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Colour Patterns/Field Characters
The dwarf
minke whale has the most complex colour
pattern of any baleen whale. Some
features are found only in dwarf minke
whales:

-
dark
band of colour on the neck, between
the end of the mouth and the
flipper, which continues as a
dark throat patch extending on
each side well down onto the throat.
These dark throat patches are seen
very clearly if the whale turns to
expose the underside of the body.
-
flipper colour, which is dark at the
tip but completely white at the
base of the flipper
-
colour
of the shoulder region, which is
completely white where the flipper
joins the body and extends as a
white shoulder patch around much
of the flipper
-
a
light grey, roughly triangular
thorax patch, which extends up
each side of the animal from just
above the white shoulder patch
and flipper
No other whale has this combination of
colour patterns which conclusively
identifies the animal as a dwarf minke
whale.
The Antarctic
minke whale has no dark throat patch, the
flipper is light to dark grey with white
only along the leading edge of the flipper,
there is no white shoulder patch and the
thorax patch is small and behind, not above
the flipper.
The northern hemisphere minke whale has a
white band across the flipper, but the tip
and the base of the flipper are dark. There
is no white shoulder patch.
Many of the other patterns of colour are
quite asymmetrical in the dwarf minke whale,
with different arrangements of colours on
the left and right side. This asymmetry is
not as pronounced as in the finback whale
but is obvious once you look:
-
the top of
the head is light grey but the light
colour extends further back on the right
side than on the left
-
the base
of the lower jaw, just in front of the
eye, has a white notch or band but is
completely dark on the left side
-
the eye is
often partially surrounded by white on
the right side but this is only rarely
so on the left
In total, these features make the left
side of the head look much darker than
the right side.
Many features of the colour pattern vary
so extensively that we are using them,
with scars, to recognise individual
whales (see Individual Recognition).
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