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Spinner Dolphin (Stenella longirostris) - Wiki
Subject: Spinner Dolphin (Stenella longirostris) - Wiki
Spinner dolphins-Spinner Dolphin (Stenella longirostris).jpg
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Spinner Dolphin (Stenella longirostris) - Wiki


Spinner Dolphin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[Photo] Spinner dolphins in Hawaii. From: http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=309225150&size=l Photo by Giles Douglas

The Spinner Dolphin (Stenella longirostris) is a small dolphin found in off-shore tropical waters around the world. It is famous for its acrobatic displays in which they will spin longitudinally along their axis as they leap through the air.

Taxonomy
The Spinner Dolphin is sometimes referred to as the Long-snouted Dolphin, particularly in older texts, to distinguish it from the similar Clymene Dolphin which is often called the Short-snouted Spinner Dolphin. The species was discovered by John Gray in 1828. There are four named subspecies:

Eastern Spinner Dolphin (S. l. orientalis), found in the tropical eastern Pacific.
Central American or Costa Rican Spinner Dolphin (S. l. centroamericana), also found in the tropical eastern Pacific.
Gray's or Hawaiian Spinner Dolphin (S. l. longirostris), found in the central Pacific around Hawaii but represents a mixed bag of broadly similar subtypes found throughout the world.
Dwarf Spinner Dolphin (S. l. roseiventris), first found in the Gulf of Thailand.

However the species display a greater variety than these subspecies might indicate. A hybrid form characterized by its white belly is noted in the eastern Pacific. Other less distinct groupings have been identified in other oceans.

The specific name comes from the Latin for long-beaked.

Physical description
The Spinner Dolphin is dark gray, with darker patches in the tail stock, back and throat. Usually it has creamy-white patch on the belly though this varies considerably. The beak is distinctively long and thin, with a dark tip. The fins too are lengthy for dolphins of this size. The dorsal fin is erect and even leans forward in older males found in the eastern Pacific. However this description has to be described as a little loose - Spinner Dolphins are the most variable in form of all cetaceans.

Adults have varied in size from 129 cm to 235 cm and weight from 23 kg to 78 kg. The gestation period is 10 months. Individuals reach maturity at 4-7 years (females) and 7-10 years (males). Longevity is unknown.

Spinners congregate in groups that vary from just a few dolphins to great schools numbering in the thousands. They are consistently acrobatic and keen bow-riders. The reason for the creature's spinning is not known. One suggestion is that the great cauldron of bubbles created on exit and re-entry may act as a target for echolocation by other individuals in the school. It may also be simply play-acting. Individuals have been spotted completing at least 14 spinning jumps in quick succession.

In the Atlantic the Spinner may be mistaken for the Clymene Dolphin which also spins, but not to such a regular and dramatic extent. They may occasionally hybridize with other species such as Bottlenose Dolphin and both varieties of Spotted Dolphin. Sometimes male Bottlenoses may even chase and "gang-rape" a female Spinner.

Population and distribution
Spinner Dolphins occur in pelagic tropical waters in all the world's major oceans. Although they mainly live in the open ocean, they are sometimes found near the shores of tropical island chains such as in the waters off Hawaii. Their greatest population density occurs between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. Although described as pantropical the species roughly divides up into geographical areas corresponding to subspecies. The total population is unknown and was certainly dramatically reduced by fishing activity in the eastern Pacific, but is still regarded as endangered. The population is currently unknown.

Communication
Dolphin sounds appear to be in the form of click-whistles and pulse sounds which are a mix of echolocation and communication. Echolocation sounds enable dolphins to track objects in dim or dark water and to, in effect, see much further than their eyes will allow. Their complex array of whistle sounds are the way that dolphins talk to one another. The spinners can even identify themselves with sounds they make while trailing bubbles from their blowholes -- sounds called signature whistles.

These spinner dolphins also communicate by slapping the water with various body parts. For instance, “nose-outs” occur when beak is thrust from the surface. This action is commonly used when the pod is emerging from a rest period. “Tail slaps” are often used to indicate impending danger or to signal a dive. Head slaps, side slaps, and back slaps are most frequently seen as the school begins to pick up speed. Last, and most spectacular, are the spins themselves. Many animals spin repeatedly, with each spin tending to get smaller and smaller, finally finishing up with an emphatic side slap.

The power of the spin comes from the tremendous acceleration under the water and the torque of the tail as the dolphin breaks the surface. The aftermath of the spin -- the sound of the slap, the splash on the surface, and the dense bubble cloud underwater, which even distant dolphins can pick up through their echolocation -- may be the real purpose of the spin.

Spinner dolphins maximize the effect of this splash by twisting around to land in a belly-flop, or back-flop. Spins are most frequently performed while the school is spread out across the water. A spinning dolphin may be signaling to the others: "here I am. . . . here is where I am going. . . " The effect of many dolphins spinning and leaping at once, defines what scientists call the envelope of the school -- that is, its size, direction, and speed of travel.

Feeding
Dolphins tend to do most of their hunting at night as the “scattering layer” of marine life, which has spent the day at depths of 3000 feet, rises toward the surface to feed on microscopic plant material. It is composed of fish, jellyfish, euphausiids (or krill), squid, shell-less snails, as well as copepods. Before diving into layer, the pod of dolphins gathers together in a kind of rally as if realizing that they are about to embark on a dangerous journey. Indeed, these dolphins are taking a great risk because other predators have gathered as well, such as sharks, which are natural predators of dolphins. The spinners form small subgroups and spread out across the sea. Time after time, the dolphins dive down into the utter darkness at 800 feet, or more. They do not use their teeth to chew but rather to grasp and immobilize their prey.

Despite being separated by several miles of water, the school still coordinates its activities through sound -- -and through spinning -- which reaches an explosive crescendo in the darkness of night. Using their echolocation, the spinners scan the darkness and, using their whistles, they call members of the school back together and can unite for defense. By dawn, the spinners regroup. Well-fed, they likely will move once again towards the shelter of nearby islands.

Human interaction
Spinner Dolphins have been studied both in the wild and in captivity in Hawaii. Up to two million Spinner Dolphins, mostly eastern and white-bellied varieties, were killed in the thirty years after purse seine fishing for tuna was introduced in the 1950s. The process killed probably half of all Eastern Spinner Dolphins. See Pantropical Spotted Dolphin for a discussion.

Although not caught in purse seine nets, spinner dolphins in Hawaii can be subjected to multiple daily visits to their nearshore resting grounds. If continued without strong regulations, the magnitude of people desiring wild dolphin encounters and some not-so-ethical tour operators exploiting the proximity of nearshore dolphin habitats while guaranteeing up-close interactions may result in the "loving nature to death" syndrome as found in similar areas, e.g. the Orcas of the Pacific Northwest.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinner_Dolphin
The text in this page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article shown in above URL. It is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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Scientific Name: Stenella longirostris (Gray, 1828)
Common Names:
English – Spinner Dolphin, Long-beaked Dolphin, Long-snouted Dolphin
French – Dauphin longirostre
Spanish – Delfín Tornillón, Estenela Giradora
Taxonomic Notes: Recent genetic work suggests that the genus Stenella is paraphyletic, and it is likely that the Delphininae will be restructured in coming years. Some species, including the Spinner Dolphin, may move to different genera. Four subspecies of Spinner Dolphins are currently recognized: S. l. longirostris (Gray’s spinner), S. l. orientalis (eastern spinner), S. l. centroamericana (Central American Spinner) and S. l. roseiventris (Dwarf Spinner). Smaller individuals in Arabian waters (in both the Red Sea and Persian Gulf) may represent an undescribed subspecies.

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