Orca News 2010 |
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December 12, 2010: Young female Morgan, who was discovered all by herself in Dutch waters this June and brought to Dolfinarium Harderwijk for rehabilitation, will not be released back to the wild. Here are the main points of a report issued by Dolfinarium Harderwijk:
All contributors are opposed to a release into the wild of Morgan. (Ford;
Camphuysen; Leopold; Guinet; Lockyer; Ugarte; McBain)
Note:
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December 5, 2010: Bingo and Stella will move to Nagoya
28-year-old male Bingo and 24-year-old female Stella will be transfered from Kamogawa Sea World to Port of Nagoya Public Aquarium for breeding purposes, according to a news report in The Chunichi Shimbun. That would separate Stella from her three daughters Lovey, Lara and Ran 2. This will be a tough move, especially for 4-year-old Ran 2. The exact date of the transport is yet to be announced. At Nagoya, Bingo and Stella will be together with 28-year-old female Nami. It'll be interesting to see whether the two adult females will get along. |
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October 15, 2010: Kohana gave birth to male calf
Kohana, just 8 years old, gave birth to her first calf Wednesday evening at Loro Parque on Tenerife, Spain. Unfortunately Kohana seems to reject the little boy, who had been sired by Keto, and he has to be handfed.
Here's a video of the birth. On the very same day a newborn calf was encountered among the Southern Resident killer whale community. How utterly different the future of those two babies look... |
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October 10, 2010: Killer whale born at SeaWorld Orlando, calf is seventh for Katina By Susan Jacobson, Orlando Sentinel Katina, a 34-year-old female, gave birth to her seventh calf Saturday night at 7:28 p.m.. SeaWorld's Nick Gollattscheck said the birth went smoothly and the mother passed the placenta this morning - a good sign according to park vets. The baby is nursing regularly for about 10-18 seconds each time. The great-grandmother went into labor at 6:47 p.m. and delivered the calf 45 minutes later. It swam to the surface moments later for its first breath, the park said. SeaWorld's newest addition, 7-foot-long and 350-pound, is in good physical shape and showing signs of strength hours after its birth. Mother and calf are bonding, and veterinarians and caretakers are making sure the baby starts to nurse, park spokesman Nick Gollattscheck said. The sex of the calf won't be known for a while. The news was welcome for the Orlando theme park, where the firstborn of Katina's calves, Kalina, 25, died suddenly on Monday. Results of a necropsy could take up to six weeks. In June, Taima, a 20-year-old female, died at the park giving birth to a stillborn calf. The new calf's father is Tilikum, a 12,000-pound male who in February drowned a SeaWorld trainer in front of park patrons. The death made national news. According to an online profile, Katina is the most successful whale mother in captivity and the oldest orca at SeaWorld Orlando. The newest calf is the 16th born at SeaWorld Orlando and the 27th at all three SeaWorld parks in the U.S. (c) Orlando Sentinel, 2010
Note: Here's a video. Katina has three more calves surviving, Unna, Ikaika and Nalani. Unfortunately Unna and Ikaika are no longer with their mother, being send to other parks. Another three calves of Katina have already passed away: Katerina in 1999, Taku in 2007, and of course Kalina last week. Update October, 18: it's a boy! |
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October 5, 2010: SeaWorld’s killer whale Kalina dies unexpectedly By Mary Anna Gentleman, Orlando Sentinel SeaWorld officials report that Kalina, a 25-year-old killer whale at the Orlando theme park, died Monday, Oct. 4, after a sudden illness. A necropsy will be performed, but the cause of her unexpected death likely will not be known for as long as six weeks. According to park veterinarians, Kalina showed no signs of illness as recently as Friday and had good appetite on Sunday, Oct. 3. She began showing signs of discomfort Monday afternoon and died suddenly in the early evening. Kalina was SeaWorld’s first successful birth in the park’s breeding program; she was born Sept. 26, 1985, to Katina. In 2004, Kalina gave birth to her fourth calf. (c) Orlando Sentinel, 2010
