By Pete Thomas/GrindTv
Whale watchers in Monterey Bay, California, were thrilled Sunday to see a strikingly white Risso’s dolphin swimming with gray pod mates.
The extraordinary sighting was made by passengers and crew aboard a Monterey Bay Whale Watch vessel. The accompanying photos were provided by naturalist Melissa Galieti, who said the young dolphin was swimming with its mother and two other cow-calf pairs.
The crew was not able to determine whether the dolphin was a true albino, with pink eyes, or a partial albino (leucistic, with blue eyes), because “this little one kept coming to the surface with its eyes closed,” Galieti stated on the company Facebook page.
Its body outline in some of the photos, however, is tinged pink.
Galieti added via email: “It also exhibited some play behaviors, like pec-fin slapping and rolling. All the guests were excited to see something so stunning.”
It’s the same white dolphin that was spotted in Monterey Bay on August 28, so it seems to be familiar with the area, and passengers undoubtedly are being told to be on the lookout for a white dolphin.
Risso’s dolphins are large, blunt-nosed mammals that usually stay fairly far offshore.
Their normal color is dark gray, but their bodies typically feature many scratches or scars, which are believed to be caused by other Risso’s dolphins, squid (their favorite prey), or parasites.
Calves tend to be a lighter gray. White Risso’s dolphins, like white whales, are extremely rare.
What an amazing gift to our planet !
Stunningly BEAUTIFUL !
Posted by: CornwallsVoice | Jan 29, 2015 at 11:23 AM