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2009 Digital Calendar photo description
"Dolphin Duo"
Wild Bottlenose Dolphins have become habituated to humans in their environment.
Dolphins swim right up to snorkellers with intense interest and even looks of curiosity
and a faint smile at how un-coordinated and helpless humans are in water.
As they rise to the surface they blow bubbles as signatures or splash around
on the surface as a form of communication
Inshore Bottlenose Dolphin - Tursiops truncates
Inshore Bottlenose Dolphins are small cetaceans that have a long, beaklike snout,
a falcate (sickle-shaped) dorsal fin, and sharp teeth. They are Odontoceti (toothed whales)
and have one blowhole. They live in small groups called pods and grow to be at most
3.7 m long, sometimes weighing more than 635 kg. Dolphins can dive down to more
than 300 m and can jump up to 6 m out of the water.
Nikon D70, 6.1 megapixel resolution,�AF Sigma 10-20mm D lens,
Housed in Sea & SEA D70 housing, 1/80th sec @ f5.6, �ISO 200 at 10 mm, taken while
free diving at a depth of 10 m offshore in Southern Mozambique
Photograph by Andrew Woodburn