Dolphin of the Ganga
Dolphins are the most uncontroversial of popular motifs of contemporary times, promoted on television and Hollywood movies alike as symbols of wholesome fun, innocence and gentle intelligence. The exposure, however, is biased towards marine dolphins. Freshwater dolphins, in dire need of public sympathy and protection, have gone largely neglected. Most people are not even aware of the fact that that some species of dolphins (or cetaceans) are found in habitat other than seas and oceans. In fact, four of a total of about 40 species of cetaceans inhabit rivers; three of these are found in Asia, and, of them, two belong to South Asia.
The South Asian freshwater dolphins are the Platanista gangetica minor (bhulan, sometimes also referred to as susu) in the Indus river of Pakistan and the Platanista gangetica (susu) of the Ganga-Brahmaputra system in India, Nepal and Bangladesh. The lipotes vexillifer (baiji) is confined to the Yangtze of China, and the fourth specie, inia geoffrensis (boto), belongs to the Amazon.