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Bottlenose Dolphin Facts
The bottlenose dolphin is perhaps one of the most well known cetaceans,
because of its widespread use in marine parks and research facilities.
The bottlenose dolphin may be best known as "Flipper" (as seen in the television series).
This is the dolphin most frequently seen along the shores of the United States.
This species is very flexible in its behavior.More
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The Bottlenose Dolphin
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION�����
This is a relatively robust dolphin with a usually short and stubby beak - hence the name
"bottlenose". The bottlenose dolphin (like the beluga) has more
flexibility in its neck than other oceanic dolphins, because 5 of
the 7 neck vertebrae are not fused together as in the other oceanic
dolphins. There are 18-26 pairs of sharp, conical teeth in each
side of its jaw.
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COLOUR�����
The color of the bottlenose dolphin varies considerably, but generally this dolphin is light gray to
slate gray on the upper part of the body shading to lighter sides
and pale, pinkish gray on the belly. The belly and lower sides are
sometimes spotted.
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FINS AND FLUKES�����
The dorsal fin is high and falcate (curved) and
located near the middle of the back. The flukes are broad and curved
with a deep median notch. The flippers are of moderate length and pointed.
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LENGTH AND WEIGHT�����
Length is from 6-12 feet (1.9-3.8 m). These
dolphins may weigh as much as 1430 pounds (650 kg) off Great
Britain, though most are much smaller in other parts of the world.
Males are somewhat larger than females.
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FEEDING�����
Feeding behaviors are diverse,
ranging from coordinated efforts to catch food, feeding in
association with human fishing, to chasing fish into mudbanks. An
adult bottlenose dolphin may consume 15-30 pounds (8-15 kg) of food
each day. Bottlenose dolphins eat a wide variety of food, including
fishes, squid, and crustaceans.
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MATING AND BREEDING�����
Males reach sexual
maturity at about 11 years. Females reach sexual maturity at about
5-7 years. The gestation period is 12 months. Calving can take place
year-round with peaks in some areas during spring and fall. Calves
nurse for over a year (12-18 months), and stay with their mothers
for up to three years learning how to catch fish and other important
tasks.
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DISTRIBUTION AND MIGRATION�����
Bottlenose
dolphins are found worldwide in temperate and tropical waters,
absent only from 45 degrees poleward in either hemisphere. They are
frequently seen in harbors, bays, lagoons, estuaries, and river
mouths. There appear to be two ecotypes: a coastal form and an
offshore form. Population density appears to be higher nearshore.
Biochemical studies now are providing more information about the
relationship within and between the ecotypes. In some areas,
dolphins have limited home ranges; in others, they are migratory
generally ranging further.
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NATURAL HISTORY�����
Based on a number of
studies of nearshore populations, bottlenose dolphins seem to live
in relatively open societies. Mother and calf bonds and some other
associations may be strong, but individuals may be seen from
day-to-day with a variety of different associates. Group size is
often less than 20 nearshore; offshore groups of several hundred
have been seen. Much of what we know of the general biology of
dolphins comes from studies of bottlenose dolphins, both in
captivity and in the wild.
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STATUS�����
The bottlenose dolphin is
protected in U.S. waters by the Marine Mammal Protection Act.
Bottlenose dolphins are still generally plentiful in numbers,
but are at or near depletion in some areas. Both incidental and
direct exploitation of bottlenose dolphins are known to occur,
generally at low to moderate levels. The largest direct kills have
traditionally been in the Black Sea, where Russian and Turkish
hunters apparently have reduced local populations. Bottlenose
dolphins are accidentally caught in a variety of fishing gear,
including gillnets, purse seiners used to catch tuna, and shrimp
trawls. These dolphins also are occasional victims of harpoon and
drive fisheries. Live captures of bottlenose dolphins for captivity
have had effects on some local dolphin populations in the Gulf of
Mexico and southeastern United States. Bottlenose dolphins are
vulnerable to pollution, habitat alteration, and human disturbance
(such as boating). Several die-offs of bottlenose dolphins have
occurred. Retrospective analysis of tissues of dolphins that died
in 1987-1988 during a large die-off (approximately 800-1,000
dolphins) on the Atlantic U.S. coast indicates that mortality may
have been caused by a morbillivirus. This virus has been linked to
dies-offs of Gulf of Mexico bottlenose dolphins as well. Dolphins
with disease symptoms appeared to have elevated levels of PCB�s,
leading researchers to conclude that pollutants are playing a role
in these events.