Note: Kalina is survived by four calves, Keet, Keto, Tuar and Skyla. She also had a stillbirth in 1997. Kalina became the first captive born mother in 1993 with her calf Keet. She was just 6 years old when impregnated by Kotar. Kalina was separated from all of her own offspring before they were 3 years old, some of them before they were even 2 years old. These separations are completely against an orca's nature who in the wild remains with its mother for life. Kalina's last offspring was moved away from her in 2006. Her best companion Taima died earlier this year. |
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September 7, 2010: Killer whale dies at SeaWorld in San Diego; orca shows canceled By Tony Perry, Los Angeles Times Sumar, a 12-year-old killer whale, died mysteriously Tuesday at SeaWorld in San Diego, forcing cancellation of the orca shows at Shamu Stadium, officials at the park said. The male orca began acting lethargic on Monday and was given antibiotics by park veterinarians. But his condition worsened and he died at about 1:45 p.m. A necropsy is planned. The show will resume Wednesday. Sumar, approximately 15 feet long and 5,300 pounds, had been at the San Diego park since 1999. He was born at the SeaWorld park in Orlando, Fla., on May 14, 1998, and spent some months at the SeaWorld park in Ohio before being transferred to San Diego. While still a calf, Sumar's mother, Taima, attacked him during a show at the Orlando park. The two were separated permanently, and other female orcas acted as Sumar's surrogate mother. In San Diego, Sumar was a star of the orca shows and was considered a possible candidate for breeding. Six orcas remain at the park. (c) Los Angeles Times, 2010
Note: Here's a video by NBC covering the story.
Update: Sea World has published details about Sumar's death.
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September 7, 2010: According to reliable sources the female killer whale captured around July 20 in the Russian waters of Chkalova Island (Okhotsk Sea) has apparently escaped from the net enclosure during a storm in mid August. That would be great news indeed but I'm still awaiting confirmation. |
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August 8, 2010: Saving Luna, the heartbreaking film about lost Southern Resident killer whale Luna (L98), has found some very prominent support. Actors Scarlett Johansson and Ryan Reynolds have joined as executive producers and a new version of The Whale Movie is in the making. It'll contain additional footage and will be narrated by Reynolds. Hopefully this will lead to a wider audience, this beautiful movie about this extraordinary whale certainly deserves it. I had the honour to watch Saving Luna on San Juan Island's big screen and, believe me, at the end the whole auditorium was visibly shaken. It's a story that you'll never forget. |
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August 8, 2010: Dolfinarium Harderwijk reports that Morgan is getting better and that a restricted number of park visitors are allowed to see her. She still has to gain another 100kg before any decisions about release or transfer to another park can be made. |
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July 30, 2010: A killer whale was captured around July 20 in the Russian waters of Chkalova Island (Okhotsk Sea). It was captured by the team that annually catches beluga whales in this area to sell them to commercial oceanariums. The killer whale capture was not planned in advance: the captors were preparing for beluga whale capturing while they saw a pod of killer whales and decided to try the luck. To the knowledge of the Russian Research team, they had no official permit to capture a killer whale, neither the facilities to keep it. One killer whale was captured; it is unknown what has happened with the rest of the pod, how many of them were injured or died. Currently the whale is kept in a temporary net enclosure which is too small for such a big animal, and the catchers are trying to get a permit that would be dated back to July to make this capture look legal. (Source: Russian Orcas Project) Please help protest this move and demand from the Russian government to let this orca go back to her wild family! Here are a couple addresses:
It might also be helpful to write to the Russian Federation's Embassy in your respective country. Here's a sample letter by Merel:
Embassy of Russia
