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CAPTIVITY
Bimbo Pilot Whale Returned to Wild One day he would be friendly and the next he would be in a wildly agitated state, or he might be depressed. After four years of treatment, which included antidepressant drugs and tranquilizers, Bimbo smashed into a window of the aquarium, flooding spectators.
Corky Corky, Captive at Sea World - San Diego Corky, a female orca, has lived in captivity longer than any orca. For 38 years, she has been walked on, ridden on and climbed over and has performed foolish tricks in order to obtain food while living at Sea World, San Diego. Corky was captured at the age of four in the waters above Vancouver Island (the “Northern Residents") and taken from her mother and family, the A-5 pod. This would make her age 41. She has lived longer than any captive orca. Because orca lifespan is cut so short in captivity, aquaria insisted that an orca’s lifespan was only 35 years, not its lifespan in the wild of 70 and beyond. Originally housed at Marineland near Los Angeles, Corky and her mate Orky were transferred to Sea World, where Orky only lived for 18 months. In a freak accident, Corky was attacked by a female orca named Kandu, who was killed in the assault. Such a bizarre event has never been witnessed in orca history anywhere in the world. At Sea World, Corky has given birth to seven calves; all of them have died. How different her world of concrete, frozen fish and thousands of gawking people aiming their cameras is from Corky’s true home, the waters off the northern shore of Vancouver Island with her family. Dr. Paul Spong has been studying orca pods for more than 38 years from his home on Hanson Island, British Columbia, and trying to get Corky returned to her home. Until several years ago, Corky’s mother, A-23, was alive. Paul’s dream was to have a mother and her adult child reunited. He continues to work on his goal of having Corky returned to her family pod. He states: What orcas are displaying in these tanks is a caricature
Keiko, Keiko's Early Years Keiko was born in 1977 or '78 in Atlantic waters near Iceland . While an infant, he was stolen from his mother's side and in 1979 he taken to an Icelandic aquarium called Saedyrasfnid. In 1982, he was purchased by Marineland in Ontario , Canada. Here he began training and performing for the public. His skin lesions appeared for the first time. In 1985, Marineland sold him to Reino Aventura , an amusement park in Mexico City , for $350,000. For eight years, he lived in the amusement park in a tank that was much too small and too warm for an orca. These conditions led to his skin lesions becoming worse and his dorsal fin bending over. Bent dorsal fins are often seen in captive orcas due to the lack of exercise. Keiko's Film Career In 1992, the filming of the movie Free Willy began at Reino Aventura in Mexico City . It was the story of a young boy who befriends a killer whale in his small tank and then coaxes him to leap over a sea wall to freedom. After stardom from Keiko's role in the film, many negotiations ensued with his Mexican owners to improve his living conditions. People throughout the world demanded better living conditions for Keiko and wanted his screen life of freedom to become his real life. Keiko Moves to Oregon In 1996, Keiko was moved to a large tank at the Oregon Coast Aquarium with natural seawater from a nearby bay. Strenuous efforts began to rehabilitate him by solving his ongoing skin problems, and giving him ample nourishment in order to bring him up to the normal weight of a male orca of his age. His skin lesions cleared up. In 1997, live fish were introduced to Keiko so that he could learn how to hunt on his own. He did not eat the fish, but instead brought them to his trainers. In August, he caught and ate his first fish. By the following June, he weighed 9,620 pounds. A goal was set to release him into a pen in the North Atlantic by 1998. Keiko Taken to Iceland - First Step to Freedom In 1998, Keiko was airlifted to Iceland by United Parcel and placed in a sea pen in Klettsvik Bay where he learned to forage on wild fish. He was slowly moved into larger spaces within the bay. For more than 20 years, he had been fed by humans and this was a big adjustment. Now his exercise was swimming against waves in the ocean, not from performing tricks. He lived with only the natural sea bottom below him, not a concrete tank. He had the sounds of the water and other sea creatures around him, not the cheers of crowds watching him perform. His caretakers fed him 125 pounds of herring a day and took him on daily "walks" into the ocean to keep him fit. Keiko Released Into Ocean In July 2002, Keiko was released into the open ocean. He was separated from his walk boat and spent several weeks in the waters of the North Atlantic . This was the longest time he had spent away from humans since his capture in 1979. He turned up in Norway , nearly 1,000 miles away. He was a hit in the village of Halsa on Norway 's west coast. So many people wanted to swim with him and even crawl on his back, that animal protection authorities had to place a ban on people approaching him. The Keiko staff veterinarian, Dr. Larry Cornell, began tests to determine his health and found that ". he was robust and showed no signs of weight loss." He had obviously been able to feed himself during this 56-day journey to Norway . He could always be tracked via satellite and VHF tags. One of the problems with Keiko's return to the wild was that almost his entire life had been spent with humans, and he seemed to crave human companionship. He would approach boats to interact and be petted. The pneumonia that killed him came on quite quickly. After he died, he was buried on a snowbound pasture. Normally a dead whale would be towed to sea and sunk in deep water. His burial was done in secret to keep the media away. During the night, machines dug a hole near the waterline, and then Keiko was slid a few yards across the snow to his grave. Only seven people, including his team and the machine operator, were present. Hundreds of people have visited his gravesite and left mementoes. Keiko means "Lucky One" in Japanese. Whether this hapless whale was "lucky" is questionable. It was more likely that humans who came in contact with him were the lucky ones. What a journey for this animal from Iceland to Canada , then Mexico , Oregon and back to Iceland . The massive efforts on Keiko's behalf were an attempt to put something right and return an animal to its home. Caring and concerned humans tried to undo what greed by other humans had caused. A captured orca can be sold for many thousands or even millions of dollars. Because Keiko died at a relatively early age, it does not mean that a return to the wild shouldn't be attempted with another orca. Keiko had spent 23 years in captivity and two years acclimating to the wild. Every orca's life experiences and personality will be different. If an animal can be placed with their family pod (which wasn't done in Keiko's case), the chances for success should be much greater. Pods stay together for life and each has their own dialect (much as a northern, southern or eastern accent in the United States ). Most importantly, no orca should ever be taken from its natural habitat. It should live out its life in with its family group. Lolita Lolita - a Life of Captivity
Wally In Memory of Wally Wally, a 10-year-old Atlantic bottlenose dolphin, died of congestive heart failure. He was a big attraction and appeared with two other dolphins, Katie and Tai. The trio was moved to Magic Mountain while their pool was cleaned. Veterinarian Joe Alexander did not believe the move contributed to Wally’s death but stated that bottlenose dolphins usually live to their late 20s. Deaths like Wally’s occur frequently. But the public usually doesn’t know, as the parks keep this negative news from the public. At Sea World all of the orcas are called “Shamu,” so the death of an orca may go unnoticed.
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