The ethical debate surrounding the harvesting of shark fins and dolphin fins can be compared in an analogous manner because both involve the controversial practice of killing marine animals for their fins, which can lead to negative impacts on the populations of these species and their ecosystems.
A dolphin is warm-blooded.
An orca is a type of whale, specifically a member of the dolphin family.
No, an orca whale is not a dolphin. Despite being commonly referred to as killer whales, orcas are actually the largest species of dolphins.
that question is impossible to answer. that's like asking how many cells you have. unless you get one dolphin and count its cells, you wont be able to tell
A killer whale, also known as an orca, is actually a type of dolphin, not a whale. Despite its name, it is classified as a member of the dolphin family.
Analogous!
The size of a dolphin compared to a shark is more than half and dolphins aren't predators. If you compare more factors, a dolphin could never win
They help eat bad things to human in the sea.
Dolphins have blow holes, not blow horns. The blow hole allows the dolphin to inhale and exhale air. The blow hole is analogous to a nostril in other mammals.
Dolphins identify each other with characteristic "signature whistles," a pattern of sound unique to each dolphin analogous to our names. Scientists use dorsal fin shapes and characteristic markings (like spots, stripes, or scars) to tell dolphins apart. In the future, scientists might be able to quickly and more accurately identify dolphins based on their signature whistle.
It depends on what you're comparing it to. Compared to a dolphin Yes, it is pretty big, but compared to other whales it's somewhat small.
Homologous features of animals are a lot more recent in contrast to evolution, where as analogous dates far back. Homologous features are similar in structure, but perform different functions, such as the human hands and dolphin flippers, which makes room to allow recent evolution comparisons while analogous consists of wings of a bee and a bird, which are completely different. When trying to determine evolutionary relationship between two species, biologists concentrate on homologous features, as analogous features would be considered useless in this case.
The sides of a dolphin are commonly referred to as the "flanks." These flanks are the areas between the dorsal fin and the pectoral fins, and they play a role in the dolphin's streamlined shape, aiding in swimming. The coloration on the flanks can vary among species, often displaying a lighter shade compared to the dorsal side.
When feeling the texture of a dolphin, it is most commonly compared to the feel and texture of a boiled egg with it's shell removed
I'll give you the 32 types the Bottlenose dolphin, the Killer Whale, the Common dolphin, the False Killer Whale, the Hector's dolphin, the Short-Finned Pilot Whale, the Commerson's dolphin, the Long-Finned Pilot Whale, the Black dolphin, the Atlantic Humpbacked dolphin, the Haeviside's dolphin, the Indo-Pacific Humpbacked dolphin, the Southern Right Whale dolphin, the Tucuxi, the Northern Right dolphin, the Pygmy Killer Whale, the Spotted dolphin, the Melon-Headed Whale, the Atlantic Spotted dolphin, the Irrawaddy dolphin, the Striped dolphin, the Rough-Toothed dolphin, the Spinner dolphin, the Risso's dolphin, the Clymene dolphin, the Fraser's dolphin, the White-Beaked dolphin, the Peale's dolphin, the Atlantic White-Sided dolphin, the Hourglass dolphin, the Pacific White-Sided dolphin and the Dusky dolphin.
no a dolphin is about 150lbs but depends if you have a baby dolphin or a adolt dolphin and there is your dolphin anser bey
It depends on the animal, Elephants have small brains compared to their body mass, whereas a dolphin has a rather large one...