'Magical' pink dolphins rescued in Bolivia in push to boost species
The Hindu
Over the past dozen years nearly 60 trapped pink river dolphins, scientifically known as Inia boliviensis, have been rescued.
Rescuers using boats and drones worked for three days last week in a lush stretch of Bolivia's Amazon rainforest to find a pair of trapped pink river dolphins, a species endangered by steady encroachment along the waterways the colorful mammals call home.
The two dolphins were found languishing in still water ponds cut off from the Bolivian Amazon's Rio Grande after they swam inland and the main channel dropped, according to Claudia Venega, a biologist with a rescue program.
She explained that many pink dolphins lose access to the river because of their reproductive instincts.
"When the females go to give birth they seek out quieter places and so they leave the river in search of calmer backwaters," said Venega, noting that other females will often join to help raise the infant calves and teach them to fish.
Over the past dozen years nearly 60 trapped pink river dolphins, scientifically known as Inia boliviensis, have been rescued, she added.
The dolphins' rosy complexion is due to blood vessels close to their skin, though some specimens are blue or even white.
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