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June 24, 2010: Yesterday employees of the Dolfinarium Harderwijk have captured a young orca. In the afternoon the animal was spotted near Ameland by a ship of the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Foodquality. The dolfinarium wants to rehabilitate the animal, now named Morgan, and release it back into the wild. The individual is a young female killer whale of about 3.5 meters in length. Eyewitnesses say the animal was extremely emaciated and weakened. How the animal came into the Waddensea is unknown, but apparently it lost its family. It is extremely rare that a killer whale is found in the Waddensea. The last sighting was in 1947. In 1963 a last dead beached whale was found on the beach of Noordwijk. Dolfinarium Harderwijk used to display orcas in the past, most recently Gudrun before she was send to the US. Here are some videos: RTV Noord, NOS Nieuws, Dolfinarium. The whole event reminds one of poor Pascuala in Mexico, 2007. Hopefully little Morgan will make it through! Update July 1, 2010: the tank that Morgan is in measures 25 by 10 meters and is 4 meters deep. Dolfinarium Harderwijk declared that Morgan will have to stay at the Dolfinarium for at least 3 to 6 months before any further decisions can be made. They came to this conclusion after multiple medical exams. Morgan needs to gain about 180 kilogram before she reaches her 'normal' weight. The dolfinarium is now talking with SOS Dolfijn and other experts all over the world about the health of Morgan. |
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June 19, 2010: After months of speculation 27-year-old female Nami has been moved from Taiji Whaling Museum to Port of Nagoya Public Aquarium (pdf with pics of the move). Taiji had been displaying killer whales since 1978. Port of Nagoya was already in the business from October 2003 until their lone orca Ku died in September 2008. Apparently the Nagoya Aquarium wants to start a captive breeding program and is in negotiations with Kamogawa Sea World to artificially inseminate Nami with semen from the Kamogawa males. I sincerely hope that Taiji will now find the inner strength to discontinue its ugly history of catching or killing orcas and other cetaceans from the wild. Maybe the worldwide success of the movie The Cove gets them to think about how they want their community to live in the 21st Century... |
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June 7, 2010: SeaWorld orca dies while giving birth By Jason Garcia, Orlando Sentinel A killer whale at SeaWorld Orlando died Sunday from complications that arose while she was giving birth, officials said. The park said Taima, born at SeaWorld Orlando in July 1989, died late in the afternoon, approximately 20 hours after going into labor Saturday evening. The calf was stillborn. "Everyone is very saddened by the loss ... Everyone is reeling," said Dr. Chris Dold, vice president of veterinary services for Orlando-based SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment. Taima "was a member of the family." Taima was one of eight killer whales at SeaWorld Orlando. She had successfully given birth to three calves in the past. Dold said Taima's fetus was in an unusual position in the birth canal during the delivery process. The orca also experienced a condition in which the placenta was delivered before the fetus itself. After Taima was unable to deliver her calf, park veterinarians attempted to assist. But SeaWorld said the complications ultimately proved too severe. Dold said SeaWorld has not had a mother killer whale die while giving birth in more than 25 years. The company, which operates SeaWorld marine parks in Orlando, San Diego and San Antonio, says it has recorded 26 successful killer-whale births since its first in 1985. Losses of the fetus are more common, although Dold said the rate of killer-whale stillbirths is significantly lower in SeaWorld's parks than it is in the wild. The park considers it a successful birth when the calf has reached one year of age. "There are lots of these kinds of complications that can occur ... We know they happen in the wild, we know they happen in collections," Dold said. "We know they happen everywhere." SeaWorld says it will not know the definitive cause of Taima's death until a full post-mortem investigation is completed, a process that is expected to take up to six weeks. A second orca at SeaWorld Orlando is also pregnant. The 34-year-old orca Katina is due to have her seventh calf in late October. Both Taima and Katina were impregnated by Tilikum, the six-ton orca who drowned trainer Dawn Brancheau earlier this year. (c) Orlando Sentinel, 2010 Notes: Taima leaves behind her three-year-old daughter Malia at SeaWorld Florida, her twelve-year-old son Sumar at SeaWorld California and her nine-year-old son Tekoa at Loro Parque Tenerife in Spain, What annoys me is that SeaWorld keeps on lying to the public althought the facts are out there for everybody to check:
"Dr. Chris Dold, vice president of veterinary services for Orlando-based SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment ... said SeaWorld has not had a mother killer whale die while giving birth in more than 25 years."
