Kids
Want To Know - Dolphin Babies
Author:
Carma Haley Shoemaker
Published on: November 29, 2001
Katie from Southern California
asks, “How do dolphins have babies?”
Katie has offered a wonderful question. In fact, this
is one question I have received numerous times. So, this
is for all of you who asked about dolphin babies.
In
order to understand how dolphins have babies, we need
to talk a little about how a dolphin breathes. This is
a very important event in the life of a newborn dolphin,
so we need to understand how this works.
Dolphins
spend their lives submerged in water. However, just as
we do, they need air – or oxygen – to breath.
When a dolphin needs to take a breath, it comes to the
surface of the water and takes in air through its “blowhole.”
The
dolphins “blowhole” is an opening on the back
of the head that looks like a small mouth. It opens and
closes, and often times a mist of water can be seen shooting
from it. This blowhole is the dolphin’s way of breathing.
The mist is simply the water on the dolphin’s skin
being blown away as the dolphin exhales before taking
another breath. Once the dolphin takes a breath, the blowhole
closes – so no water can get in the dolphins lungs
– and it swims and dives just as always.
So,
the question is, how do dolphins have babies. If they
live in the water, but need air to breath, how do they
have babies?
A
dolphin mother carries her baby in her womb, or belly,
just as a human mother does. And when its time, the dolphin
mother will begin labor – the act of having her
baby. Labor and delivery of a newborn dolphin usually
takes very little time, with the baby being born in only
one to two hours. During labor, the dolphin mother will
“float” in the water, only moving or swimming
to the surface from time to time to get air. Once the
baby is born, the dolphin mother quickly swims under it,
uses her snout to carry or push her new baby to the surface
where it will take its first breath. If a baby dolphin
doesn’t breath right away – and this happens
from time to time, as the babies may not know how to use
their blowhole – the mother dolphin will gently
push or tap on the baby’s stomach, throat, and chest
to stimulate the baby to take a breath. The baby dolphin
then begins to breath, swim, feed (from its mother of
course, as it is just a baby), and play, learning from
watching its mother and the other members of the pod.
Dolphins
grow and mature very rapidly and are born with certain
senses of what to do, such as swim, without anyone teaching
them. But, just as humans, dolphin babies need love, guidance,
and teaching in order to learn all the skills they need
to survive, and one day, have babies of their own.
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Reprinted from http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/4895/86027
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