Dear MARMAMers: 

On behalf of senior authors Jolanda Luksenburg and Antonio Mignucci and our 
coauthors, I am very happy to announce the publication online of our article:

Bolaños-Jiménez, J., Mignucci-Giannoni, A., Blumenthal, J., Bogomolni, A., 
Casas, J.J., Henríquez, A., Iñíguez, M., Khan, J., Landrau-Giovannetti, N., 
Rinaldi, C., Rinaldi, R., Rodríguez-Ferrer, G., Sutty, L., Ward, N. & 
Luksenburg, J. 2014. Distribution, feeding habits and morphology of killer 
whales Orcinus orca in the Caribbean Sea. Mammal Review.   doi:10.1111/mam.12021

Abstract below. PDFs available upon request, from Jaime Bolaños, 
[email protected], Jolanda Luksenburg, [email protected] and 
Antonio Mignucci, [email protected]

Abstract
1. Killer whales Orcinus orca are found in all oceans of the world, but most of 
our knowledge on the species comes from studies conducted at higher latitudes. 
Studies on killer whales in the Caribbean have been scarce. 
2. We compiled 176 records of killer whales from the Caribbean, including 95 
previously unreported records and 81 records recovered from the literature, 
consisting of 27 capture or kill records, 4 stranding records and 145 sighting 
records. 
3. Our results indicate that killer whales are widespread in the Caribbean Sea 
and can be found year-round in the region. Mean group size was 3.7 animals. A 
diversity of prey items was recorded, including sea turtles and marine mammals 
and possibly fish. We cannot exclude ecotype or morphotype-specific dietary 
specialization in the Caribbean population. A preliminary morphological 
analysis of 10 characters in 52 individuals from 21 different groups suggests 
that Caribbean killer whales do not represent any of the four Antarctic and 
subantarctic types, type 1 from the northwest Atlantic, or ‘resident’ and 
‘transient’ killer whales from the northwest Pacific. Some Caribbean killer 
whales share a combination of characters typical of type 2 in the North 
Atlantic, whereas others share those typical of ‘offshore’ killer whales in the 
northwest Pacific. The significance of this is unclear. Comparison of Caribbean 
killer whales to previously
 described morphotypes and ecotypes is hampered by the lack of detailed, 
quantitative data on variation within other types, as well as by the lack of 
comparisons of genetic diversity. 
4. Our study adds to the growing knowledge of the diversity of killer whales 
worldwide, but underscores that additional research is warranted in the tropics.

With warm regards,

Jaime Bolaños-Jiménez 
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