Dolphins World
  • Home
  • Information
  • Species
  • Conservation
  • Humans
  • Images
  • Video
Select Page

Performing Bottlenose Dolphins

by Dolphins-World | Jan 28, 2014 | Images

Performing Bottlenose Dolphins in dolphinarium

What Size are Bottlenose Dolphins?

by Dolphins-World | Oct 2, 2013 | FAQs

Adult bottlenose dolphins range from two to four meters or six to thirteen feet.

What is the Hole on top of Dolphins for?

by Dolphins-World | Oct 2, 2013 | FAQs

The hole on the top of the dolphin is the blowhole. Dolphins breathe through their blowhole.

What is the Difference Between a Dolphin and a Porpoise?

by Dolphins-World | Oct 2, 2013 | FAQs

People sometimes use the word dolphin and porpoise interchangeably. However this is a mistake, as dolphins and porpoises are in fact different animals.

What do Bottlenose Dolphins Look Like?

by Dolphins-World | Oct 2, 2013 | FAQs

The bottlenose dolphin is probably one of the best known species of dolphins. Bottlenose dolphins are around eight to nine feet long and they have streamlined body with a large fin at the top

« Older Entries
Next Entries »

Categories

  • Facts
    • FAQs
  • Information
    • Physiology
  • Species
  • Humans
    • Culture
    • Travel
  • Multimedia
    • Images
    • Video
  • Kids
  • News

Use Policy of this Website

This site is protected by CopyScape

CopyScape Protected Do not Copy

Please, do not copy content.

Students and teachers are allowed to use this information for school projects and homework.

Latest Tweets

Tweets by @BioExpedition

Tag Cloud

acrobatic aerial behaviors anatomy aquarium Australian dolphins boats bottlenose bottlenose dolphins breeding captivity care cetacean conservation dolphin dolphinarium dolphin pod dolphins dolphin show facts feed fish food freshwater habitat information intelligence jump mammal ocean oceanic dolphin pod prey river rivers school sea small dolphin species temperate waters tourism tursiops Tursiops aduncus Tursiops australis tursiops truncatus wild dolphins
  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Dolphin Anatomy and Physiology
  • Dolphin Books and DVDs
  • Dolphin Conservation
  • Dolphin Facts and Information
  • Dolphin FAQs
  • Dolphin Information
  • Dolphin Pictures
  • Dolphin Video
  • Dolphins and Humans
  • Dolphins for Kids
  • Dolphins in Culture
  • Privacy Statement
  • Site Map
  • Travel to Dolphins
  • Types of Dolphins
  • RSS