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Amazon River Dolphin Facts BIOEXPEDITION.COM Inia Geofrenssis

Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

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http://goo.gl/C8qht The Amazon River dolphins is a freshwater dolphin endemic of the Amazon region.Visit us: http://goo.gl/ZkZz7Facebook: http://facebook.com/bioexpeditionTwitter: http://twitter.com/bioexpeditionYoutube: http://youtube.com/bioexpeditionPinterest: http://pinterest.com/bioexpedition

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Page 1: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Amazon River Dolphin Facts

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Inia Geofrenssis

Page 2: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Amazon River Dolphin

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Page 3: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Amazon River Dolphin

The Amazon river dolphin is a freshwater river dolphin.

The Amazon dolphin is the largest of all the river dolphins in the world.

The Amazon dolphin split from its oceanic ancestors about 15 million years ago.

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Page 4: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Amazon River Dolphin

Other common names of the species are Boto, Bouto, Bufeo and pink dolphin.

There are three recognized subspecies:

Inia geoffrensis geoffrensisInia geoffrensis humboldtianaInia geoffrensis boliviensis.

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Page 5: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Anatomy

Body length can range from 5.0 to 7.9 ft and weigh 350 pounds.

Botos have extremely flexible necks, as some of the vertebrae are unfused.

They are able to move their head in most directions.

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Page 6: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Anatomy

Body color varies with age. The young individuals being dark gray and adults are pink.

The rostrum and mandible are long and robust and the melon is small and flaccid.

They possess heterodont dentition and conical teeth.

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Page 7: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Habitat

They can be found in the Amazon and Orinoco Rivers.

Their distribution include

BoliviaBrazilColombiaEcuadorPeruVenezuela.

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Page 8: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Habitat

The Amazon river dolphin lives in main rivers, small channels, mouths of rivers, lakes, and just below waterfalls and rapids.

The boto dolphins are sometimes swimming through the trees.

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Page 9: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Behavior

They appear to be most active during the early morning and late evening.

They are slow swimmers. Generally travel at around 1.3 miles per hour.

They are known to associate with other dolphins and giant otters.

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Page 10: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Behavior

Inia geoffrensis is typically solitary and is rarely seen in tight groups of more than three members.

These dolphins do not dive very deep, and they rarely raise their flukes out of the water.

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Page 11: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Feeding

They feed on crustaceans, crabs, small turtles, catfish, piranha, shrimp, and other fishes.

Amazon River Dolphins use their echolocation to locate prey in the murky waters of the Rainforest Rivers

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Page 12: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Feeding

Botos are usually solitary feeders.

They consume about 2.5% of their body weight every day

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Page 13: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Reproduction

Females reach sexual maturity between six and ten years of age.

Males seem to initiate sexual activity by nibbling at the flippers of females.

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Page 14: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Reproduction

Gestation lasts 10-11 months and a single calf is born.

The interval between births may be as long as five years.

The longevity of Inia geoffrensis in captivity is from 10 to 26 years.

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Page 15: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Threats

The boto is fully protected by law in South America.

The natural predators of the Amazon River dolphins are caimans, sharks, anacondas and jaguars.

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Page 16: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Threats

Threats include incidental mortality in fishing gears, deliberate killing for fish bait and attractant for predator control, damming of rivers and environmental pollution.

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Page 17: Amazon River Dolphin, The Pink Dolphin - Facts

Credits

Copyright© Bioexpedition.com 2012