"The company, which operates SeaWorld marine parks in Orlando, San Diego and San Antonio, says it has recorded 26 successful killer-whale births since its first in 1985. Losses of the fetus are more common, although Dold said the rate of killer-whale stillbirths is significantly lower in SeaWorld's parks than it is in the wild."
On CNN, Dold said "the birthing success rate is about 50 percent in the wild and 85 percent in a zoological situation."
My condolences to the trainers but I wish SeaWorld's officials would stop misleading the public.
Another note (cudos to Jim):
One more note regarding neonate mortality in the wild:
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March 16, 2010: Takara's calf of this January has been named Sakari which is an Inuit word for "sweet". |
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March 4, 2010:
Orca Network and the Center for Whale Research issued a very well stated press release on the tragic events at SeaWorld Florida: "What’s best for Tilikum now, and what have we learned?(Source: Orca Network) |
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February 27, 2010:
SeaWorld appears to blame the trainer for being not careful enough. True as that might be I'd like to remark that neither the whales nor the trainers are the problem here. The problem is the unnatural situation captive cetaceans are in. Filmmaker and author Chris Palmer pretty much expresses my own thoughts, only much more eloquently than I ever could: "I've spent more than 25 years making wildlife films, many of them about powerful and dangerous predators such as killer whales. It is easy to see that in their own environments, little prevents such creatures from yielding to their natural impulses, as they should. Wednesday's tragic accident at SeaWorld Orlando shows that we need to reconsider keeping wild animals in captivity for our entertainment and take a hard look at our own understanding of the natural world. The stakes have been raised for those who argue that the pros of performing animals in captivity (protection and conservation of wild animals, public education) outweigh the cons (forcing animals into confinement, risking critical or fatal human injuries). Orcas and other large predators should not be held in captivity unless those doing so can make an overpoweringly persuasive case for it -- mainly that the animal's release into the wild, perhaps after an injury, will mean certain, immediate death. One reason behind my conviction: The lesson too many take away from marine park shows is wild animals are like pets. Some can be trained to obey a human's command on occasion, but no matter how much they may learn to tolerate human interaction, these animals are far from tame. Why do people forget this seemingly obvious truth?(Source: CNN) |
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February 25, 2010:
A veteran animal trainer whose dream was to work at SeaWorld Florida was killed Wednesday when one of the show's killer whales dragged her underwater and she drowned. SeaWorld said that 12,000-pound Tilikum pulled Dawn Brancheau, 40, into the orca's tank about 2p.m. Witnesses told the Orlando Sentinel that the animal suddenly grabbed Brancheau by the upper arm, tossed her around in his mouth and pulled her beneath the water as dozens of tourists looked on in horror. Brazilian tourist João Lúcio da Costa Sobrinho, 28, and his girlfriend, Talita Oliveira, 20, watched the attack from an underwater-viewing area where they had gone to take photos. Suddenly, they saw a woman in the killer whale's jaws, her face bloody. The more than 20-foot-long orca circled round and round, turning her over and over, they said. "It was terrible," Sobrinho said. "It's very difficult to see the image." Witnesses who watched the attack while eating at the "Dine with Shamu" show - a poolside buffet where trainers demonstrate their connection with the animals - told the Sentinel a female trainer was petting a killer whale when it grabbed her and plunged into the water. It reappeared on the other side of the tank and leapt up holding the woman, they said. Within minutes, an alarm sounded, and security workers escorted the spectators out. Some people were screaming, and children were crying, Sobrinho and Oliveira said. The scene was more orderly at "Dine with Shamu." Several spectators said the animals had been agitated during a 12:30p.m. show, playing or