Male: 9,000 to 10,000 kg
Female: 7,000 to 8,000 kg
Did you know?
The southern British Columbia resident population of the killer whale is endangered.
Physiology
The killer whale is the largest member of the dolphin family. It has a
distinctive black and white pattern, with a blunt head and tall dorsal fin that
is triangular in shape and in the middle of its back. The maximum recorded
length for a male is 9.0 metres, and for a female it's 7.7 metres. However,
whales in the British Columbia population tend to be much smaller.
Killer whales live in any ocean between 0 degrees Celsius and tropical water temperature.
The depth of the ocean doesn't affect them—they have even been known to enter rivers.
Killer whales travel in pods, which normally consist of a mother and her offspring. Resident
pods can have up to three or four generations in one pod. Male calves born into a resident
pod do not leave their mother's pod. Females, on the other hand, may form sub-pods with
their own offspring later on in life. Transient whales don't always stay with a group for
life. Either sex may leave their mother to travel, either alone or with another transient
group. There are normally only two to six whales in a transient group, but it can reach
up to 20.
There are three distinct types of killer whales: resident, transient and offshore. Resident
killer whales travel in relatively stable groups called pods. They were coined as "resident" because
they are seen each summer. There are about 600 whales in the resident population between
Washington and Alaska, and they all feed on fish. Transient whales are those who travel
in small groups and who are normally in transit. They eat mainly mammals, differing from
the resident whales. There are about 400 transient whales that range from southern California
to the Aleutian Islands of Alaska. Offshore whales are a bit more mysterious than the previous
two types. They are rarely seen in British Columbia and could possibly be distant relatives
of the resident killer whales. Offshore killer whales seem to feed on fish and squid. There
are about 200 off-shore killer whales catalogued thus far.
There are three types of sounds that all killer whales produce: clicks, whistles and pulses.
Clicks are used to detect and pursue prey, while whistles and pulses are how they communicate
amongst themselves. Residents have seven to 17 calls that very between pods. Transients
only have four to six, none of them used by residents.
Range
Killer whales are found in all three of Canada's oceans, and have even been
known to enter Hudson Bay and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. They are, however,
uncommon in the Atlantic and Arctic oceans. They are most often seen off the
southern coast of British Columbia.