Why is blind dolphin facing extinction?
Answers
Answer:
The Ganga dolphin was declared India’s national aquatic animal in 2009, and the government approved a National Dolphin Action Plan in 2010 to save the highly endangered freshwater mammal. What has happened since then? “Not very much,” admitted Ravi Singh, chief executive officer of WWF-India, the NGO that wrote the plan and has been trying for decades to save the animal that is revered by millions of Hindus.
After the extinction of the Yangtze dolphin, the Ganga dolphin is one of only three freshwater dolphins left in the world (China also classes the finless porpoise in this category). There are about 1,800 left in the Indian part of the Ganga-Brahmaputra-Meghna basin, down from about 4,500 as recently as 1982. There may be around 600 more left in Bangladesh, and a few in Nepal, all part of the same basin. In Bhutan, the fourth country in the basin, the Ganga dolphin has not been seen for many years.
Because blind dolphin can listen small sound in ocean but now a days the cyclone be occurring number of .This may the water with dolphin are extinction