fighting with one another and refusing to obey commands to splash the crowd, a staple of the program. "It is with great sadness that I report that one of our most experienced animal trainers drowned in an incident with one of our killer whales this afternoon," SeaWorld President Dan Brown said in a statement to the media. "We've initiated an investigation to determine, to the extent possible, what occurred." Brancheau had worked at the park since February 1994. Ever since she visited SeaWorld with her family about 30years ago, Brancheau's goal had been to train killer whales, said her mother, Marion Loverde of Indiana. "Everyone knew that was her dream," Loverde said. Brancheau's supervisor, Chuck Tompkins, said Brancheau knew the risks of the job. ‘"She loved what she did, and she loved being with the animal. And she understood the risk," said Tompkins, corporate curator in charge of animal behavior for SeaWorld Parks & Resorts. "Dawn knew how to be able to connect with animals and with people." Tilikum, the largest killer whale at any SeaWorld park, has been involved in two previous deaths. He was one of three killer whales blamed for the 1991 drowning of a trainer while he performed at the now-defunct Sealand of the Pacific in British Columbia. In 1999, the dead body of a naked man was found lying across Tilikum's back at SeaWorld Orlando. Tompkins said Tilikum would not be put down because of the attacks. His name, according to various sources, means "welcome," "greetings" or "friend" in Chinook jargon. SeaWorld Orlando and San Diego will be open today, but there will be no "Believe" or "Dine with Shamu" shows, both of which feature killer whales. The San Diego park canceled its Wednesday afternoon Shamu show because of the accident. "We're terribly saddened by the loss of the member of our SeaWorld family - it doesn't matter what park," San Diego park spokesman David Koontz said. When Orange County firefighters arrived at the park less than five minutes after receiving a 911 call, Brancheau was already dead, a spokesman said. The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration dispatched an investigator from Tampa. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, a longtime critic of SeaWorld's practices, again called on the park "to stop confining oceangoing mammals to an area that to them is like the size of a bathtub," it said in a statement. "It's not surprising when these huge, smart animals lash out." Many other animal-rights activists have long criticized SeaWorld and other marine parks for keeping orcas and other wildlife in captivity. Russ Rector, a former dolphin trainer in Fort Lauderdale, said keeping the animals captive makes them dangerous. "Captivity is abusive to these animals. And the abuse mounts up. And when these animals snap - just for a minute - they're so big and can be so dangerous that it's like a shotgun," Rector said. "It does an incredible amount of damage in just a moment." At SeaWorld on Wednesday afternoon, guests were turned away from the walkways that lead to Shamu Stadium and were told the 5:30 p.m. show was canceled. Outside the park entrance, people were talking about the accident. Several said the killer whales had not behaved normally during the 12:30 p.m. show. Brad Sultan of Tampa said one of three orcas that was supposed to create a triangle with its trainers didn't do it. Another orca that was supposed to swim around the tank and splash made it only about a quarter of the way, he said. The show, Sultan said, "abruptly ended." (Source: Orlando Sentinel) (Update regarding autopsy report: CNN) The sad news comes only two months after another trainer was killed at Loro Parque in Spain (see below). Condolences to the trainer's family and friends. |
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January 8, 2010: SeaWorld Texas' 18 year old female orca Takara gave birth yesterday morning at 7:13 AM after a short period of labor. The gender of the calf has not been stated yet. This is Takara's third calf after Trua in 2005 and Kohana in 2002, both of whom were separated from her at young age. Trua remained at SeaWorld Florida when Takara was moved to Texas in February 2009. Kohana went to Loro Parque, Spain, in February 2006. In the wild killer whales remain with their mother for life. Here's some film. Note (Jan 29): SeaWorld thinks it's a girl. |
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