Ecology
River dolphins are now facing extinction due to habitat loss, hunting by humans, and naturally low numbers. Also, many river dolphins possess very poor eyesight -- some are considered blind -- which can lead to unfortunate encounters with humans or human-made objects (boats or fishing nets, for example).Some dolphin species can live in marine or riverine environments. The Tucuxi, for example, is equally at home in both ecotypes. However, these are not classified in the Platanistoidea superfamily and are therefore not regarded as true river dolphins. Juvenile river dolphins are grey and turn pink at maturity.
Taxonomy
In the most recent classification (Rice, 1998) there are currently four extant families that make up the river dolphins. However, a December 2006 survey found no members of Lipotidae (commonly known as the Yangtze River dolphin) and declared the species functionally extinct, Platanistidae is listed as the only extant family of the Platanistoidea superfamily. The previously accepted classification treated all four families as belonging to this family and treated the Ganges and Indus River Dolphins as separate species.Classification by Rice (1998)
- Superfamily Platanistoidea
- Family Platanistidae
- Ganges and Indus River Dolphin, Platanista gangetica
- Family Iniidae
- Amazon River Dolphin (or Boto), Inia geoffrensis
- Family Lipotidae
- Chinese River Dolphin (or Baiji), Lipotes vexillifer (possibly extinct, since December 2006)
- Family Pontoporiidae
- La Plata Dolphin (or Franciscana), Pontoporia blainvillei
Previous classification
- Family Platanistidae
- Ganges River Dolphin, Platanista gangetica
- Indus River Dolphin, Platanista minor
- Amazon River Dolphin (or Boto), Inia geoffrensis
- Chinese River Dolphin (or Baiji), Lipotes vexillifer (presumed extinct as of 2006
- La Plata Dolphin (or Franciscana), Pontoporia blainvillei
Extinction
On Dec. 13th, 2006, the Yangtze River Dolphin, or Baiji, was declared "functionally extinct", after a 45-day search by leading experts in the field failed to find a single specimen
The last verified sighting of the beak-nosed dolphin was in September of 2004.
However, in August, 2007, reports surfaced that a man saw and videotaped what appears to be a baiji in the Yangtze River. A team of scientists attempted to verify the sighting beginning in September, 2007. 
It is believed that overfishing, damming and sub-aquatic sonar pollution (which interfered with the dolphin's sonar-based method of locating food), led to the extinction. Reuters news reported this their first record of a mammalian extinction in 50 years.
Notes
References
- Reeves, Randall R. et al. (2002). National Audubon Society guide to marine mammals of the world. Alfred A. Knopf. 527 pp.
- Rice, Dale W. (1998). Marine mammals of the world: systematics and distribution. Society of Marine Mammalogy Special Publication Number 4. 231 pp.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Friday October 10, 2008 at 08:52:25 PDT (GMT -0700)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.