• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Watch Amazon River Dolphins Pee Straight Up Into The Air: They May Be Sending Messages To Their Mates

February 11, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

It’s not unusual for species to have a few tricks up their sleeves that we never knew about. Blue whales can sing low enough to remain undetected by killer whales, tarantulas can run just as fast with six legs as they do with eight, and now research has revealed that Amazon river dolphins (Inia geoffrensis) are peeing straight up into the air.

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

Scent marking is an important business in the land animal world, it can tell others to keep out, signal all sorts of things to do with mating, and even be something that increases social bonding in chimp society. For aquatic mammals, though, urination is not usually considered a means to communicate. 

We were really shocked because it was something that we have never seen before or heard of from other researchers.

Claryana Araújo-Wang

This makes these observations of wild Amazon river dolphins, also known as botos, between 2014 and 2018 even more unusual. The botos showed unexpected amounts of what the team term “aerial urination”. This involved male botos swimming at the surface of the water on their backs, exposing the penis above the water, and urinating into the air. 

“We first observed this behaviour in 2014 while doing our regular field work. We first saw a male flip his belly up out of the water and expose his penis and then proceeded to urinate into the air. We were really shocked because it was something that we have never seen before or heard of from other researchers,” study author Claryana Araújo-Wang told IFLScience. 



A receiver male is also present in most of these instances and either pursues the stream of urine or stays in the place where the urine makes contact with the water’s surface. 

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

In total, the team recorded 36 urination events and receiver dolphins were present at 67 percent of them. All of the urination events involved only male dolphins as both the urinator and the receiver. 

Twenty-five of the aerial urination occasions occurred when the botos were in a group setting and 11 occurred with a solo dolphin. This behavior is rarely observed, with only one other photograph of a cetacean species doing this behavior. The team believe, however, that this is a relatively frequent occurrence in young male botos in the Tocantins River. 

“Our study was conducted in a different biome than the Amazon – it’s in the Cerrado (Brazilian Savannah). Thus, this is one of the reasons we just called the animals botos (rather than Amazon River dolphins),” explained Araújo-Wang. 

We believe that aerial urination may have a social function but further understanding of the functions of this behaviour will require more research.

Claryana Araújo-Wang

The time for each of the urination events was typically very short, with an average of around 11 seconds. The team believe that this suggests other factors influence this urination behavior rather than the simple need to pee. 

Instead, the researchers suggest that the behavior is used in social contexts. Amazon river dolphins possess bristles on their rostrums, which may aid in the detection of pheromones or similar chemicals in the urine of the peeing dolphin. 

“We believe that aerial urination may have a social function but further understanding of the functions of this behaviour will require more research. However, we hypothesise that aerial urination helps in advertising male quality in terms of social position or physical condition possibly mediated through hormones,” finished Araújo-Wang. 

The paper is published in Behavioural Processes.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Biden wants to keep working on police reform bill but willing to take executive action
  2. The Case Of The Mystery Sea Urchin Killer Has Finally Been Solved
  3. Cancel The Apocalypse, Dead Star Will Not Come Dangerously Close After All
  4. A Solar Cemetery? Spain’s Largest Urban Solar Farm Is Being Built In Graveyards

Source Link: Watch Amazon River Dolphins Pee Straight Up Into The Air: They May Be Sending Messages To Their Mates

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • With The Powerful Vera Rubin Observatory, We Could Find Up To 50 Interstellar Objects Like Comet 3I/ATLAS
  • First Evidence For Maternal Care In Plants Reveals Placenta-Like Structure That Sustains Their Offspring
  • “Dragon Man” And “Big-Headed Man” Co-Existed In Prehistoric China 150,000 Years Ago, New Dating Reveals
  • Space Astronomy Is Under Threat As New Paper “Raises Important Concerns” About Megaconstellations
  • New Study Says Cheese Can Protect Against Dementia – Is It Too Good To Be True?
  • Faraday’s Enigma Of Premelted Ice Finally Explained After 166 Years
  • What Is The Smelliest Thing In The World?
  • IFLScience We Have Questions: How Did Frogs Become A Pregnancy Test For Humans?
  • Could One Drill A Hole From One Side Of The Earth And Come Out The Other Side?
  • Africa Is Splitting Into Two Continents And A Vast New Ocean Could Eventually Open Up
  • Which Is Better: Hot Or Cold Showers?
  • Is Gustave The Killer Croc Dead? Notorious Crocodile Accused Of 300 Deaths Is Surrounded By Legend
  • Why Do We Have Two Nostrils, Instead Of One Big Nose Hole?
  • Humans Have Accidentally Created A Barrier Around The Earth
  • Something Just Crashed Into The Moon, First-Known Instance Of Prehistoric Bees Nesting In Fossil Skulls, And Much More This Week
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Carries The Key Molecules For Life In Unusual Abundance– What Does That Mean?
  • Want Your Career To Take The Next Step? How Scientific Conferences Can Be A Catalyst For Change
  • Why Do Little Birds Always Ride On Rhinos? It’s An Incredibly Deep Relationship
  • The World’s Rarest Great Ape Just Got Even Rarer
  • This Is The First Ever Map Of The Entire Sky In An Incredible 102 Infrared Colors
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version