Northern bottlenose whale

Despite the name, it’s a beaked whale—not the famous bottlenose dolphin

Cephas


Northern bottlenose whale

EXEWCRENVUNTLCDDNE

Despite the name, it’s a beaked whale—not the famous bottlenose dolphin

Population

Big-headed, deep-diving, and surprisingly curious, the Northern bottlenose whale is the beaked whale most people are likely to meet in the North Atlantic. Its look is unforgettable: a long, bottle-shaped beak; a small, curved fin set far back; and a large, rounded forehead—the “melon”—that swells with age. Older males often turn pale on the face, as if wearing a white helmet.

Unlike dolphins with many teeth, this whale usually shows only two small teeth at the tip of the lower jaw, and they’re most visible in adult males. That’s because it doesn’t grab prey the way a dolphin does. It feeds by suction: flaring the lips, opening wide, and vacuuming in squid and fish in a quick gulp. The result is neat, fast, and perfect for life in dark water, where a chase would waste precious oxygen.

Diving is where this species shines. Northern bottlenose whales can slip well over a kilometer down and stay there for more than an hour, hunting in cold, black canyons where sunlight never reaches. Before a dive, they breathe calmly at the surface, often “logging” like a floating pole as they top up their oxygen stores.

Sound is their flashlight. They send out quick clicks and read the echoes (echolocation) to find squid and to map steep seafloor walls. When a dive ends, they rise in a smooth glide, take a few soft blows that puff forward like steam from a bottle, and then rest again. These whales favor deep edges—submarine canyons and steep slopes off places like Newfoundland, Iceland, and Norway—places rich in squid but far from shore.

Distribution

Country
Population est.
Status
Year
Comments
Atlantic Ocean
2020
Belgium
2020
Canada
2020
Denmark
2020
Faroe Islands
2020
France
2020
Germany
2020
Greenland
2020
Iceland
2020
Ireland
2020
Netherlands
2020
Norway
2020
Portugal
2020
Azores, Madeira
Spain
2020
Canary Is.
Svalbard
2020
Sweden
2020
United Kingdom
2020
United States
2020

Anything we've missed?

Help us improve this page by suggesting edits. Glory never dies!

Suggest an edit

Get to know me

Terrestrial / Aquatic

Altricial / Precocial

Polygamous / Monogamous

Dimorphic (size) / Monomorphic

Active: Diurnal / Nocturnal

Social behavior: Solitary / Pack / Group

Diet: Carnivore / Herbivore / Omnivore / Piscivorous / Insectivore

Migratory: Yes / No

Domesticated: Yes / No

Dangerous: Yes / No