The Amazon Dolphin lives in the Amazon Rainforest. The current habitat is freshwater, flooded forests, the rain is 1,500mm and 3,000 mm. The dolphins have a flexible neck, alage paddle-like flippers, long snout, special teeth, sensory hairs, reduced dorsal fin, and a light pink coloration. Their skin turns more pink and transparent when they get older. Their snout helps the anthem for muddy rivers. Amazon river dolphin habitats are threatened by human activities like hunting for fishing bait, river pollution from mining, oil and gas, and agricultural runoff, as well as a good development such as dams. Climate change is also a major threat, leading to increased temperatures and droughts that cause mass strandings. It will have increased heat tolerance, better pollution resistance, enhanced echolocation in murkier water, or a larger, more powerful tail for navigating low water and strong currents. This is all about the Amazon Dolphin.