To play the devil's advocate...Not to be rude, but if you have this view on ALL animals and not just a few, why are you on this forum...
To play the devil's advocate...Not to be rude, but if you have this view on ALL animals and not just a few, why are you on this forum...
There is no source needed, no aquarium home to cetaceans has had natural requirements.I don't think you understand what I am asking you for, which is a source. You keep saying things that are framed as being facts, but you're just saying them; you haven't told me or shown me where you are getting this information from. If you're getting this from any external source, I'd like to know what it is and read it myself. If you're just coming up with this information on your own, then you should stop phrasing all of it as factual and clarify that these are just opinions that aren't based on anything except your own internal logic.
Those animals do a lot better in captivity than large cetaceans. Orcas in captivity live to be 30 years old at the oldest. In the wild, they can live to be 100. They also have been known to become violent and kill their trainers. Tilikum killed three of his trainers. Where as in the wild, there is no recorded case of an orca killing a human.For instance, the Western European Hedgehog generally has a home range of up to 4km diameter which it traverses each night when feeding.... but no one ever suggests that zoos need to have multiple acres for their hedgehog exhibits!![]()
. Orcas in captivity live to be 30 years old at the oldest. In the wild, they can live to be 100.
There is no source needed, no aquarium home to cetaceans has had natural requirements.
@Sunny
they are CAPTIVE, and CAPTIVITY can never be positive.. No matter how golden the cage is in which they are forced to spend their lives, because animals do not have the choice whether they want to be locked up. The human being presumes to do that. And it doesn't matter at all whether the animal was born in captivity or not, how a living creature being feels has nothing to do with where it was born. NEVER, for absolut NO animal is captivity OK. They live in prisons, just so people like you can gawk at them.
And this has nothing to do with the lifespan...many captive animals do not live so long as they would in Freedom, not only dolphins, including captive pets.... So you do understood now, what CAPTIVITY for every animal really means
To play the devil's advocate...![]()
It also depends on how old the orcas were when they were brought in from the wild and how long they lived to be in captivity. But that’s a whole nother topicWell, quite apart from the fact that the latter claim is extremely shaky and has not been demonstrated to any reasonable level - biopsy results suggested that the female who was widely claimed by ARA to have lived beyond a century was actually around 65-75, and the claims of her age were more or less entirely based on the later-disproved assumption that an adult male seen with her was her son - the former claim is verifiably false given the fact there are currently 7 captive orcas which are older than 30, with the oldest living animal being 57!
Sounds awfully like the time one person on this site, when asked to substantiate some fairly wild claims, merely replied "MY LOGIC AND KNOWLEDGE" and refused to elaborate![]()
Not to be rude, but if you have this view on ALL animals and not just a few, why are you on this forum...
@Bib Fortuna With all due respect, nobody takes Peta seriously. They kill far more animals than they rescue and they spend much of their time complaining about things that don't need to be complained about, like Super Mario skinning tanukis to get the tanuki suit when he clearly gets it from a leaf, so looking on their forums is a waste of everyone's time.
It also depends on how old the orcas were when they were brought in from the wild and how long they lived to be in captivity. But that’s a whole nother topic.
That’s true, I admit I was wrong with that part. But even so they still live more than 30 years longer than that in the wild. The oldest orca in the wild was 105.Lolita - 57 years old (52 years in captivity)
Corky II - 56 years old (52 years in captivity)
Ulises - 44 years old (41 years in captivity)
Katina - 46 years old (43 years in captivity)
Kiska - 44 years old (42 years in captivity)
Kshamanek - 34 years old (29 years in captivity)
Stella - 34 years old (30 years in captivity)
Orkid - 32 years old (born in captivity)
So all but one of the animals in question have lived in captivity longer than the 30-year hard barrier you claim to existincidentally, there's a bunch of 29-year old captive born ones which will soon cross that barrier too.
The oldest orca in the wild was 105.
the latter claim is extremely shaky and has not been demonstrated to any reasonable level - biopsy results suggested that the female who was widely claimed by ARA to have lived beyond a century was actually around 65-75, and the claims of her age were more or less entirely based on the later-disproved assumption that an adult male seen with her was her son
Quick everyone!! We need to pressure legislators to ban the ownership of hamsters as "pets".Same goes for various rodent species, in particular certain hamsters.
There is no source needed, no aquarium home to cetaceans has had natural requirements.
Not to be rude, but if you have this view on ALL animals and not just a few, why are you on this forum...
Come with me to the science deniers club, it's fun to ignore the evidence. Trust me I do it all the time, and I definitely am not an ignoramus for doing so. : PThere is no source needed, no aquarium home to cetaceans has had natural requirements.
This post brought to you by PETAThere is no source needed, no aquarium home to cetaceans has had natural requirements.
Apparently, you don't understand what "average age" means.^^OK....the average age of a domestic cat is 15. Mine is 19. Theory destroyed
Apparently, enough people to allow them to employ hundreds of people all over the world and finance all of their antics...With all due respect, nobody takes Peta seriously.