Common dolphin

Common dolphin
Common dolphins doing a behavior known as "porpoising."
Size compared to an average human
CITES Appendix II
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Delphinidae
Genus: Delphinus
Linnaeus, 1758
Species:
D. delphis
Binomial name
Delphinus delphis
Subspecies
  • D. d. delphis
  • D. d. bairdii
  • D. d. ponticus
  • D. d. tropicalis
  Range of common dolphin
Synonyms
List
    • Delphinus albimanus Peale, 1848
    • Delphinus algeriensis Loche, 1860
    • Delphinus capensis Gray, 1828
    • Delphinus delphus Linnaeus, 1758
    • Delphinus forsteri Gray, 1846
    • Delphinus fulvifasciatus Wagner, 1846
    • Delphinus fulvofasciatus True, 1889
    • Delphinus janira Gray, 1846
    • Delphinus loriger Wiegmann, 1846
    • Delphinus marginatus Lafont, 1868
    • Delphinus novaezealandiae Gray, 1850
    • Delphinus novaezeelandiae Wagner, 1846
    • Delphinus novaezelandiae Quoy & Gaimard, 1830
    • Delphinus vulgaris Lacépède, 1804
    • Delphinus zelandae Gray, 1853

The common dolphin (Delphinus delphis) is the most abundant cetacean in the world, with an estimated global population of about six million. It is currently the only member of the genus Delphinus, the type genus of the subfamily Delphininae. This places it as a close relative of the bottlenose dolphin, humpback dolphin, striped dolphin, spinner dolphin, Clymene dolphin, spotted dolphin, Fraser's dolphin, the tucuxi, and the Guiana dolphin.

The common dolphin was once divided into two different species, the short-beaked common dolphin and the long-beaked common dolphin. These are now generally regarded as ecotypes. Recent research shows that many long-beaked populations worldwide are not closely related to one another, often originating from short-beaked ancestors, and they do not consistently share the same derived traits. For this reason, these forms are no longer classified as separate species.

Despite its name, the common dolphin is not widely considered the "archetypal" dolphin; that role is more often associated with the bottlenose dolphin, largely because of its frequent appearances in aquaria and the media. Nevertheless, the common dolphin held cultural significance in antiquity and frequently appeared in Greek and Roman art, such as in murals created by the Minoan civilization.