BIOLOGICAL INTELLIGENCE
Species/Orca
REFERENCE_002DDData DeficientUpdated 2026-06-07

Orca

Orcinus orca

Also known as Killer Whale, Spekkhogger

The largest member of the dolphin family and a top predator in every ocean. Orcas are associated with shaping marine food webs from the top down, though their role varies sharply between populations, which differ in diet, calls and hunting behaviour.

Largest member of the dolphin family.Found in every ocean on Earth.Distinct populations differ in diet, calls and culture.Globally Data Deficient — yet some local populations are at serious risk.
01

How this species supports living systems

Functions → Services → Recipients
Species/Ecological Function/Ecosystem Service/Recipient
Species
Orca
Function
Predation
Hunting other animals — which keeps prey numbers in balance.
Service
Ecosystem Stability
Ecosystems staying balanced enough to keep functioning over time.
BiodiversityForests
Service
Biodiversity Maintenance
Keeping a wide range of species present rather than a few dominant ones.
BiodiversityWild Plants
Species
Orca
Function
Nutrient Cycling
Moving nutrients through an ecosystem so life can reuse them.
Service
Ocean Productivity
The ocean's capacity to grow the plankton and prey that feed marine life.
FisheriesBiodiversity
Service
Ecosystem Stability
Ecosystems staying balanced enough to keep functioning over time.
BiodiversityForests

Read each line left to right: the orca performs an ecological function, which supports an ecosystem service, which benefits a recipient. These functions, services and recipients are shared nodes — other species connect to the same ones, forming the first layer of the knowledge graph.

02

Identity

Class
Mammalia
Order
Cetacea
Family
Delphinidae
Genus
Orcinus
Species
orca
Human Translation

Despite the name 'killer whale', the orca is the largest dolphin — a toothed whale, not a baleen whale.

03

Conservation

IUCN Status
DDData Deficient
Population Trend
Unknown globally
Wild Population
At least ~50,000 individuals (reported estimate)
Main Issue
Varies by population — some local groups are highly threatened even where the species globally is not assessed.
CITES
CITES Appendix II
Human Translation

Data Deficient means there isn't enough global data for a complete extinction-risk assessment. It does not mean the orca is safe: several well-studied local populations are in serious decline.

04

Distribution

Native Range
All oceans, from polar seas to the tropics.
Current Range
Still found worldwide, with notable concentrations in cold, productive waters.
Human Translation

Orcas live in every ocean, but individual populations tend to specialise in particular regions and prey.

05

Biology

Length
6–8 m; large males can approach ~9 m
Weight
Up to ~6,000 kg in large males
Lifespan
Females often 50–80+ years; males typically shorter
Diet
Carnivore — varies markedly by population
Key Food
Salmon, Herring, Seals, Other cetaceans, Rays & sharks
Reproduction
Gestation ~15–18 months; usually a single calf, with long intervals between births.
Behaviour
  • Highly social — lives in stable, often matrilineal pods
  • Population-specific vocal dialects
  • Cooperative, sometimes culturally transmitted hunting techniques
  • Distinct ecotypes with different diets and behaviour
Human Translation

Different orca populations behave almost like distinct cultures — separate diets, calls and hunting methods passed down within the group. Some eat only fish; others specialise in marine mammals.

06

Ecological Intelligence

Ecological Role
Apex marine predator, often regarded as a keystone species in its food web.
Keystone
Frequently — its predation is linked to the structure of marine communities.
Trophic Level
Apex consumer (top of the marine food chain)
Human Translation

As an ocean apex predator, the orca's hunting is associated with regulating populations of prey such as seals and fish, which is linked to the balance of marine ecosystems.

07

Threats & Solutions

Threat → Category → Driver
Threats
Prey Depletion
Exploitation · Overfishing

Fish-eating populations are closely tied to prey such as Chinook salmon; declines in prey are linked to poor body condition and low calf survival.

ConfidenceHigh
Chemical Pollution
Pollution · Industrial Chemicals

As long-lived top predators, orcas accumulate persistent pollutants such as PCBs, which are associated with reproductive and immune harm.

ConfidenceHigh
Noise Pollution
Pollution · Shipping & Vessel Traffic

Underwater noise can interfere with the echolocation and communication orcas rely on to hunt.

ConfidenceMedium
Vessel Disturbance
Disturbance · Shipping & Vessel Traffic

Vessel traffic can disrupt feeding and movement, particularly near coastal populations.

ConfidenceMedium
Bycatch
Exploitation · Commercial Fisheries

Entanglement and competition with fisheries affect some populations.

ConfidenceMedium
Climate Change
Climate · Global Warming

Warming and shifting prey distributions are associated with longer-term changes for some populations.

ConfidenceMedium
Captivity Trade
Exploitation · Captivity Industry

Historic live capture damaged some populations; pressure has declined but persists in places.

ConfidenceHigh
Solutions
Prey Recovery

Rebuilding the fish and prey populations predators rely on.

Rebuilding key prey stocks such as salmon is central for fish-eating populations.

Pollution Control

Phasing out and cleaning up harmful chemicals.

Reducing persistent chemicals lowers the toxic burden carried by top predators.

Marine Protected Areas

Ocean zones where harmful activity is limited or banned.

Protected ocean zones can shield critical feeding and resting habitat.

Vessel Regulation

Rules on where and how fast boats can travel.

Speed and approach limits reduce disturbance and noise.

Fisheries Reform

Managing fishing to cut bycatch and protect prey.

Managing fisheries reduces both bycatch and prey competition.

Population Monitoring

Tracking populations so gaps in data can be closed and trends caught early.

Closing the data gaps behind the Data Deficient status is itself a priority.

Underwater Noise Reduction

Quieter ship technology and traffic management.

Quieter vessels help protect communication and hunting.

Captivity Phase-Out

Ending the capture and display of wild animals.

Ending live capture removes a historic source of decline.

08

Importance Assessment

Ecological Importance5/5

How much this species shapes its ecosystem.

Extinction Risk3/5

How close the species is to disappearing.

Cultural Importance5/5

Its significance to people and cultures.

Public Recognition5/5

How widely known the species is.

Data Availability2/5

How much reliable data exists.

Mission Relevance5/5

How relevant it is to 4PLANET missions.

09

Connections

First layer of the knowledge graph
Ecosystems
Global OceansCriticalPolar MarineHighCoastal MarineHighContinental ShelfModerateFjordsModerate
Threats
Prey DepletionChemical PollutionNoise PollutionVessel DisturbanceBycatchClimate ChangeCaptivity Trade
Solutions
Prey RecoveryPollution ControlMarine Protected AreasVessel RegulationFisheries ReformPopulation MonitoringUnderwater Noise ReductionCaptivity Phase-Out
Missions
OCE4NWH4LESSPECIESRE:WILD Marine4PLANET BRAIN
Related Species
Jaguar
10

Sources

Source keys reference the bodies this profile draws on. Full citations will connect to a dedicated source database in a later version. No citations are fabricated.

IUCN_RED_LISTCITESNOAAIWCSMITHSONIAN