| Pretty
in Pink - Dolphins of a Different Color
In at least two places in the world, one
of the most intelligent mammals next to man, is not the dull gray/blue
of your everyday dolphin. These delightful, and endangered species are
both pink.
In and around Hong Kong harbor, there is
a tiny population numbering just over 100, of Chinese White Dolphins who
have had a “dye job”. This species of dolphin, which can be found from
South Africa to Australia in its white form, is only pink in the Hong Kong
location, and is said to be even pinker than their South American cousins.
They live in the estuary salt water of the Pearl River, fighting off the
threats of sewage, chemicals, and over-fishing, to survive. Rather than
a separate or sub-species of the Chinese White, these dolphins are thought
to be an anomaly of nature.
In Brazil, the Amazon River dolphins are
born gray, and turn pinker with maturity. Unlike their pink Asian relatives,
these are strictly freshwater dolphins, which will rest on the river bottom,
and who come with a set of molars for chewing food, the only type of dolphin
so equipped.
Why are dolphins pink? One theory set forth
by scientists, who have few studies to go on due to the shrinking population,
is that the color comes from consuming crabs and shellfish which have a
red pigment to their muscle tissue. Over time, the pigment builds up in
the skin, and the dolphin becomes pinker as they grow older.
In addition, dolphins red blood cell count
and hemoglobin concentration in those cells, is higher than that in the
human. Which may be one explanation for the Brazilian dolphin's unusual
ability to flush a bright pink when excited.
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