A previously unknown population of Irrawaddy dolphins discovered in Bangladesh has given scientists "great hope" for the survival of the rare species, conservationists said Wednesday. Its very unique, I guess its exotic. It belong to those animals that are extinct.
A research team estimated that 6,000 Irrawaddy dolphins thrive in the country's Sundarbans mangrove forests and nearby waters of the Bay of Bengal.
The group is the largest ever found—previously, scattered groups of only about a hundred Irrawaddy dolphins each had been found throughout the dolphin's Southeast Asian habitat, which stretches from the mouths of rivers feeding the Bay of Bengal across open waters to Indonesia (map of the region).
The species' total worldwide population is unknown.
(Related: "Irrawaddy River Dolphin Closer to Extinction Despite Reports, Experts Say.")
"Thats why this is so exciting … ," said Howard Rosenbaum, head of the ocean giants research program at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), the conservation group that made the discovery.
"Here you have this area where we found nearly 6,000 animals—it gives us hope for protecting the entire species and this really important habitat."
Few marine-mammal biologists had previously explored the diverse water ecosystem where the new dolphin group was found, which ranges from freshwater mangroves to brackish water to deep ocean canyons in just a small area.
Because the 6.5- to 8-foot-long (2- to 2.5-meter-long) mammals surface only occasionally, researchers used a transect method to gather data about the population.
The team steered a boat along a straight line, noting any dolphin sightings along each run.
A wider population estimate was then made from that data, presented Wednesday at the First International Conference on Marine Mammal Protected Areas in Maui, Hawaii.
The Irrawaddy Dolphin. One hour film from BBC on the Irrawaddy Dolphins and what is happening with the onset of spring. The history of observations, the accelerated capture, comments biologists ,view from space, and much more in this stunning film!
ReplyDeleteHighly recommended!
Irrawaddy-Dolphins