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SeaWorld, critics debate if park tanks orsea pens are best for orcas
During a night performance in 2014, trainers direct killer whales at Shamu Stadium in SeaWorld San Diego in California.
The captive orcas are at the center of an animal welfare debate. Photo: Don Bartletti/Los Angeles Times/TNS
The killer whales at SeaWorld SanDiego in California will not get a happy ending.
A documentary movie was released in 2013 about SeaWorld. It accuses the company of
mistreating its killer whales, also called orcas. Now, people who fight for animal welfare are
angry. They demand that the San Diego theme park free its 11 killer whales.
However, scientists agree that the orcas probably will never be released to the open seas.
The closest they would get to freedom would be living in ocean coves. The coves would
be separated from open water by netting. There, the orcas would be fed and cared for by
humans for the rest of their lives.
Captive Orcas Will Always Need Help
Killer whales that have lived in captivity are not a good fit for the wild because they have
not spent enough time in the ocean, said Naomi Rose. She is a scientist for a group that
protects animals from mistreatment.
By Los Angeles Times, adapted by Newsela staff on 01.14.16
Word Count 656
There are no sea pens that can hold all 11 orcas. The cost of building such pens could
reach $5 million each. Each pen could cost up to $500,000 a year to care for, Rose said.
Although animal welfare groups have tried to get the orcas moved to sea pens, SeaWorld's
killer whales may never make the change. SeaWorld has said no to giving up its orcas. It
says they are safer living in the parks’ concrete and glass cells.
“They would not be better off in sea pens than where they are now,” said Chris Dold. He is
the head veterinarian for SeaWorld Entertainment. “We would not ever feel comfortable
putting our whales into that setting.”
Sea Holds Dangers Too
Dold and other SeaWorld supporters say that killer whales that have not lived in the wild
may not be able to handle the sea. Even in pens, they could get sick or experience tough
weather.
The call to release the orcas has grown louder since the 2013 release of the documentary
“Blackfish.” The movie charged SeaWorld’s parks with mistreating its killer whales.
SeaWorld Entertainment has 23 orcas in three parks across the country.
SeaWorld San Diego proposed a $100 million plan last year. It said it would double the size
of its killer whale exhibit. The project was called Blue World. California's leaders accepted
the plan. However, the leaders want SeaWorld to end its captive breeding program and
halt the transfer of its orcas in and out of the park.
SeaWorld has put Blue World on hold. It has also taken California to court. It is fighting the
no-breeding rule.
Unhappy Ending For "Free Willy" Orca
One famous orca was released to a sea pen. His name was Keiko. He was the whale
whose story was featured in the 1993 movie “Free Willy.”
Keiko was captured off Iceland in 1979. He was trained to perform at theme parks. After
several years at a theme park in Mexico, the whale was transported to a sea pen in Iceland
in 1998.
During a short swim outside of the pen, accompanied by caretakers on a ship, Keiko
swam away. He turned up in a deep inlet in Norway. There, he was found horsing around
with children and fisherman along the shore. The whale died a few months later of
pneumonia, a lung disease.
No Good Solution
Mark Simmons was once a SeaWorld trainer who was hired to help with Keiko in Iceland.
He said the Keiko experience showed that sea pens are not a safe place for killer whales.
People who fight for animal welfare say those who oppose sea pens do not want an
answer to the problem. They do not want to consider an alternative to keeping the whales
captive.
Ingrid Visser started the Orca Research Trust. It is a group dedicated to the study of orcas.
“We can put a man on the moon, surely we can move an animal out of a concrete life,” she
said.
Quiz
1 According to the article, what effect did the documentary movie "Blackfish" have on the killer
whales issue?
(A) It made many people upset about how orcas are treated at SeaWorld.
(B) It made SeaWorld and animal welfare activists come to an agreement.
(C) It gave SeaWorld a chance to explain how they take care of killer whales.
(D) It made California's leaders write a new law, demanding that SeaWorld
release its orcas.
2 Why did SeaWorld put its new, larger killer whale exhibit on hold?
(A) SeaWorld realized $100 million is too much money to spend on killer whales.
(B) SeaWorld is angry at a new rule that says it cannot breed killer whales in
captivity.
(C) SeaWorld has realized that the best solution is to transfer the killer whales to
another place, not build a new exhibit.
(D) SeaWorld was only pretending it would build the larger tanks in order to
calm down angry animal welfare activists.
3 What do scientists, many animal welfare groups, and SeaWorld agree on?
(A) The best option for the orcas is to live in protected sea pens.
(B) Sea pens are expensive and not totally safe. The best answer is to build
bigger tanks.
(C) Orcas deserve to live in freedom in the ocean. They just need to learn how to
survive again.
(D) Captive orcas should not be returned to the open ocean. It would be too
difficult to survive.
4 What might animal welfare groups who want to move killer whales to sea pens say to Mark
Simmons?
(A) You are not qualified to decide what's best for killer whales, because you've
never worked with them.
(B) It is sad that Keiko died, but he was getting pretty old and he probably
would have died anyway.
(C) It is sad Keiko was let out of his pen and later died, but sea pens are still a
much better choice than a small concrete tank.
(D) It's too bad that Keiko was let out and died, but all scientists agree that sea
pens are the best solution for killer whales.