The Province - Letters to the Editor
Sunday, July 20, 2003
Letters to the Editor
Is it a dolphin death tank? Or loving space for two?
I'm writing in response to the Vancouver Aquarium's desire to obtain
a friend for Spinnaker. Captivity does not work for cetaceans.
Since successful breeding of cetaceans is quite low, the conservation
argument is null and void. As for the argument of education, holding
a self-aware, highly social, aquatic mammal captive in a barren
concrete tank, is an education that is incomplete at best.
These sentient beings are placed into a white concrete tank that
sustains no living thing and reverberates their sonar in a grotesque
echo. The dolphins will eventually stop their natural echolocation
(which serves to identify and make sense of their world as well
as communicate with one another) to end the reverberations much
like a human would close their eyes in response to abnormal, constant
visual stimulation. Other maladaptive behaviours include head banging
into the side of the tank and suicide.
Unfortunately for Spinnaker, the captivity industry is not upfront
with all the facts surrounding captivity. Make no mistake, the cetacean
captivity industry is a billion-dollar per year industry and not
some philanthropic quest to educate the public and or conserve the
species.
I would urge the Canadian public to encourage the aquarium not
to bring in another dolphin and to look at rehabilitation, with
the possibility of freedom in the ocean. Bringing another dolphin
into that death tank will only serve to cut another dolphin's life
expectancy in half.
Nora Sinkankas, Captive Dolphin Awareness Foundation, Oklahoma
City, Okla.
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It's bad enough that Spinnaker is locked up in such a small pool,
why make another dolphin suffer the same fate? The same thing is
going to happen that happened with the whales. They will die quicker
than if they were living free. Animals are not happy in captivity.
The Vancouver Aquarium should concentrate on teaching the dolphins
to live in the wild again and return them to where they belong.
Clarke Oor, Port Coquitlam
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If the Coalition for No Whales in Captivity really does stand for
better treatment of cetaceans, then they should recognize the cruelty
lies not in keeping them in captivity but isolating them. You cannot
release dolphins and whales back into the wild that have been in
captivity for the majority of their lives. It would be no different
than abandoning a family pet at the humane society.
When rehabilitating animals with the intention of releasing them
back into the wild, the animal must not become attached or socialized
with humans. Since we are obviously past that point with Spinnaker,
let him have a friend.
Dave Thomas, Vancouver, B.C.
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I saw Spinnaker last Sunday at the aquarium and I learned a lot
about dolphins. I am eight-years-old and travelled in from Abbotsford
to see him. Even though Spinnaker looked like he was having fun,
I think he needs a pal who got injured, like him, and can't be returned
to the wild. People who think Spinnaker doesn't need a pal are very
cruel.
Renee Hansen, Abbotsford
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Yes, absolutely yes, Spinnaker should have a friend.
I have an aquarium. Granted it's only a 15-gallon tank, but still,
I've noticed that my fish are sociable. The odd time when I'm down
to one fish, I notice it behaves differently, always hiding, never
coming out to swim freely. Yet, as soon as I get more fish it's
fine. After all, fish hang out in schools, don't they?
Same with my birds. I always have at least two so they have company
and playmates. I know what it is to be alone and long for playmates.
I don't see the people in the Coalition for No Whales in Captivity
going it alone. They have formed a group!
The Vancouver Aquarium is just like my aquarium. It may be on a
much grander scale, but still, it's full of pets that are loved
and looked after.
And anyone who has ever had a pet knows it fulfills something people
never can -- it connects us to nature. In essence, they take us
out of our own self-made captivity. Get a playmate for Spinnaker.
Helen Alksnys, Richmond
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