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| Dolphins, like almost all mammals, give birth to live young, and nurse them with mammary glands, though it boggles the mind to imagine nursing underwater. But the birth of a dolphin starts long before his babyhood; it starts with how Mom and Dad first met. | |
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Dolphin Love: Mating |
Most
of what we know about dolphin reproduction was observed in captivity,
which one might agree is not necessarily normal behavior. But what we
have determined is that dolphins are most likely to mate during the spring,
with male-female courtship ritual playing a large part in dolphin dating. |
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Dolphin OB/GYN: Where does it happen? |
| Humans
and other land mammals may have a messy birth, but it’s generally
not hard to find a reasonably private place to do it. Dolphins, on the other
hand, often live in a three-dimensional world filled with dangers, including
the sharks with their legendary sense of smell. And of course, blood and
other birth fluids will draw predators. So how do mother dolphins keep themselves
and their babies safe? After eleven or twelve months, depending on the species, a pregnant dolphin gives birth. Dolphins are among the only animals that have assisted birthing; when a dolphin is giving birth, she’s often assisted by another female dolphin who acts as midwife. Birth, just like in humans, can happen anywhere. When it does happen, the mother’s pod will surround her protectively while she’s in labor, waiting to fend off any predators who may be thinking about a quick and easy meal. No free lunches from cetaceans! |
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It’s A Cetacean! Dolphin Babies |
| Baby
dolphins are born tail-first and are usually single births (with the exception
of a few smaller dolphin species which tend to have twins). Sometimes the
mother dolphin has been reported to help the baby reach the surface of the
water by swimming beneath it and gently lifting upward; this may be normal
dolphin play behavior, or it may actually be genuine maternal concern for
the baby. Babies generally eat first thing, finding the mammary glands located in sacs toward the mother’s rear. In dolphins born in captivity, nursing continues for as long as twelve to eighteen months, though this may not be reflective of the wild. Babies must eat quickly, as they need to be able to get back up to the surface in order to breathe, and don’t really have the equipment of most mammals for suckling. So instead of dolphin babies sucking to stimulate milk flow, the dolphin mother actually has specialized muscle contractions that squirt milk into the baby’s mouth. The baby grows very quickly on the high-fat mother’s milk, in some species doubling its weight within two weeks. |
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