River dolphin
River dolphins are four living species of dolphin which reside in freshwater rivers and estuaries. River dolphins inhabit areas of Asia and South America. They are classed in the Platanistoidea superfamily of cetaceans. Three species live in fresh water rivers. The fourth species, the La Plata Dolphin, lives in salt-water estuaries and near-shore marine environments. However, it is scientifically classed in the river dolphin group rather than the oceanic dolphin family.
River dolphins are in danger of extinction due to habitat loss, hunting by humans, and naturally low numbers. Also, many river dolphins possess very poor eyesight.
Characteristics
The largest river dolphins usually grow up to 2.4 meters (8 feet) long, but most of the animals are smaller. River dolphins may be white, pink, yellow, brown, gray, or black.[1]
Taxonomy
The four families of river dolphins are classified by Rice, 1998[1] as belonging to Platanistoidea. Formerly Platanistidae was listed as the only extant family of the Platanistoidea superfamily. The previously accepted classification treated all four families as belonging to this family and treated the Ganges and Indus River Dolphins as separate species. Five lineages of dolphin have evolved to live in big, muddy rivers. River dolphins are thought to have relictual distributions. Their ancestors originally occupied marine habitats, but were then displaced from these habitats by modern dolphin lineages.[2][3] Many of the morphological similarities and adaptations to freshwater habitats arose due to convergent evolution. A December 2006 survey found no members of Lipotidae (commonly known as the Yangtze River dolphin) and declared the species functionally extinct.[4][5]
Current classification by Rice (1998)
- Superfamily Platanistoidea
- Family Platanistidae
- Genus Platanista
- Ganges and Indus River Dolphin, Platanista gangetica with two subspecies
- Ganges River Dolphin (or Susu), Platanista gangetica gangetica
- Indus River Dolphin (or Bhulan), Platanista gangetica minor
- Superfamily Inioidea
- Family Iniidae
- Genus Inia
- Amazon River Dolphin (or Boto), Inia geoffrensis
- Inia geoffrensis geoffrensis
- Inia geoffrensis boliviensis
- Inia geoffrensis humbotiana
- Family Pontoporiidae
- Genus Pontoporia
- La Plata Dolphin (or Franciscana), Pontoporia blainvillei
- Superfamily †Lipotoidea
- Family †Lipotidae
- Genus †Lipotes
- Baiji (or Chinese River Dolphin), †Lipotes vexillifer (functionally extinct, since December 2006)
Previous classification
- Family Platanistidae
- Ganges River Dolphin (or Susu), Platanista gangetica
- Indus River Dolphin (or Bhulan), Platanista minor
- Amazon River Dolphin (or Boto), Inia geoffrensis
- Chinese River Dolphin (or Baiji), Lipotes vexillifer (presumed extinct as of 2006)
- La Plata Dolphin (or Franciscana), Pontoporia blainvillei
Difference Between Marine and River Dolphins
Both river dolphins and marine dolphins belong to a group of mammals called cetaceans. But these two dolphins differ somewhat in appearance. For example, the snout of a river dolphin measures about 30 centimeters [1 foot] long, approximately four times as long as that of most marine dolphins. River dolphins have smaller eyes than marine dolphins, and their vision is poorly developed because they live in dark, muddy water. This environment also makes river dolphins less active than marine dolphins. River dophins feed primarily on fish.[1]
Extinction of the Baiji
On December 13, 2006, the Baiji (aka Yangtze River Dolphin and Chinese River Dolphin) was declared "functionally extinct", after a 45-day search by leading experts in the field failed to find a single specimen.[4][6] The last verified sighting was in September 2004.[7] In August 2007, reports surfaced that a man saw and videotaped what appears to be a Baiji in the Yangtze River. A team of scientists attempted to verify the sighting beginning in September 2007.[8]
It is believed that overfishing, damming and sub-aquatic sonar pollution (which interfered with the dolphin's sonar-based method of locating food), led to the extinction. Reuters news reported this their first record of an aquatic mammalian extinction in 50 years.
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Rice, D. W. (1998). Marine mammals of the world: systematics and distribution. Society of Marine Mammalogy Special Publication Number 4. pp. 231.
- ↑ Cassens, I., S. Vicario, V. G. Waddell, H. Balchowsky, D. Van Belle, W. Ding, C. Fan, R. S. L. Mohan, P. C. Simoes-Lopes, R. Bastida, A. Meyer, M. J. Stanhope, and M. C. Milinkovitch (2000). "Independent adaptation to riverine habitats allowed survival of ancient cetacean lineages". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 97 (21): 11343–11347. doi:10.1073/pnas.97.21.11343. PMID 11027333.
- ↑ Hamilton, H., S. Caballero, A. G. Collins, and R. L. Brownell Jr. (2001). "Evolution of river dolphins". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B: Biological Sciences 268 (1466): 549–556. doi:10.1098/rspb.2000.1385. PMID 11296868.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Turvey, S. T., R. L. Pitman, B. L. Taylor, J. Barlow, T. Akamatsu, L. A. Barrett, X. Zhao, R. R. Reeves, B. S. Stewart, K. Wang, Z. Wei, X. Zhang, L. T. Pusser, M. Richlen, J. R. Brandon and D. Wang (2007). "First human-caused extinction of a cetacean species?". Journal of the Royal Society, Biology Letters 3 (5): 537–540. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0292. PMID 17686754.
