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Geological · Ayeyarwady River, Sagaing Region, MM

Irrawaddy Dolphin Fishermen Cooperation — Ayeyarwady Myanmar

The Irrawaddy dolphin (Orcaella brevirostris) cooperative fishing behaviour with traditional fishermen on the Ayeyarwady River near Mandalay — where the dolphins herd fish toward the fishermen's nets in response to the fishermen's tapping signals on the boat hull, a cooperative behaviour documented since the 19th century and now reduced to a handful of practising dolphin-fisherman partnerships. The dolphin's combination of its rounded forehead (no beak), its low dorsal fin, and its exceptionally expressive behaviour creates an encounter of genuine cross-species communication of a kind found nowhere else in Myanmar. The Mingun and Magwe reaches of the Ayeyarwady produce the most reliable dolphin encounters, and the fishing boats' traditional shape (the same wooden design used for 200 years) and the river's life (ferries, pagodas, and the Ayeyarwady's enormous width) provide a Burmese cultural context of considerable depth.

When
Oct — Apr, peak Nov — Mar
Best viewing
A quiet morning boat encounter on the Ayeyarwady where fishermen tap their hulls to summon Irrawaddy dolphins into cooperative herding — one of the rarest human-wildlife partnerships still practised anywhere. The experience combines living cultural tradition with extraordinary animal behaviour at close range.
Category
Geological
Status
Returns Jan 2027

About this spectacle

On the wide, amber-brown waters of the Ayeyarwady River near Mingun and Magwe, a remarkable cross-species partnership plays out each morning. Fishermen tap rhythmically on the sides of their narrow wooden boats — the same design used for two centuries — and Irrawaddy dolphins, with their distinctive rounded foreheads and expressive faces, respond by circling and herding fish toward the nets. Visitors witness what feels like genuine communication: the dolphins surface close to the boats, apparently coordinating their movements with the fishermen's signals, before disappearing beneath the river's surface. The backdrop is quintessentially Burmese — ferries drifting past, white pagodas visible on the bank, and the enormous breadth of the Ayeyarwady catching the morning light. The dolphins' low dorsal fins cut silently through the current. With only a handful of active fisherman-dolphin partnerships remaining, each encounter carries the weight of something rare and fragile — a tradition documented since the 19th century that is quietly disappearing from the world.

When to go

Oct — Apr, peak Nov — Mar

Getting there

Nearest airport: MDL. Nearest city: Mandalay.

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