yes
No. They hunt and eat live prey. Seals and dolphins are two that they will hunt.
A predator-prey relationship near where I live is dolphins-tuna-sardines. Dolphins are predators that hunt and eat tuna, who are the prey of dolphins. The tuna are also predators, but they hunt and eat sardines, who are the prey of tuna. So dolphins know to look for tuna where they see sardines, but they do not prefer to eat the sardines.
They attack in pods and they surround the prey .
Dolphins do not use sonograms; instead, they use a form of echolocation to hunt, which involves emitting sound waves and listening for the echoes that return from objects in their environment. This ability allows them to locate prey even in dark or murky waters, making it effective for hunting at night. By interpreting the returning sounds, dolphins can determine the size, distance, and shape of their prey.
A useful echo is echolocation, which is used by marine animals such as dolphins to locate and then hunt their prey
Large green anacondas prey on deer, rodents, tapirs, river dolphins, caimans, mountain lions, and jaguars.
Most dolphins live in groups. That makes it easier to hunt. When they find a school of fish, they chase it to a shallow place. Then they swarm out into a line. Then the fish are trapped. They are caught by a line of dolphins. They do not chew with their teeth. They sallow their prey whole.
Yes. Sharks and Orca will take young dolphins. Young dolphins will swim beside their mothers and a pod of dolphins will aggessively protect their young.
This can mean two things: 1. People go on a "dolphin hunt" 2. Dolphins go on a hunt and we term it as "dolphin hunt" If the case is 1, then the question carries neither sense nor meaning. if the case is two, then we can assume that the dolphin prey turns on them, sometimes killing them as well.
the dolphins eat their prey with their snobs
they can be to the Japanese
Yes, river dolphins do have eyes, but they are relatively small and less developed compared to those of other dolphins. Their eyesight is adapted to the murky waters of their freshwater habitats, where visibility is often poor. River dolphins primarily use echolocation to navigate and hunt for prey, relying more on sound than sight.