Dolphin Awareness Month is a good time to highlight dolphins and to draw attention to their vulnerability to hunting, fishing, capture, and exploitation.
Dolphins are mammals. They are considered one of the world's most intelligent animals, and they have several cognitive abilities that set them apart. You can see dolphin intelligence in action in the way they communicate and use tools.
One of the fascinating things about these marine mammals is their complex methods of communication. There are three main ways they communicate: whistles, echolocation, and social communication. Dolphins can make squeaks, buzzes, whistles, clicks, and a wide array of other crazy noises. These whistles can be heard by others of the species from miles away. Their whistle repertoire can change as they get older, and dolphins who bond with one another can learn each others signature whistles and often copy each other’s whistles.
There are nearly forty different species of dolphins found in oceans around the world. The largest dolphin is the Orca also known as the Killer Whale which can grow to ten metres long. Some dolphins have evolved to live in freshwater.
This is a very easy display. Collect all the nonfiction books from the shelf and then add some fiction. Here's some good ones to start your search
• Dolphin Boy by Michael Morpurgo and Michael Foreman
Jim lives in a Cornish fishing village - but since the fish disappeared, no one goes fishing any more. One day, Jim spots a dolphin beached on the sand, and soon the whole village is working together to return the dolphin to the water. The dolphin stays in the harbour, playing with Jim and the swimmers, but then the dolphin disappears...
• Dolphin Baby by Nicola Davies and Britt GranstromThe moment Dolphin Baby pops into the blue, he swims up, up, up ... and takes his very first breath. From then on, the baby calf swims close to his mother's side, discovering all there is to know about life under the sea
• Wild Orca by Brenda Peterson and Wendell Minor
Pays tribute to Granny, the world's oldest-known orca whale who lived to be one hundred and five. Told from the perspective of young Mia and her family on a whale-watching excursion in the San Juan Islands, this intimate and informative story celebrates the importance of nature, tradition, communication, and family in both human and orca communities.
• Little Hector and the Big Blue Whale by Ruth PaulA picture book to find out all about the tiny and endangered Hector's dolphin. A small but daring dolphin, Little Hector swims out into the deep blue ocean. He meets many dangers - and an unlikely friend - and proves you are never too small to have BIG adventures. There are two more titles in this series about Hector.
• Pelorus Jack the Dolphin Guide by Susan BrockerThis is the heart-warming New Zealand tale of Pelorus Jack, a rare white Risso’s dolphin who delighted passengers over 100 years ago as he guided steamships through the rough waters of French Pass into the calm waters of the Marlborough Sounds. It is believed he became the first sea creature to be protected by law in any country.
Follows Little Dolphin from her difficult birth to her escape through the shark net that traps her mother. She is adopted by a pod that teach her the clicks and whistles of the dolphin language, They also teach her how to use tools
• Arion the Dolphin Boy by Saviour Pirotta or
• Arion and the Dolphin by Vikram Seth
Arion, a young musician at the court of Periander in ancient Greece is thrown overboard on his return from a musical contest, Arion is saved and befriended by a dolphin.
And a novel, Little Dolphin Rescue by Rachel Delahaye