are diagnostic, based on fixed sequence differences ( table 1 ), while nuDNA allele frequency differences allow diagnosis based on cumulative assignment probability (e.g. assignment tests or PCA; figures 3 and 4 ). Description This is a species of killer whale, reaching total lengths of at least 830 cm in males and 710 cm in females [20] and weights of 6600 kg in males and 4700 kg in females [143]. It has the basic features of the killer whale body plan: a robust body with a tall dorsal fin near the centre of the back, large paddle-shaped flippers, broad flukes with a slightly convex trailing edge and a blunt head with a short, poorly defined beak ( figure 8 a ). There is sexual dimorphism, with males growing much larger than females, and near sexual maturity developing a tall (up to at least 1.5 m), erect dorsal fin and much larger flukes and pectoral fins. The mouthline is straight, with a small downturn at the gape. The basic killer whale colour pattern is largely dark grey to black, with a white ventral field that has lobes extending up and back along the tail stock, a white post-ocular patch, and a light grey to white ‘saddle patch’ behind the dorsal fin. The lower jaw and the undersides of the flukes are mostly white, but the entire flippers and dorsal fin are black. The areas of light and dark are generally well defined, with a crisp border. Each tooth row of both upper and lower jaws contains 10–14 large, conical teeth [144]. Comparison to other taxa Bigg’s killer whale is one of three proposed species of killer whales (genus Orcinus ) globally. It is endemic to the North Pacific Ocean and adjacent seas, and it preys primarily on marine mammals (as opposed to bony fish and elasmobranchs). It can be distinguished from other killer whale species and ecotypes by its genetic profile, its morphology and colouration (see Diagnosis above), and also acoustically. Distribution Bigg’s killer whales occur throughout the waters of the eastern North Pacific Ocean from at least northern Baja California, Mexico, through to eastern Russia and northern Japan in the western Pacific [48,147,148]. Their distribution extends to the Okhotsk Sea and Arctic Ocean (e.g. Chukchi Sea; figure 1 ). While they are most commonly observed over the continental shelf and in inshore waters, they may also occur in oceanic waters beyond the continental shelf edge [147].