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  2. Certain species of dolphins have shown a tendency to live in warmer or more temperate climates. Dolphins that prefer to live in coastal waters may feed on plankton or other local prey abundant in the shallow offshore coastal waters instead of the colder and deeper waters.

  3. Like other mammals, dolphins are warm-blooded creatures with endothermic regulation, meaning that dolphins are able to maintain steady core body temperatures of 96.8 to 98.6 F. Dolphins generate body heat through a higher metabolic rate that exceeds that of most land mammals.

  4. Dolphins can be found in both tropical and arctic waters all around the world. However, unlike whales, they prefer warmer climates. The bottlenose dolphin is one of the most well-known species; it prefers warm, temperate waters with water temperatures between 50 and 90 degrees Fahrenheit.

    • Mammalia
    • Cetacean
    • Animalia
    • Chordata
  5. Dec 13, 2019 · While most dolphins prefer warmer tropical or temperate waters one species, the orca (sometimes called killer whale) lives in both the Arctic Ocean and the Antarctic Southern Ocean. Five dolphin species prefer fresh to salt water; these species inhabit rivers in South America and South Asia.

  6. For maine dolphins, warming ocean temperatures because of climate change have caused some of their primary food sources to move into deeper, cooler water.

    • 5 min
  7. Jun 29, 2024 · Dolphins can live in either fresh or salt water. Distributed in marine environments worldwide, they range from equatorial to subpolar waters and also can be found in many major river systems. The common and bottlenose dolphins are widely distributed in warm and temperate seas.

  8. Most dolphins prefer tropical and temperate waters as they are warm-blooded mammals and so it is easier for them to regulate their body temperature in these environments. Can dolphins live in fresh water?

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