Photo: Two harbor porpoises

Harbor porpoises will dive as deep as 656 feet (200 meters), but they usually stay near the surface, coming up frequently to breathe.

Photograph by Bill Curtsinger

Map

Map: Harbor porpoise range

Harbor Porpoise Range

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Fast Facts

Type:
Mammal
Diet:
Carnivore
Average life span in the wild:
20 years
Size:
4.9 to 6.6 ft (1.5 to 2 m)
Weight:
110 to 200 lbs (50 to 90 kg)
Group name:
Shoal
Did you know?
During the Middle Ages, harbor porpoise meat was considered a delicacy suitable for a royal feast.
Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
Illustration: Harbor porpoise compared with adult man

Harbor porpoises are shy, elusive sea mammals whose numbers are declining primarily because they are frequently caught by accident in commercial fishing nets. Specific numbers are unknown, but some scientists think their enormous range may mean that despite the declines, sizable populations could remain.

Harbor porpoises are found throughout the temperate coastal waters of the Northern Hemisphere. As their name suggests, they prefer the shallows, less than 500 feet (152 meters) deep, and are commonly seen in harbors and bays. They are also known to frequent inland waters, including rivers, estuaries, and tidal channels.

Harbor porpoises survive primarily on fish and are among the smallest of the cetaceans, reaching an average size of about 5 feet (1.5 meters) and 121 pounds (55 kilograms). They can dive deep, more than 655 feet (200 meters), but usually stay near the surface, coming up about every 25 seconds to breathe with a distinctive puffing noise that resembles a sneeze.

Unlike their dolphin relatives, they have a blunt, rounded head rather than a prominent forehead and snout. Their mouths are short with black, inward-curving lips and spatulate, or spade-shaped, teeth. Their necks, short and immobile, are virtually undistinguishable from their grayish bodies, which taper to a tail with small, curved flukes and a middle notch.

Because of their retiring nature, scientists know little about the behavior of these creatures in the wild, and much species research is focused on specimens rescued or killed as bycatch in fishing nets. In the Gulf of Maine region in the early 1990s, for example, as many as 3,000 were annually drowned in commercial fishing gear like gill nets. Populations are also harmed by chemical and noise pollution.

The World Conservation Union currently lists harbor porpoises as a vulnerable species, while individual countries, including Canada and the United States, have given them special status.

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