lambandserpent:

Type A looks like a “typical” killer whale, a large, black  and white form with a medium-sized white eye patch, living in open water  and feeding mostly on minke whales.[17]
Type B is smaller than Type A. It has a large white eye  patch. Most of the dark parts of its body are medium gray instead of  black, although it has a dark gray patch called a “dorsal cape”[31] stretching back from its forehead to just behind its dorsal fin. The  white areas are stained slightly yellow. It feeds mostly on seals.[17]
Type C is the smallest type and lives in larger groups than  the others. Its eye patch is distinctively slanted forwards, rather than  parallel to the body axis. Like Type B, it is primarily white and  medium gray, with a dark gray dorsal cape and yellow-tinged patches. Its  only observed prey is the Antarctic Cod.[17]
Type D was identified based on photographs of a 1955 mass  stranding in New Zealand and six at-sea sightings since 2004.  Immediately recognizable by its extremely small white eye patch, shorter  than usual dorsal fin that curves back, and bulbous head (similar to a  pilot whale). Its geographic range appears to be circumglobal in  subantarctic waters between latitudes 40°S and 60°S. And although  nothing is known about the Type D diet, it is suspected to include fish  because groups have been photographed around longline vessels where they  reportedly depredate Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides).[32][33]

lambandserpent:

  • Type A looks like a “typical” killer whale, a large, black and white form with a medium-sized white eye patch, living in open water and feeding mostly on minke whales.[17]
  • Type B is smaller than Type A. It has a large white eye patch. Most of the dark parts of its body are medium gray instead of black, although it has a dark gray patch called a “dorsal cape”[31] stretching back from its forehead to just behind its dorsal fin. The white areas are stained slightly yellow. It feeds mostly on seals.[17]
  • Type C is the smallest type and lives in larger groups than the others. Its eye patch is distinctively slanted forwards, rather than parallel to the body axis. Like Type B, it is primarily white and medium gray, with a dark gray dorsal cape and yellow-tinged patches. Its only observed prey is the Antarctic Cod.[17]
  • Type D was identified based on photographs of a 1955 mass stranding in New Zealand and six at-sea sightings since 2004. Immediately recognizable by its extremely small white eye patch, shorter than usual dorsal fin that curves back, and bulbous head (similar to a pilot whale). Its geographic range appears to be circumglobal in subantarctic waters between latitudes 40°S and 60°S. And although nothing is known about the Type D diet, it is suspected to include fish because groups have been photographed around longline vessels where they reportedly depredate Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides).[32][33]
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