We know that the ongoing climate crisis is making life dangerous for marine life — but how exactly do interactions between humans and marine mammals like dolphins fit into this? Have we reached ...
Traditional free divers also do not drive dolphins away ... base for a range of people to engage in education, environmental preservation and academic research with the help of dolphins will ...
Claryana Araújo-Wang, a researcher at Botos do Cerrado Research ... we put in the water.” If dolphins are using chemical cues to communicate with each other, human pollution could block ...
The researchers found special structures in the tongue of young Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins that may help it detect fat. And at the back of the tongue, a row of taste receptors that are ...
However, scientists have suspected dolphins’ teeth are for more than just munching for some time. Now, new research suggests it may have something to do with echolocation and may even help ...
“Dolphins help disabled children, dolphins bond with us, take people out, save people in danger ... that lives only in coastal waters that do not exceed 30 or 35 meters deep.