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Physeteroidea
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Physeteroidea is a superfamily that includes three species of : the , in the genus , and the pygmy sperm whale and dwarf sperm whale, in the genus Kogia. In the past, these genera have sometimes been united in a single family, the Physeteridae, with the two species in the subfamily Kogiinae; however, recent practice is to allocate the genus Kogia to its own family, the , leaving the Physeteridae as a (single extant species) family, although additional fossil representatives of both families are known.


Characteristics
The sperm whale ( Physeter macrocephalus) is the largest species of , with adult bulls (males) growing to be about long, and weighing about . The two kogiid species are much smaller, around in length, and weighing .

The bodies of physeteroids are robustly proportioned, with paddle-shaped flippers. The lower jaw is always relatively small and thin relative to the upper jaw. The of these whales are distinctly asymmetrical, with the blowhole being located on the left side of the head; in the sperm whale, this is near the top of the head, while on the kogiids it is further forward. All species have a large number of similar, and relatively simple, teeth. In the kogiids, and sometimes also in the sperm whale, the teeth in the upper jaw do not erupt, and are sometimes altogether absent.

(1984). 9780871968715, Facts on File. .

The eyes of physeteroids are unable to swivel in their sockets, and possess only a vestigial . Echolocation likely is a far more important sense to these animals than vision.

Another common characteristic is the , a semiliquid waxy white substance filling the 'case' or spermaceti organ in the whale's head, which plays a primary role in the production and directional manipulation of focused clicking sounds used for echolocation in the extant great sperm whale ( Physeter macrocephalus). All three species dive to great depths to find food, although the sperm whale is believed to dive much deeper than either of the kogiids. Members of both families eat squid, fish, and even sharks.

lasts from 9 to 15 months, depending on species. The single calf remains with the mother for at least two years, before being . Physeteroids do not reach full sexual maturity for several years. All species congregate in 'pods' or herds, consisting of mostly females, calves, and adolescent males, although these pod sizes are typically smaller in the kogiids.


Evolution
The earliest sperm whale fossils are known from the late – about 25 million years ago,Stucky, R. E. & McKenna, M. C. (1993). Mammalia. Pp. 739–771 in Benton, M. J. ed.: The Fossil Record 2. Chapman & Hall, London.
(2025). 9780123735539, Academic Press. .
with an ancestry tracing back from the latest before diverging from the remainder of the odontocetid line, leading to the , and .

The record suggests that sperm whales were more common in the , during which basal lineages (such as and ) existed; other fossil genera assigned to the Physeteridae include , , , , , , , and , while kogiid fossil genera include , , and . The earliest kogiids are known from the late Miocene, around 7 million years ago.Perrin, W. F., Würsic, B. & Thewissen, J. G. M. eds.: Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals. Academic Press, San Diego, 1414 pp.

The close relationship between extant Physeteridae and is confirmed in recent molecular studies using mitochondrial cytochrome b,; on the basis of these analyses, their nearest relatives appear to be the on one hand, and the and on the other. The last cited paper also favours the grouping of Physeteridae and Kogiidae in a single superfamily, Physeteroidea, as has sometimes previously been suggested. Bianucci & Landini, 2006 suggest that Diaphorocetus, Zygophyseter, Naganocetus, and Aulophyseter antedate the inferred split of the Kogiidae and Physeteridae, thus would restrict the family Physeteridae to those genera that postdate this split (a view).


Classification
They are members of the , the containing all the toothed whales and dolphins. Suggestions that the sperm whales might be a sister group to the baleen whales were refuted by molecular and morphological data, confirming the monophyly of Odontoceti including sperm whales. One extant species of the genus is placed in the family Physeteridae. Two species of the related extant genus Kogia, the pygmy sperm whale K. breviceps and the dwarf sperm whale K. simus, are sometimes also placed in this family, or else are placed in their own family, the .

A summary of the classification of extant and extinct (†) taxa is:


Nomina dubia

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