common bottlenose dolphin vs Compact Stonewort
Tursiops truncatus compared with Nitella tenuissima
Key Differences
- common bottlenose dolphin is Least Concern while Compact Stonewort is Extinct.
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | common bottlenose dolphin | Compact Stonewort |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom | Animalia (Animals) | Plantae (Plants) |
| Phylum | Chordata (Chordates) | Charophyta (Charophyta) |
| Class | Mammalia (Mammals) | Charophyceae (Charophyceae) |
| Order | Cetacea (Whales & Dolphins) | Charales (Charales) |
| Family | Delphinidae (Oceanic Dolphins) | Characeae |
| Genus | Tursiops (Bottlenose Dolphins) | Nitella |
| Species | Tursiops truncatus | Nitella tenuissima |
Conservation Status
common bottlenose dolphin
LC — Least ConcernPopulation: ~600.0K
Trend: Stable →
Compact Stonewort
EX — ExtinctPhysical Characteristics
| Attribute | common bottlenose dolphin | Compact Stonewort |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | Carnivore | — |
| Average Lifespan | 45 years | — |
| Average Length | 3.0 m | — |
| Average Weight | 300.0 kg | — |
Habitat & Geographic Range
common bottlenose dolphin
Found across multiple habitat types including tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests, and tropical and subtropical grasslands and savannas, among 12 distinct biome types. Populations are also found in montane and highland environments at higher elevations.
Widely distributed across Asia (Taiwan), Europe (6 countries), and South America (Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela).
Compact Stonewort
Native to Asia and Europe and North America, inhabiting ecosystems characteristic of the region.
Distributed across Brazil, Norway, Sweden, Taiwan, and United States.
common bottlenose dolphin
The most studied and recognized dolphin species, bottlenose dolphins inhabit warm and temperate oceans worldwide, from coastal shallows to the open sea. Highly intelligent with large brains relative to body size, they demonstrate self-recognition, complex communication, and social learning. They live in fluid fission-fusion societies and cooperate to herd fish. A keystone indicator species for marine ecosystem health.
Compact Stonewort
<em>Nitella tenuissima</em>, a stonewort formerly found in fresh and brackish water habitats, was a member of the charophyte family Characeae — the algal lineage most closely related to land plants. Historical records document its occurrence across Brazil, Norway, Sweden, Taiwan, and the United States, where it inhabited clear, oligotrophic lakes, ponds, and slow-flowing water bodies with low nutrient levels. Like other Nitella species, it was a delicate, translucent, submerged aquatic plant lacking the calcium carbonate encrustation of related genera, forming low-growing mats on soft sediments in well-illuminated shallow water. The species played a role in aquatic ecosystems by stabilising lake sediments, contributing to water clarity, and providing microhabitat for invertebrates and small aquatic organisms. <em>Nitella tenuissima</em> is classified as Extinct by the IUCN, having not been recorded from any of its former localities despite targeted searches. The primary causes of its extinction are believed to be widespread eutrophication of freshwater habitats driven by agricultural nutrient runoff and sewage discharge, which eliminated the clear, nutrient-poor conditions on which the species depended. The loss of this stonewort is emblematic of the broader decline of freshwater charophyte diversity across the Northern Hemisphere. Biological traits including historical morphological measurements and reproductive parameters are documented only in sparse historical herbarium specimens and early botanical literature.
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