) published in Hector 1873 The whale was discovered from a lower jaw with teeth found by naturalist
Henry Travers on
Pitt Island in the
Chatham Islands of New Zealand in 1872.
James Hector, the director of the
Colonial Museum, reported the jaw in an 1873 paper on the whales and dolphins of New Zealand, thinking it a specimen of
strap-toothed whale (
Dolichodon layardii), which had been described by
British Museum zoologist
John Edward Gray in 1865 from a South African specimen. Gray, in an 1874 response, doubted Hector's identification and thought the jaw likely from a new species, which he provisionally named
Dolichodon traversii in honor of Travers, the collector. Hector was not persuaded though and insisted in an 1878 article that it was the jaw of a strap-toothed whale, which by then had been renamed
Mesoplodon layardi. A calvaria found at
White Island in New Zealand in the 1950s went unidentified for about 40 years, until in 1999 it was identified as being from a
ginkgo-toothed beaked whale (
Mesoplodon ginkgodens). According to a 2002 study,
DNA sequence and
morphological comparisons show that the first three finds all came from the same species, which is therefore properly known as
M. traversii. In December 2010, a cow and male calf stranded, then died, on
Opape Beach, eastern
Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. At the time they were thought to be
Gray's beaked whale (
Mesoplodon grayi), and were buried at the beach after photographs, measurements and tissue samples were taken. Genetic analysis in 2011 revealed that they were spade-toothed whales, the first whole individuals known to have been seen. The skeletons were exhumed, without the female's skull, which had washed out to sea, and were taken to
Te Papa, New Zealand's national museum. The first ever description of the external appearance of the whale, along with an analysis of DNA, was published in 2012. On 4 July 2024, a dead male blackish-silver specimen washed ashore near
Taieri Mouth, on the southern east coast of the South Island, New Zealand. Samples from the intact specimen were taken by the
Department of Conservation and sent to the
University of Auckland's Cetacean Tissue Archive for DNA testing. The specimen was brought to the
Invermay Agricultural Centre in
Mosgiel for dissection, which began on 2 December. This was the first intact specimen able to be dissected. The skeleton will be first of this species on display in a museum. The individual was named Ōnumia by
Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou, after the
Māori name for the area where he was found. ==Description==