Yes, dolphins are known to protect their young. Mothers are particularly attentive, keeping their calves close and helping them surface for air. Additionally, other members of the pod often assist in safeguarding the young, forming a protective barrier against potential threats, such as predators. This social structure enhances the survival chances of the calves.
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.
dolphins are not poisonous but can attack you of bump into you really hard to protect itselve and its young
by protecting the female dolphins...
Dolphins beat up sharks because they are trying to defend their young ones and to drive the sharks away so that they the sharks don't bother the dolphins anymore.
dolphins will protect you from sharks because they know it is dangerous and will take you and swim to somewhere safe.
There are two kinds of people who protect dolphins. There are conservationists, who try to protect dolphins in the wild from threats that could lower their population and make them endangered, or worse, extinct. There are also animal rights activists, who work to have dolphins released from captivity, which is very inhumane for dolphins.
Yes, Dolphins nurse and carry their babies.
dolphins make a group called (a pod) to protect there young from enemies
they keep the young by thereside. remember bottle-nosed dolphins are mammals
No, dolphins do not lay eggs. Dolphins give birth to live young.
dolphins swim in pods to protect themselves and to catch food
Dolphins have instincts for survival, such as seeking food, avoiding predators, and caring for their young. They also have a strong instinct for social interaction, forming tight-knit bonds with other dolphins in their pod to work together and protect each other. Additionally, dolphins have an instinct for navigation, using echolocation and magnetic fields to help them find their way in the ocean.