We use cookies to provide you with the best experience on our website. No personal information is stored. If you continue without changing your cookie settings, we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the website. Please refer to our privacy statement for further information on our cookies.


Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) home page | Sponsored by Welsh Assembly Government

Countryside Council for Wales
Landscape & wildlife

Priority species healthcheck

Common Dolphin
(Delphinus delphis)

The fastest dolphin to be found in Welsh waters

Common dolphin

The common dolphin has a slender and elegant body shape with a long beak and sharp angle between the beak and forehead. The dorsal fin is tall and slender with a half-moon or sickle-shaped trailing edge.

The patterning of this species is very distinctive; the attractively marked flank of yellow buff and grey patches forms a swepping hourglass shape brought into stark relief by the black upper body and white belly. The characteristic inverted v-shaped patterned mirrors the dorsal fin and further adds to the dramatic appearance of this species.

This is not a coastal species, but an open ocean or 'pelagic' dolphin. It is found in large groups or 'pods' of up to, and over, a hundred individual animals. Common dolphins are the fastest of all the small dolphins, reaching speeds of 27mph. They are often active at the surface; jumping and splashing.

Common dolphins are one of the smallest dolphins, with a body length of 1.7-2.4m, weighing 70-110kg. They are between a harbour porpoise and a bottlenose dolphin in size.

In Wales, common dolphins are more likely to be sighted at sea from boats, although they can be seen from offshore islands such as Bardsey and the Pembrokeshire islands. Large congregations of common dolphins are found in the summer months (May to November) in the waters off the coast of Pembrokeshire in St George's Channel.

Information supplied from CCW Species Series: Dolphins, porpoises and whales in Welsh waters.

 

Status (Legal protection)

  • Species of principal importance in Wales (S.42)
  • UK Biodiversity Action Plan priority species
  • Schedule 5 Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981
  • Appendix II Bern Convention
  • Appendix II Bonn Convention  
  • Annex IV EC Habitats & Species Directive
  • Schedule 2 Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2010
  • Annex A of EU Council Regulation 338/97; therefore treated by the EU as if they are included in CITES Appendix I 

Information from www.jncc.gov.uk.

Distribution maps

NBN Logo

The information comes live from the NBN Gateway.

BARS Website

BARS

Status, trend, target and threat information comes live from BARS.

 

Our other sites

Follow Us

 

twitter logo

 

Follow our tweets

 

Youtube Logo

 

Subscribe to our channel

 

Flickr Logo

 

Browse our gallery

 

Wordpress Logo

 

CCW English Blog

 

Logo Wordpress

 

Blog Cymraeg CCGC

       

Contact the Team
Postal address
The habitats and species team
C/O Enquiries
CCW
Maes-y-Ffynnon
Penrhosgarnedd
Bangor
Gwynedd
LL57 2DW
Telephone number
0845 1306229
Page feedback