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Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - Printable Version

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Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - BoldChamp - 10-31-2015

First link;

http://darwin.wcupa.edu/~biology/fish/pubs/pdf/2002MMS-MaxSwim.pdf

Mean swim speeds of Bottlenosed dolphins was roughly 6.5 meters a sec. Max speed was 8.15 meters a sec. 8 meters a sec was given for the Common dolphin.

Page 4 in this next link gives the swimming speeds for various dolphin species;

http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1041/edwards.pdf


Lagenor or Pacific White Sided dolphins topped at 7.8 meters a sec, for a total of 2 secs.

Porpoising Bottlenosed dolphins managed 11.2 meters a sec. Common dolphins managed 8.8 meters a sec. Spotted dolphins reached 11.1 meters a sec.

Swim speeds of dusky dolphins, page 15;

http://www.doc.govt.nz/upload/documents/science-and-technical/drds270.pdf

Burst speeds ranged from 3.08 - 10.04 meters per sec.


RE: Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - chaos - 10-31-2015

Bold, nice to see you weighing in. Seems a lot of the oldtimers are making cameos. Be lucky.


RE: Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - BoldChamp - 10-31-2015

(10-31-2015, 10:23 PM)chaos Wrote: Bold, nice to see you weighing in. Seems a lot of the oldtimers are making cameos. Be lucky.

Glad to join bro. Been off most forums for a while


RE: Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - brotherbear - 11-02-2015

Glad to see you here BoldChamp. It's been a while. I miss the 'old days' but let's make the 'new days' better. 


RE: Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - BoldChamp - 11-04-2015

(11-02-2015, 03:20 PM)brotherbear Wrote: Glad to see you here BoldChamp. It's been a while. I miss the 'old days' but let's make the 'new days' better. 

Nice to see you too bro...its been a while lol. And, I can agree with that


RE: Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - Pckts - 12-08-2015

I heard that Orcas where the fastest swimming mammal, not sure if this is absolutely correct. I need to look in to I think.


The Killer Whale or Orca (Orcinus orca), or less commonly, Blackfish, is the largest species of the dolphin family, though they are commonly mistaken as a species of whale. They are called killer whales often because they sometimes hunt whales for food. They are found in all the world’s oceans, from the frigid Arctic and Antarctic regions to warm, tropical seas. Some killer whale populations feed mostly on fish while others hunt sharks, marine mammals, including sea lions, seals, walruses and even large whales and Great white sharks. The killer whale’s large size and strength make it among the fastest marine mammals, often reaching speeds in excess of 35 kn (65 km/h).


killer whale killer whale
Orcinus orca top speed 30 mph
feels like 9.3 mph
http://www.speedofanimals.com/animals/killer_whale


RE: Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - BoldChamp - 12-29-2015

Not quite so sure the Orca is the fastest sea mammal.....many sources state this, but i cant find a reliable source on top speed. They seem to use stamina to capture most prey, traveling at a slow speed and for several hours without tiring.


RE: Measured swim speeds of various Dolphin species - BorneanTiger - 11-29-2019

(12-29-2015, 10:55 AM)BoldChamp Wrote: Not quite so sure the Orca is the fastest sea mammal.....many sources state this, but i cant find a reliable source on top speed. They seem to use stamina to capture most prey, traveling at a slow speed and for several hours without tiring.

The orcawould need enough speed to hunt and catch other dolphins.

For instance, a pod of what were thought to be Eastern Tropical Pacific orcas, which were thought to number at least 10, were seen attacking 20–30 dolphins off the coast of San Clemente, California, on the 29th of July, 2019. After the dolphins stampeded in one direction, the orcas surrounded them, separated an adult from its calf, and one of them caught the calf in its mouth, thus killing it. Despite being much smaller than the orcas, the mother dolphin had unsuccessfully tried to save its calf, and then retaliated against the orcas by circling them: https://www.ocregister.com/2019/07/30/videos-show-killer-whales-in-a-frantic-hunt-for-dolphins-off-san-clemente/