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The only member of the family Eschrichtiidae, the gray whale is a
mysticete, or baleen whale. It is a "coastal" whale that migrates
along the North American Pacific Coast between arctic seas and the
lagoons of Baja California, Mexico. Frequently visible from shore,
gray whales provide a unique opportunity for land and boat
observation, and commercial whalewatching has become a major
industry along its migration route. Visitors to the calving and
breeding lagoons sometimes encounter the phenomenon of the
"friendlies"; gray whales that closely approach small boats and
allow themselves to be touched by humans.More
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COLOUR�����
The gray whale received its name from the gray
patches and white mottling on its dark skin. On the skin are many
scratches, scattered patches of white barnacles, and orange whale
lice. Newborn calves are dark gray to black, although some may have
distinctive white markings.
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FINS AND FLUKE�����
The gray whale has no dorsal (top) fin. About
2/3 of the way back on its body is a prominent dorsal hump followed
by a series of 6-12 knuckles along the dorsal ridge that extend to
the fluke (tail). Its flippers are paddle shaped and pointed at the
tips. Its fluke is about 10-12 feet (3.7 m) across, pointed at the
tips, and deeply notched in the center.
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LENGTH AND WEIGHT�����
Adult males measure 45-46 feet (13.7-14 m) and
adult females measure slightly more. Both sexes weigh 30-40 tons
(27,200-36,300 kg).
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FEEDING�����
Gray whales feed on small crustaceans such as amphipods, and tube
worms found in bottom sediments. They feed primarily during the
summer months of long daylight hours in the cold Arctic waters of
the Bering and Chukchi seas. As a baleen whale, it has a series of
130-180 fringed overlapping plates hanging from each side of the
upper jaw, where teeth might otherwise be located. These plates
consist of a fingernail-like material called keratin that frays
out into fine hairs on the ends inside the mouth next to the tongue. The plates are off-white and about 2-10 inches (5-25 cm) in length. To feed a whale dives to the bottom, rolls on its side and draws bottom sediments and waters into its mouth. As it closes its mouth water and sediments are expelled through the baleen plates, which trap the food on the inside near the tongue to be swallowed.
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MATING AND BREEDING�����
Gray whales reach sexual maturity at 5-11 years
of age, or when they reach 36-39 feet (11-12 m) in length.
Gestation is 12-13 months. The calf weighs 1,100-1,500 pounds
(500-680 kg) and is about 15 feet (4.5 m) at birth. Calves nurse
7-8 months on milk that is 53% fat (human milk is 2% fat). Females
bear a single calf, at intervals of 2 or more years. Courtship and
mating behavior are complex, and frequently involve 3 or more
whales of mixed sexes. Mating and calving both occur primarily in
the lagoons of Baja California, Mexico, although both have been
observed during the migration.
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DISTRIBUTION AND BREEDING�����
Gray whales inhabit shallow coastal waters of
the eastern North Pacific. The gray whale makes one of the longest
of all mammalian migrations, averaging 10,000-14,000 miles
(16,000-22,530 km) round trip. In October, the whales begin to
leave their feeding grounds in the Bering and Chukchi Seas and
head south for their mating and calving lagoons in Baja California,
Mexico. The southward journey takes 2-3 months. The whales remain
in the lagoons for 2-3 months, allowing the calves to build up a
thick layer of blubber to sustain them during the northward
migration and keep them warm in the colder waters. The return trip
north takes another 2-3 months. Mothers and calves travel very
near shore on the northbound migration. There are some individual
gray whales that are found year round in the Straits of Juan de
Fuca between the State of Washington and Vancouver Island, Canada
and possibly off the central California coast.
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NATURAL HISTORY�����
A migrating gray whale has a predictable
breathing pattern, generally blowing 3-5 times in 15-30 second
intervals before raising its fluke and submerging for 3-5 minutes.
A gray whale can stay submerged up to 15 minutes, and travel at
3-6 miles per hour (4.8-9.6 km/hr). Mothers are very protective of
their calves, and earned the name "Devilfish" from early whalers
in the lagoons because of their violent defensive behaviors. Orcas
(killer whales) are a cause of gray whale deaths, and many gray
whales have orca teeth scars on their flukes.
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STATUS�����
At one time there were three gray whale
populations: a north Atlantic population, now extinct, possibly
the victims of over-hunting; a Korean or western north Pacific
stock now very depleted, also possibly from over-hunting; and the
eastern north Pacific population, the largest surviving population.
Hunted to the edge of extinction in the 1850's after the discovery
of the calving lagoons, and again in the early 1900's with the
introduction of floating factories, the gray whale was given
partial protection in 1937 and full protection in 1947 by the
International Whaling Commission (IWC). Since that time the
eastern North Pacific gray whale population has made a remarkable
recovery and now numbers between 19,000 and 23,000, probably close
to their original population size.
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