Abstract

ABSTRACTThe surveillance of marine mammal strandings within the framework of a biomonitoring scheme for the Mauritanian coast led to the discovery in 2013 of a 3.98 m long, juvenile rorqual Balaenoptera sp. in an advanced state of decomposition near Chott Boul (16°32.488′N, 016°27.0317′W). Photographs and skin samples were taken, but the specimen could not be collected. Based on limited morphological evidence, only Balaenoptera edeni and B. omurai were plausible. Sequences of three mtDNA regions, i.e. parts of the cox1 and the cytb genes as well as the D-loop, for a total of 2636 bp (> 16% of the mitogenome) identified the specimen as an Omura's whale, B. omurai, the first record in the Atlantic Ocean and at least 11,400 km away from its closest known range in the SW Indian Ocean (Madagascar). The question of whether the specimen is a vagrant or belongs to an unrecognized Atlantic population is discussed. Advection by currents or transport on a ship's bow bulb following collision are discarded. Circumstances (juvenile status, great distance from Indo-Pacific, necessary inter-oceanic passage through cold temperate waters) may slightly favour the hypothesis that B. omurai, if rare, could be autochthonous in the Atlantic. Beach surveys remain a useful tool to assess trends in cetacean species composition, to detect unusual mortality events and to help assess the impacts of anthropogenic activities. This is particularly applicable to remote areas where the marine mammal fauna is poorly known and where fisheries effort is high, such as the Mauritanian coast.

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