This species generally forms small groups averaging about 2-6 individuals, but does occasionally form larger aggregations of up to several hundred animals. They are quite active and may jump clear of the water (a behaviour known as breaching), somersault, spy-hop or tail-splash. They are unlikely, however, to approach boats. Guiana dolphins feed mainly on a wide variety of bony fish and occasionally on shrimps,
cephalopods, and crabs. Studies of growth layers suggest the species can live more than 40 years. More than 60 species of
demersal and
pelagic schooling fish have been reported as prey. Small fish of 8 in (20 cm) or less are preferred. Foraging may be carried out individually or in groups. Different dolphin communities may adopt their own foraging strategies based on local circumstances. One of the best studied groups herds fish onto beaches and half strands themselves for a few seconds while grabbing their prey. A study of a population off the coast of southern Brazil in the late 1990s found that females matured at 5-8 years of age and had a mean reproductive cycle of 2 years. The gestation period was found to be approximately 12 month gestation period. After age 25, the researchers found that the reproductive cycle had increased to 2.5 years a possible indication of reproductive senescence, or aging. In December 2006, researchers from the
Southern University of Chile and the
Rural Federal University of Rio de Janeiro witnessed attempted
infanticide by a group of Guiana dolphins in Sepetiba Bay,
Brazil. A group of six adults separated a mother from her calf, four then keeping her at bay by ramming her and hitting her with their flukes. The other two adults rammed the calf, held it under water, then threw it into the air and held it under water again. The mother was seen again in a few days, but not her calf. Since females become sexually receptive within a few days of losing a calf, and the group of attacking males were sexually interested in the female, it is possible that the infanticide occurred for this reason.
Infanticide has been reported previously in
bottlenose dolphins but is thought to be generally uncommon among cetaceans. ==Conservation==