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turbinetree

(24,701 posts)
Sat Aug 13, 2022, 08:29 PM Aug 2022

After half a century in captivity, Tokitae the performing orca could finally go home

Katharine Gammon in San Juan Island
Sat 13 Aug 2022 06.00 EDT

Six young orca calves were separated from their mothers in 1970 and sold to marine parks. Only one is still alive at the Miami Seaquarium

Five decades ago, a group of men rounded up more than 80 orcas in a cove on Whidbey Island off Washington state. Using boats, explosives, nets and sticks, they separated young orca calves from their mothers. Locals were haunted by the whales’ human-like cries, according to an account of the day.

Six baby whales were taken away that day in Penn Cove and sold to marine parks. Most didn’t last a year in captivity. Only one who was captured and sold is still alive.

That female whale has spent the past 52 years of her life in a pool in the Miami Seaquarium – the smallest orca enclosure in North America – performing for crowds until her retirement earlier this year.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/aug/13/toki-the-orca-captivity-miami-seaquarium

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After half a century in captivity, Tokitae the performing orca could finally go home (Original Post) turbinetree Aug 2022 OP
This is idiotic. Jirel Aug 2022 #1
and THIS... is the correct answer. WarGamer Aug 2022 #3
No matter the outcome, people have failed her many times over. Heartbreaking. WhiskeyGrinder Aug 2022 #2

Jirel

(2,018 posts)
1. This is idiotic.
Sat Aug 13, 2022, 09:43 PM
Aug 2022

What a fancy way to retraumatize an orca with no clue how to survive in the wild, and watch her die. Whatever side you’re on when it comes to wild animal capture for captivity, once you have an imprinted animal, which has not spent significant time in the wild to learn its natural roles and behaviors, it is cruel to dump that animal back into the wild and watch it slowly die in confusion, loneliness, and inability to care for itself.

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