AVA MRS.HULSEY’S THIRD GRADE SEPTEMBER30,2014 BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN AVA MRS.HULSEY’S THIRD GRADE SEPTEMBER30,2014
HABITAT OF BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS THE BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN LIVES IN GEORGIA. DOLPHINS ARE VEARY NICE. DOLPHINS JUMP FROM OUT OF THE WATER. DOLPHINS ARE VEARY CUTE. It’s diet is fish and other small animals. You can see dolphins
The ocean that the dolphins live in is salt water if you lick the water it taste salty. The ocean has waves sometimes there big waves sometimes there small waves. The ocean has small creaters fish and jellyfish jellyfish sting you. Bottlenose dolphins eat small animals. Bottlenose dolphins are9 to 12 feet. They are 500 pounds. Bottlenose dolphins are the kind usally seen in marine aquariums
The other animals that lives with the bottlenose dolphin is fish, jelly fish, And sing rays. The plants are sea weed,magnolia Coral and algie. Bottlenose dolpins have Fins tail and sharp teeth. Dolphins are soft and they splash you with water
Dolphins get caught in nets When people go to the ocean the brig a big net to catch fish and some dolphins get cought in the net and get hurt some dolphins are lucky and do not get cought and do not get hurt .
Dolphins are nice Dolphins are very nice they do not bite you can swim around with them But if you swim with a shark it will bite you but dolphins will not.
Dolphins jump out of the water Dolphins jump out of the water to get air. If you are on a deck at the ocean you can see a dolphin jump out of the water.
About winter Winter’S tale fell off from a net and they made two movies about it I saw 1 and 2
DOLPHINS ARE DOLPHINS ARE FAT THERE TALE AND FINES ARE SKINNY ITS MOTH IS SKINNY TO
How are dolphins Dolphins are smooth and wet there teeth are sharp Dolphins are gray there eyes are black there toungs are pink they may have a little black
A dolphin and her baby When a baby dolphin swims with a mama dolphin it is very cute. Dolphins can blend in with gray stuff.
Works cited Grolier online GeORGIA HABITATS WEBSITE http://gardenclub.uga.edu/m2s/index.html http://www.lilburnes.org/Students/Habitats/index.htm http://naturalhistory.uga.edu/~GMNH/habitats/habitats.htm