Wikipedia:WikiProject Cetaceans

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


This WikiProject is about cetaceans - that's whales, dolphins and porpoises to you and me. The aim of the project is to write a good description of every known cetacean species out there - all 90 of them[1], one of which is possibly extinct.

Things to be done

  • Assessment
  • Collaboration — Collaborations were selected monthly from September 2006 until January 2007, with irregular activity thereafter until the last selection in April 2008, since which time it has been inactive.
  • Change capitalisation of common names to sentence case. See Capitalisation of common names below. (Discuss)

Members

To join this WikiProject, edit this section and add * ~~~~ and any comments to the following list of members in alphabetical order by username.
Place {{User WPCETA}} on your user page to display the following userbox:

This user is a member of
WikiProject Cetaceans.

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Inactive

Featured and Good Content

Featured Articles (8)

Former Featured Articles (4)

Good Articles (29)

Featured Lists (1)

Article alerts

Peer reviews

Articles to be merged

State of articles

???Total
00

Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Cetacea articles by quality statistics

Scope of articles

Articles on almost every species have been started. Most species have their own article with the exception of

mesoplodont whales (too little information known for separate articles) and humpback dolphins
(the lack of consensus from the taxonomists makes difficult to know what species to choose). Better to do at the genus level to avoid passing judgment.

Manual of style

Bowhead whale
Ma
Early Pleistocene[3]
Size compared to an average human

Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)[4]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Balaenidae
Genus: Balaena
Species:
B. mysticetus
Binomial name
Balaena mysticetus
Bowhead whale range

Capitalisation of common names

Common names of cetaceans are written in sentence case. That is, the names are not capitalised except for the first word of a sentence and any proper names that are part of the common name. An example of the general use is bowhead whale. Examples of the inclusion of a proper name are North Pacific right whale (where "North Pacific" is a placename) and Bryde's whale (where Bryde was a person's name).

Prior to 15 February 2010 the common names were often written in title case, with every word capitalised. Most article titles have now been changed to sentence case per Talk:Bowhead whale#Requested move, but the text of some articles may still need to be changed. Discussion leading to the February 2010 policy change is archived at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Cetaceans/Archive 4#Capitalisation.

Taxobox

Each species article should use a {{

usage instructions
) to list standard information about that species.

Images

A good image of an individual of the species in question should go in the {{Taxobox}}, but other descriptive images in-lined at relevant parts of the article are great. A size-comparison diagram should accompany it (as the image2 argument).

The

PNG or SVG for diagrams. For public domain resources try the American National Oceanic and Atomospheric Administration, particularly the National Marine Fisheries Historic Image Collection
.

Range maps

The basic template map is the world map without country borders. Others can be found at Wikipedia:Blank maps.

The blue colour shows where the species may be found and white is where it is absent.

  • The grey colour has R:205 G:195 B:204 (#cdc3cc).
  • The blue colour has R:0 G:0 B:255 (#0000ff)

Some maps give the range of multiple species and separate the two with different colours. There is no standard for this yet.

When editing a map, save it at full-quality so that no blurring occurs at the edge of the countries. Blurring makes further editing of the map more difficult because the "fill" function of many image editing programs doesn't work with the blurred edges.

What to include

Cetacean species articles can contain:

  • a short introduction on the species, such as whether it is baleen or toothed
  • physical characteristics such as their birth and adult sizes and weights for both sexes, colour, callosities, fin placement, size and shape, and how one may distinguish between that and other species
  • biological elements such as life expectancy, gestation period, lactation period, speed, what they eat and interaction with other species
  • population and distribution, changes thereof over time and conservation status
  • human relationship with the species such as whaling, display in aquariums and whale-watching
  • the discoverer/describer of the species, scientific names, taxonomy debates and English meaning of the scientific name

This list is neither exhaustive nor its items appropriate for every article. Some information is probably best described in an article outside a particular species e.g. baleen.

Resources

There are a huge number of books on the subject. The websites listed at cetacea may be useful for quick fact-verifying

Free pictures

The

NOAA
has some great cetacean photos on the web. It is a U.S. Federal Government department, so its photos are public domain. They're on many websites and can be tricky to find through searches. Here are some examples:

Templates

Markup Belongs... Displays as
{{Cetacea}} Bottom of article

References

  1. ^ "The Society for Marine Mammalogy's Taxonomy Committee List of Species and subspecies". Society for Marine Mammalogy. October 2014. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 8 Jan 2014.
  2. OCLC 62265494
    .
  3. ^ "Balaena mysticetus Linnaeus 1758 (bowhead whale)". Fossilworks. Archived from the original on 2020-06-11. Retrieved 2019-12-17.