Kogia breviceps
TAXONOMY
Kogia breviceps (Blainville, 1838), Cape Province, South Africa.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
French: Cachalot pygmée; German: Zwergpottwal; Spanish: Cachalote pigmeo.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Bluish steel gray on back. Shark-like appearance. Bracket-shaped mark on side of head, resembling gill slit.
DISTRIBUTION
Worldwide in warm-temperate and tropical waters.
HABITAT
Deep, oceanic waters and over the continental shelf.
BEHAVIOR
Difficult to observe at sea. Easily approached, timid and slow-moving.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Deep-ocean and shelf-dwelling squid and octopus; fish and crabs.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
May give birth two years in succession, i.e., can be pregnant and nursing simultaneously. Calves nurse for about one year. Mating believed to occur in summer, births in spring. Mating system unknown.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Population size unknown, though not common. Not listed by the IUCN.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Sometimes taken in commercial harpoon fisheries.




