Over four years, a team from Canada’s CetAsia Research Group traveled to the Amazon river, where they then closely watched ...
Scientists studying Amazon river dolphins in Brazil have observed males spraying urine into the air, a ritual for communication.
Scientists suggest that the bristles on the dolphins' snouts help them 'decode' messages in other dolphins' urine.
Scientists are perplexed by a strange new behaviour shown by the Amazon river dolphin of flipping belly-up to urinate with ...
Male dolphins have been observed shooting jets of urine into the air and other dolphins seem to follow the stream, perhaps to ...
PetMojo on MSN7mon
5 Amazing Animals Unique to South AmericaAmazon River dolphins have been featured prominently ... Today, they remain a cherished species and one of the most unique ...
Travel Bucketlist on MSN3d
10 Surprising Facts About the Amazon RainforestThis expansive forest stretches across several South American countries, breathing life into the very atmosphere we depend on ...
7d
ZME Science on MSNSome dolphins pee up into the air and we’ve only now learned thisDolphins have pulled off some bizarre stunts, but this one is something else. Picture this: a male Amazon river dolphin swims ...
One river in the Amazon rainforest is so hot that it literally boils, destroying nearby biodiversity
Peru’s boiling river reaches 210°F, killing animals instantly. Scientists found biodiversity drops by 11% for every 1.8°F ...
After five years of planning, design, construction and animal acquisition, Caldwell Zoo‘s long-awaited Amazon River’s Edge ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results