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« Killer Raven Swarms Attacking Farm Animals | Main | Crazy Cat People: Question of the Week »

Rare Pygmy Right Whale Dissected

Category: cetaceanpygmy right whalewhale
Posted on: May 7, 2008 3:48 PM, by Benny Bleiman

This 6-month old pygmy right whale stranded itself on the beach in New Zealand. It is being dissected by a team of scientists as I write this! The whale has a similar head to true right whales, but scientists do not believe that they are closely related. In fact, they are not quite sure where these rare whales fit into the overall evolutionary tree. Hopefully this dissection will help them put some of the pieces in the puzzle.

Pygmy%20Right%20Whale.jpg

You can watch along step by step, as these Museum of New Zealand researchers carve their way through this little guy on Te Papa's Blog.

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Comments

1

Holy blimey!

I'm going to have to ask some of my coworkers about this one.
This species is only found in the southern hemisphere, but still, a dissection of this caliber is going to draw northern right whale researchers' attention as well.

Posted by: Jives | May 7, 2008 7:42 PM

2

Normally all you need is a tissue sample for genetic testing to determine where it sits on the evolutionary tree. Maybe the focus should be on why this little whale got beached?

Posted by: Paula Kahumbu | May 7, 2008 9:56 PM

3

Thanks for this fascinating item! I'm currently reading "Your Inner Fish" by Neil Shubin which is riveting, so I'll be very interested to see just what the necropsy turns up.

Posted by: Mrs Hilary Victoria Minor | May 8, 2008 8:22 AM

4

that's an amazingly tiny baleen whale

Posted by: Drhoz! | May 9, 2008 3:59 AM

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