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Some Australian dolphins use sponges to hunt fish, but it’s harder than it looks

WASHINGTON (AP) — Some dolphins in Australia have a special technique to flush fish from the seafloor. They hunt with a sponge on their beak, like a clown nose.

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Some Australian dolphins use sponges to hunt fish, but it's harder than it looks

In this photo provided by the Shark Bay Dolphin Research Project, a bottlenose dolphin wearing a marine sponge on its nose to forage swims in Shark Bay, Australia, 2023. (Meredith MacQueeney/Shark Bay Dolphin Research Project via AP)


WASHINGTON (AP) — Some dolphins in Australia have a special technique to flush fish from the seafloor. They hunt with a sponge on their beak, like a clown nose.

Using the sponge to protect from sharp rocks, swim with their beaks covered, shoveling through rubble at the and stirring up barred sandperch for a meal.

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