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  1. Our Mission - Through education, research and rescue, Dolphin Research Center promotes peaceful coexistence, cooperation and communication between marine mammals, humans and the environment we share with the well being of DRC's animals taking precedence. earn about Marine Mammal Law Enforcement, Marine Enforcement agencies and the Marine Mammal ...

  2. Oct 16, 2020 · A dolphin has only one dorsal fin. A dorsal fin is a fin on the back, or top of an animal. Marine mammals, such as dolphins and orcas, have one distinct dorsal fin, while fish have two or more. This is a good indicator of which sea creatures are fish, and which are mammals.

  3. Introduction. Marine mammals are a diverse group of aquatic, primarily ocean-dwelling mammals. Like land-dwelling mammals, they breathe air through lungs, are warm-blooded, produce milk to nurse young and have hair. But they have evolved to live, eat and breed in or close to water – seas, estuaries, lagoons and rivers.

  4. Jan 26, 2015 · Bottlenose dolphin tissue samples were obtained at necropsy from dolphins in the US Navy Marine Mammal Program. Spleen, liver, kidney and skin samples were from female animals, and muscle was from ...

  5. Mycotic Diseases of Marine Mammals. Mycotic diseases are found in marine mammals worldwide, and captive marine mammals seem particularly prone to fungal infections. Cetaceans lack nasal turbinates, which may allow fungal elements to more easily enter the pulmonary system. Most infections appear to be secondary to stress, environmental ...

  6. Seal species seen in the coastal waters of New England include the harbor, gray, harp, and hooded seals, depending on the time of year. It is normal for seal species to be seen on land. Whales, dolphins, and porpoises are also present in New England waters but rarely strand on land. Annually, seals encompass approximately 95% of the SSC Marine ...

  7. Jun 21, 2022 · Marine Animals. An extremely rich and diverse community of marine mammals is found on and around the Channel Islands. Many species of pinnipeds (seals and sea lions) and cetaceans (whales and dolphins) either breed on the islands or feed in the productive waters of the Santa Barbara Channel. Visitors to the islands often spot huge pods of ...

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