Striped Dolphin; Harbour PorpoiM 



Description. Very similar in shape to the last. Purplish gray 

 above, white below, upper parts spotted with white, lower 

 with dark gray. Teeth 37 above, 34 below. 



Range. Atlantic and Gulf coasts north to Cape Hatteras. 



Striped Dolphin 



Lagenorhynchus acjitus (Gray) 



Length. 8 feet. 



Description. Beak very short, a mere rim with a depression 

 between it and the forehead on each side. Colour black on 

 back, rest of body gray, sides with white and yellowish 

 patches; a narrrow black stripe from the base of the tail half- 

 way to the middle of the body; eye surrounded with black 

 and black lines from it to the snout and flipper; flippers black. 

 Teeth 35 above, 37 below. 



Range. North Atlantic, southward to Cape Cod. 



Harbour Porpoise 



Phoccena phoccena (Linnaeus) 



Length. 5 feet. 



Description. Head rounded in front, no beak or snout. Fin of 

 the back more triangular than in the dolphins. Colour dark 

 slate or blackish, shading gradually to white on the belly, 

 sides somewhat tinged with pink or yellowish, and a dark 

 band from the lower jaw half way to the flipper. Teeth 26 

 in each jaw. 



Range. North Atlantic south to New Jersey; also on coasts of 

 Europe and in the Pacific. 



As the bottle-nose {Tursiops tursio) is the commonest of the 

 dolphins on our coast, this is the best known of the round-headed 

 or porpoise group. It is apparently more common on European 

 coasts than with us and, being more northern in its range, is 

 not so familiar as the common bottle-nose to our sea-shore 

 visitors. 



The five species which follow are all allied to the harbour 

 porpoise, but have striking peculiarities which have earned for 

 them distinctive popular names. 



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