they dont, a dolphin avoids its predators but only if alone.if its in a group it would slap its predators with its tail and everyone of them would too.
Crabs may hide under rocks to protect themselves from rough waves, forage for food, regulate body temperature, or find shelter during low tide. This behavior also helps them avoid direct sunlight, reduce desiccation, and navigate their environment efficiently.
Both predators and prey utilize camouflage as a strategy for survival. Predators may use camouflage to ambush their prey without being detected, while prey may use it to avoid detection and escape from predators. Camouflage helps both animals blend in with their surroundings and increase their chances of survival.
Yes, guppies have wide eyes. It helps them see their predators so they can hide!
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.
Bats use echolocation, emitting high-frequency sounds and listening for the echoes that bounce back to locate prey, predators, and obstacles. Dolphins likewise use echolocation by emitting clicks and listening for the echoes to navigate, find food, and detect potential threats in their environment.
For eating or to hide from predators. Sometimes dolphins grab some seaweeds to give them to their trainer.
For eating or to hide from predators. Sometimes dolphins grab some seaweeds to give them to their trainer.
Yes, bottlenose dolphins do have predators
to hide from predators and not to get eat'en.
dolphins don't hide from sharks. Sharks hide from dolphins. Sharks hide from them because if a shark tries to mess with a dolphin, the dolphin will whip around and jab the shark's side with its pointy nose.
Yes they do hide in seaweed.
Yes, bottlenose dolphins do have predators
They live in "pods" (groups) of dolphins. They are predators, they do not live with other types of predators nor prey.
sharks
sharks
Yes, but some types more than others. The light blue/gray color of most dolphins does help them partially but they also have very powerful tail muscles and can change direction very quickly. They really only have three main predators, Orcas (Killer Whales) Sharks, and People in some places. Basically yes they do but mostly to hide from their own prey! :)
basically everything their parents are predators of