- ↑ All Headline News, Dec. 2006.
- ↑ http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7005844811
- ↑ http://www.baiji.org/fileadmin/pdf/1206_release_YFDE.pdf
- ↑ http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2007-08-29-china-dolphin_N.htm
References
- Reeves, Randall R. et al. (2002). National Audubon Society guide to marine mammals of the world. Alfred A. Knopf. 527 pp.
Extant Cetacea species |
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Kingdom Animalia · Phylum Chordata · Class Mammalia · Infraclass Eutheria · Superorder Laurasiatheria · (unranked) Cetartiodactyla · (unranked) Whippomorpha |
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Suborder Odontoceti (Toothed whales) (cont. below) |
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Delphinidae
(Oceanic dolphins) |
Cephalorhynchus
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Commerson's Dolphin (C. commersonii) · Chilean Dolphin (C. eutropia) · Haviside's Dolphin (C. heavisidii) · Hector's Dolphin (C. hectori)
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Long-beaked Common Dolphin (D. capensis) · Short-beaked Common Dolphin (D. delphis)
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Feresa
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Pygmy Killer Whale (F. attenuata)
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Short-finned Pilot Whale (G. macrorhynchus) · Long-finned Pilot Whale (G. melas)
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Grampus
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Risso's Dolphin (G. griseus)
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Lagenodelphis
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Fraser's Dolphin (L. hosei)
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Lagenorhynchus
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Atlantic White-sided Dolphin (L. acutus) · White-beaked Dolphin (L. albirostris) · Peale's Dolphin (L. australis) · Hourglass Dolphin (L. cruciger) · Pacific White-sided Dolphin (L. obliquidens) · Dusky Dolphin (L. obscurus)
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Lissodelphis
(Right whale dolphins)
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Northern Right Whale Dolphin (L. borealis) · Southern Right Whale Dolphin (L. peronii)
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Orcaella
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Irrawaddy Dolphin (O. brevirostris) · Australian Snubfin Dolphin (O. heinsohni)
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Peponocephala
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Melon-headed Whale (P. electra)
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Pseudorca
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False Killer Whale (P. crassidens)
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Sotalia
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Tucuxi (S. fluviatilis) · Costero (S. guianensis)
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Sousa
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Pacific Humpback Dolphin (S. chinensis) · Indian Humpback Dolphin (S. plumbea) · Atlantic Humpback Dolphin (S. teuszii)
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Stenella
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Pantropical Spotted Dolphin (S. attenuata) · Clymene Dolphin (S. clymene) · Striped Dolphin (S. coeruleoalba) · Atlantic Spotted Dolphin (S. frontalis) · Spinner Dolphin (S. longirostris)
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Steno
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Rough-toothed Dolphin (S. bredanensis)
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Indo-Pacific Bottlenose Dolphin (T. aduncus) · Common Bottlenose Dolphin (T. truncatus)
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Suborder Odontoceti (Toothed whales) (cont. above) |
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Monodontidae |
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Phocoenidae
(Porpoises) |
Neophocaena
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Finless Porpoise (N. phocaeniodes)
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Spectacled Porpoise (P. dioptrica) · Harbor Porpoise (P. phocoena) · Vaquita (P. sinus) · Burmeister's Porpoise (P. spinipinnis)
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Phocoenoides
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Dall's Porpoise (P. dalli)
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Physeteridae |
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Kogiidae |
Kogia
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Pygmy sperm whale (K. breviceps) · Dwarf sperm whale (K. simus)
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Iniidae |
Inia
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Amazon River Dolphin (I. geoffrensis)
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Lipotidae |
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Platanistidae |
Platanista
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Ganges and Indus River Dolphin (P. gangetica)
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Pontoporiidae |
Pontoporia
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La Plata Dolphin (P. blainvillei)
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Ziphiidae
(Beaked whales) |
Berardius
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Arnoux's Beaked Whale (B. arnuxii) · Baird's Beaked Whale (B. bairdii)
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Hyperoodon
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Northern Bottlenose Whale (H. ampullatus) · Southern Bottlenose Whale (H. planifrons)
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Indopacetus
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Tropical Bottlenose Whale (I. pacificus)
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Mesoplodon
(Mesoplodont
whales)
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Sowerby's Beaked Whale (M. bidens) · Andrew's Beaked Whale (M. bowdoini) · Hubbs' Beaked Whale (M. carlhubbsi) · Blainville's Beaked Whale (M. densirostris) · Gervais' Beaked Whale (M. europaeus) · Ginkgo-toothed Beaked Whale (M. ginkgodens) · Gray's Beaked Whale (M. grayi) · Hector's Beaked Whale (M. hectori) · Strap-toothed Whale (M. layardii) · True's Beaked Whale (M. mirus) · Perrin's Beaked Whale (M. perrini) · Pygmy Beaked Whale (M. peruvianus) · Stejneger's Beaked Whale (M. stejnegeri) · Spade-toothed Whale (M. traversii)
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Tasmacetus
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Shepherd's Beaked Whale (T. sheperdi)
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Ziphius
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Cuvier's Beaked Whale (Z. cavirostris)
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