The Dolphin Company, owner of the Miami Seaquarium, recently announce plans to release an orca from the Sequarium back into the wild. Many headlines suggest this is a positive story, and indeed, a whale returning to the wild and rejoining their family would be amazing to see. But, is it reality? Sara and Casey discuss the issues surrounding this particular whale, Tokitae, often called Toki, as well as some of the issues surrounding keeping orcas in human care.
Resources for this episode:
Scientists: End of orca program a loss
The Debate - The Ethics Of Keeping Whales And Dolphins Captive | A Whale Of A Business | FRONTLINE | PBS
Orcas Don't Do Well in Captivity. Here's Why - National Geographic
Here's why SeaWorld probably won't release its whales into the wild - Los Angeles Times
Tooth damage in captive orcas (Orcinus orca) - ScienceDirect
Bias and Misrepresentation of Science Undermines Productive Discourse on Animal Welfare Policy: A Case Study
Public Display of Marine Mammals | NOAA Fisheries
Cetaceans in Captivity: A Discussion of Welfare - 1999 AVMA Animal Welfare Forum
Killer Whale | NOAA Fisheries
National Aquarium - Dolphin Sanctuary
At Baltimore's National Aquarium, Climate Change Presents Challenges Inside And Out : NPR
Health and Welfare Assessment of Tokitae (also known as Lolita), killer whale housed at Miami Seaquarium
Bottlenose dolphin habitat and management factors related to activity and distance traveled in zoos and aquariums | PLOS ONE
Release of whales from notorious Russia ‘whale jail’ complete - National Geographic
miami-seaquarium-inspection-report - DocumentCloud
Something Rotten at the Miami Seaquarium - International Marine Mammal Project
PolitiFact | SeaWorld says their whales live as long as wild whales do
Towards understanding the welfare of cetaceans in accredited zoos and aquariums - PMC
Take Action for Southern Resident Killer Whales | NOAA Fisheries