Balaenoptera

Genus of mammals


title: "Balaenoptera" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["balaenoptera", "rorquals", "cetacean-genera", "extant-miocene-first-appearances", "taxa-named-by-bernard-germain-de-lacépède"] description: "Genus of mammals" topic_path: "general/balaenoptera" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balaenoptera" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Genus of mammals ::

| fossil_range = | image = LMazzuca_Fin_Whale.jpg | image_caption = Fin whale | taxon = Balaenoptera | authority = Lacépède, 1804 | type_species = Balaena physalus | type_species_authority= Linnaeus, 1758 | subdivision_ranks = Species | subdivision = See text

Balaenoptera () is a genus of rorquals containing eight extant species. Balaenoptera comprises all but two of the extant species in its family (the humpback whale and gray whale); the genus is currently polyphyletic, with the two aforementioned species being phylogenetically nested within it.

This genus is known in the fossil records from the Neogene to the Quaternary (13.65 million years ago to the present).

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9b/Balaenopteridae_-_Balaenoptera_acutorostrata_cuvieri.JPG" caption="Fossil of ''Balaenoptera acutorostrata cuvieri'' from the [[Pliocene]] of [[Italy"] ::

Taxonomy and systematics

The genus Balaenoptera contains the following extant species and subspecies:

Fossil species

Many fossil Balaenoptera species have been described. Some (namely B. borealina, B. definata, B. emarginata, B. gibbosa, B. rostratella, and B. sibbaldina) are either nondiagnostic, highly fragmentary, or had no holotype specimen named, hence are considered nomina dubia. The valid fossil species of Balaenoptera are:

References

References

  1. {{MSW3
  2. (May 2020). "List of marine mammal species and subspecies".
  3. McGowen, Michael R. (2019-10-21). "Phylogenomic Resolution of the Cetacean Tree of Life Using Target Sequence Capture". Systematic Biology.
  4. "Balaenoptera".
  5. (August 20, 2008). "Balaenoptera Lacépède, 1804". World Register of Marine Species.
  6. (December 2015). "Population genetic structure of the South American Bryde's whale". Revista de biología marina y oceanografía.
  7. (July 13, 2020). "Balaenoptera brydei Olsen, 1913". World Register of Marine Species.
  8. (2005). "The Taxonomic and Evolutionary History of Fossil and Modern Balaenopteroid Mysticetes". Journal of Mammalian Evolution.
  9. M. Bisconti. 2007. A new basal balaenopterid whale from the Pliocene of northern Italy. Palaeontology 50(5):1103-1122
  10. Boessenecker, Robert W. "A new marine vertebrate assemblage from the Late Neogene Purisima Formation in Central California, part II: Pinnipeds and Cetaceans." Geodiversitas 35.4 (2012): 815-940.
  11. R. E. Weems and L. E. Edwards. 2007. The age and provenance of "Eschrichtius" cephalus Cope (Mammalia: Cetacea). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27(3):752-756
  12. [https://paleobiodb.org/classic/checkTaxonInfo?taxon_no=65766 ''Balaenoptera cephalus''] at [[Fossilworks]].org
  13. Martin. (2014). [http://sdsu-dspace.calstate.edu/handle/10211.3/115478 From Finbacks to Humpbacks: Investigation of the Evolutionary History of Balaenopteridae] {{Webarchive. link. (2014-07-14 .)
  14. [https://paleobiodb.org/classic/checkTaxonInfo?taxon_no=68435 ''Balaenoptera davidsonii''] at [[Fossilworks]].org
  15. T. Demere. 1986. The fossil whale, Balaenoptera davidsonii (Cope 1872), with a review of other Neogene species of Balaenoptera (Cetacea: Mysticeti). Marine Mammal Science 2(4):277-298
  16. M. Bosselaers and K. Post. 2010. A new fossil rorqual (Mammalia, Cetacea, Balaenopteridae) from the Early Pliocene of the North Sea, with a review of the rorqual species described by Owen and Van Beneden. Geodiversitas 32(2):331-363
  17. E. D. Cope. 1895. Fourth contribution to the marine fauna of the Miocene period of the United States. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 34:135-155
  18. [https://paleobiodb.org/classic/checkTaxonInfo?taxon_no=69157 ''Balaenoptera taiwanica''] at [[Fossilworks]].org
  19. T. Huang. 1966. A new species of a whale tympanic bone from Taiwan, China. Transactions and Proceedings of the Paleontological Society of Japan 61:183-187

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balaenopterarorqualscetacean-generaextant-miocene-first-appearancestaxa-named-by-bernard-germain-de-lacépède