ruveyn wrote:
ShadesOfMe wrote:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/4927224/Pink-dolphin-appears-in-US-lake.html
Quote:
Charter boat captain Erik Rue, 42, photographed the animal, which is actually an albino, when he began studying it after the mammal first surfaced in Lake Calcasieu, an inland saltwater estuary, north of the Gulf of Mexico in southwestern USA.

Are you always this gullible? How about the Loch Ness monster? I have a bridge I would like to sell to you for under a thousand dollars. Are you interested?
ruveyn
The pink in an alibno dolphin comes from the blood vessels that are visible beneath the skin. Because of the lack of pigmentation in the skin, it becomes translucent, permitting the dolphin to take on a pinkish color because of said blood.
This is a fact that's very easy to check on. Other albino dolphins have existed before; this isn't something new and completely abnormal.
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