The Sperm Whale family or simply the Sperm Whales is the collective name given to three species of whale, the Sperm Whale, the Pygmy Sperm Whale and the Dwarf Sperm Whale. There are three different taxonomic intrepretations of this 'family'. The last of these listed here is the one that has generally been used since 1998.
- (see [1]) All three species are members of the Kogiidae family.
- (see [2]) Physeteroidea recognised as the single family with Kogiidae as a subfamily. Alternatively Physeteroidea is called a superfamily and contains Kogiidae as a family.
- (see [3]) Two distinct families - Physeteroidea and Kogiidae.
In any case there is complete agreement that there is two genera - Physeter containing one species - the Sperm Whale - and Kogia containing the Dwarf Sperm Whale and Pygmy Sperm Whale.
The common characteristic of each species is spermaceti, a semi-liquid waxy white liquid filling the case or spermaceti organ in the whale's head. See the individual species articles for further details.
References
- Order Cetacea by Mead and Brownell in Mammal Species of the World, Wilson and Reeder (eds), Smithsonian Institute Press.
- Cetacean Societies Field Studies of Dolphins and Whales, Mann, Connor, Tyack and Whitehead (eds), ISBN 0226503410
- "Marine Mammals of the World. Systematics and Distribution", by Dale W. Rice (1998)