Fisheries bycatch Small cetaceans such as melon-headed whales are vulnerable to fisheries
bycatch and may be injured or killed through interactions with fisheries or entanglement in lost or discarded netting. Small numbers of melon-headed whales have been caught incidentally in the
longline fishery targeting
tuna and
swordfish off
Mayotte, and in
driftnet fisheries in the Philippines,
Sri Lanka,
Ghana and
India. In the eastern tropical Pacific
purse-seine tuna fisheries, melon-headed whales have been rarely taken as
bycatch. The small numbers of injured individuals observed near Mayotte suggests that either interactions with the pelagic longline fishery in this region are rare for this species, or that individuals are more often killed rather than injured.
Hunting Individuals are taken for bait or human consumption in small cetacean subsistence and harpoon fisheries in several regions, including Sri Lanka, the Philippines and
Indonesia. At Dixcove port in Ghana, melon-headed whales are the third highest cetacean species caught for 'marine
bushmeat' by artisanal fishermen, through both bycatch from drift gillnets and occasional directed catch.
Pollution Environmental contaminants stemming from plastic debris,
oil spills and dumping of industrial wastes at-sea, in addition to agricultural run-off from terrestrial sources, can lead to
bioaccumulation in marine ecosystems and pose a threat to melon-headed whales (as with all marine mammals and long-lived, high
trophic level consumers).
Persistent organic pollutants (POPs)–include environmental contaminants such as
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs),
organochlorine pesticides e.g.
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethanes (DDTs) and
hexachlorocyclohexanes (HCHs) and
organobromine compounds such as
polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs)–are
lipophilic (fat-soluble) and can accumulate in the
blubber of marine mammals. In high concentrations these pollutants can interfere with overall health,
hormone levels and affect both the immune and reproductive systems. Females with high contaminant levels can pass contaminant loads across the placenta or via lactation from mother to calf, leading to calf mortality. Blubber samples from melon-headed whales stranded in Japan and Hawaiʻi were found to have PCB concentrations above thresholds considered toxic. Off Japan the levels of PBDE and
chlordane related compounds (CHL) in blubber increased during 1980–2000.
Noise Melon-headed whales may be vulnerable to impacts from anthropogenic (human generated) noise, such as those associated with military sonar activities, seismic surveys and high power multi-beam echosounder operations. Based on previous stranding events linking mass strandings with sonar, ==Conservation status==