The document discusses the endangered pink dolphin, including its characteristics of measuring up to 2.5 meters long and weighing 200 kg as adults. They breathe every 30 to 110 seconds by shooting a jet of water up to 2 meters high. The pink dolphin lives exclusively in fresh water in rivers, canals, flooded forests, and lakes in eastern Peru's Amazon region. The greatest threat to this endangered species is river contamination from oil activities, fuel disposal, and fishing with dynamite.
The document discusses the endangered pink dolphin, including its characteristics of measuring up to 2.5 meters long and weighing 200 kg as adults. They breathe every 30 to 110 seconds by shooting a jet of water up to 2 meters high. The pink dolphin lives exclusively in fresh water in rivers, canals, flooded forests, and lakes in eastern Peru's Amazon region. The greatest threat to this endangered species is river contamination from oil activities, fuel disposal, and fishing with dynamite.
The document discusses the endangered pink dolphin, including its characteristics of measuring up to 2.5 meters long and weighing 200 kg as adults. They breathe every 30 to 110 seconds by shooting a jet of water up to 2 meters high. The pink dolphin lives exclusively in fresh water in rivers, canals, flooded forests, and lakes in eastern Peru's Amazon region. The greatest threat to this endangered species is river contamination from oil activities, fuel disposal, and fishing with dynamite.
Members: Gavilano Lazaro, Steven Alexander Yucra Condori, Josué Felipe De la Cruz Collazos, Missael Anderson The endangered pink dolphin Characteristics
They can measure up to
2.50 m long and weigh around 200 kg, when they are fully developed. They breathe every 30 to 110 seconds and shoot a jet of water up to 2 meters high through the dorsal orifice.
Gavilano Lazaro, Steven Alexander
Habitat •The pink dolphin, a species that lives exclusively in fresh water. This specimen can be found in rivers, canals, forests flooded by rain, and lakes in the eastern Amazon of Peru.
Gavilano Lazaro, Steven Alexander
ENDANGERED STATUS: The greatest threat facing this species is the contamination of rivers by oil activities, disposal of fuel oils, and fishing with dynamite.