a great white shark is a fish and a bottle nose dolphin is not
Bottlenose dolphins eat approximately 4% to 5% of their body weight in food per day, meaning they spend a great deal of time searching for food and feeding.
There are indeed dolphins around Goa, mainly the Indo-Pacific Humpback Dolphin
of course! every animal has an enemy! For the bottlenose dolphins, it's mainly the great white. i know what you're thinking, "a dolphin is no match for a shark". well your're wrong. when in a group or 'pod', they can attack sharks from their soft bellies with their hard snouts. dolphins usually win. hope that helped! ;D
Bottlenose Dolphins are predators but they are not quite apex predators. Some large shark species, such as the tiger shark, the dusky shark, the great white shark and the bull shark, prey on the bottlenose dolphin - especially unprotected calves.. Killer Whales have also been observed eating bottlenose dolphins.
Bottlenose dolphins eat approximately 4% to 5% of their body weight in food per day, meaning they spend a great deal of time searching for food and feeding.
Possible threats to bottlenose dolphins include habitat loss due to coastal development, pollution from runoff and oil spills, entanglement in fishing gear, and hunting or captivity for entertainment purposes. These threats can impact their food sources, disrupt their migration patterns, and lead to injuries or fatalities.
The difference is "great northern" and "common".
A niche is essentially when, where, and how the animal lives. A Bottle-nose dolphin lives near the top of the food-chain, although it still has some predators, such as the great white shark. It's territory is the ocean- it lives in many different areas, so you can look up its habitat. The dolphin feeds off of schools of fish, and sometimes squid. Some species of dolphins also migrate, depending on the location of the animal.
The great white shark predates on dolphins
YES
a great piano has lower notes
That's subjective, but essentially the difference lies between the definitions of "huge" and "great," making them synonymous.