Classroom lesson · Wildlife · 🇲🇨 Monaco

Dolphins in Monaco's Seas

Bottlenose and striped dolphins swim the Mediterranean near Monaco

A group of striped dolphins leaping through the Mediterranean Sea

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The waters around Monaco are home to several species of dolphin, including bottlenose dolphins and the beautiful striped dolphin. Dolphins are not fish - they are mammals, just like us, which means they breathe air, feed their babies milk, and are warm-blooded. Boat trips from Monaco sometimes spot dolphins swimming and leaping in the open sea.

Tell me more

Striped dolphins are named for the vivid dark and light stripes that run along their sides. They are fast, energetic swimmers and love to leap completely out of the water - a behaviour called breaching. Scientists think dolphins breach for several reasons: to communicate, to knock off parasites, or simply because it feels exciting. Groups of striped dolphins can sometimes number in the hundreds.

Bottlenose dolphins are the species most people recognise from nature programmes. They are very social and live in small family groups called pods. Bottlenose dolphins are known for their intelligence - they use tools (like sponges to protect their snouts while foraging on the sea floor), have individual names for one another (a unique whistle for each dolphin), and play games together.

The Pelagos Sanctuary is a protected area of the Mediterranean Sea that covers the waters between France, Italy and Monaco. It was set up specially to protect marine mammals - including dolphins and whales - from disturbance and pollution. Monaco was one of the founders of this sanctuary, and the Oceanographic Museum monitors the health of the dolphins and other animals that live there.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Each dolphin has its own whistle name. How is this similar to - and different from - how humans use names?
  2. 02Monaco helped create the Pelagos Sanctuary to protect sea mammals. Why is it important for small countries to be involved in big environmental projects?
  3. 03Dolphins play games with each other. Why do you think play is important - for dolphins and for people?
Try this

Classroom activity

Invent your own dolphin whistle name. Make it a sound you could whistle or hum. Write it down as a description (e.g. 'three short beeps then a long rising note'). Now teach it to a partner - can they remember your whistle name after one minute?