Chordate
Atlantic bottlenose dolphin Bottlenose Dolphins are the most common species of dolphin. Of course, they are the most recognizable and popular dolphin as well. Bottlenose dolphins are likely the dolphin you think of when your hear the word "dolphin".
Bottlenose dolphins are in the mammal kingdom.
Seraphina, the Bottlenose Dolphin
Carnivore, they eat mainly of small fish, crustaceans and squid but diet varies by location
The same phylum you belong to! Chordata.
Bottlenose Dolphins belong to Phylum Chordata.
Chordate
There's the common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) and the Indo-Pacific bottlenose (Tursiops aduncus).
Yes. All animals which have a spine, or backbone, are classified in the phylum Chordata. There are three subphylums in Chordata: Urochordata (tunicates), Cephalachordata (lancelets), and Vertebrata (vertebrates). Dolphins belong to the phylum Chordata because they are vertebrates.
No a bottlenose dolphin does not have a neck
The bottlenose dolphin is in the kingdom mammals
bottlenose dolphin
the bottlenose dolphin is. by far.
A female bottlenose dolphin (there is no special phrasing for a female bottlenose dolphin)
a bottlenose dolphin you stupid person
Common bottlenose dolphin was created in 1821.
Tursiops truncatus is the scientific name for a bottlenose dolphin.