water, sunlight, temperature, and oxygen
Abiotic factors that can affect dolphins include water temperature, salinity, oxygen levels, and ocean currents. These factors play a crucial role in determining the distribution and behavior of dolphins in their marine environment. Changes in these abiotic factors can impact the health and survival of dolphin populations.
Recent molecular studies show the genus contains two species, the common bottlenose dolphin(Tursiops truncatus) and the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus), instead of one. Research in 2011 revealed a third species, the Burrunan dolphin (Tursiops australis).
A Bottlenose Dolphin. If you look up a picture you will see the teeth. (: hope this helpedd!!(:
Stones are abiotic, just as soil is. Abiotic factors are the physical and chemical factors in an ecosystem whereas biotic factors are the living (or once living) factors in an ecosystem. Therefore, as stones have never been living, they are NOT BIOTIC.
In a grassland the abiotic components are the non living parts of the ecosystem that are depended on by the living organisms. There are four major abiotic parts; soil, climate, natural disturbances and topography.
minerals and oxygens
No a bottlenose dolphin does not have a neck
bottlenose dolphin
The bottlenose dolphin is in the kingdom mammals
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.
No the bottlenose dolphin is not the fastest swimmer out of the dolphins the orca dolphin is the fastest dolphin out of all the dolphins.
Abiotic factors that can affect dolphins include water temperature, salinity, oxygen levels, and ocean currents. These factors play a crucial role in determining the distribution and behavior of dolphins in their marine environment. Changes in these abiotic factors can impact the health and survival of dolphin populations.
the tail fins of a bottlenose dolphin are called flukes