I also love the arguement from PETA-likes that still borns, miscarriage's and inbreeding only happens in captivity when we KNOW that it does in the wild. Life expentancy is another one 90 years is NOT average, that's like saying we should all live to be 124... just not. The statistic for captive Orca's in the 70's was more like 5 years

Now it's more like 14 years (it goes up and down all the time). They still spend as much time under the water as they do in the wild. SW did NOT admit to that, they don't do it. Do you know how dangerous it is to keep an animal on sedatives that chooses to breathe? Get your facts from a non-biased source rather than The Rectory, Peepchick on youtube and several other insanes that I can think of. I'm tired of these arguements. Don't be a sheep and do your own research.
oh, pleses dont call me a PETA-like, i actually cant stand them. and i have no idea who peepchick is.
i never said they live to 90 in the wild, i know its very rare. i meant that consider all the advances in medicine, husbandry ect, the life expectancy in the wild is still considerably higher than captivity.
out of the 153 orca that have died in captivity, NONE have made it to their wild average life expectancy. in the wild a orca can live for around 30 for a male 60 years for a female - in captivity they are lucky to reach 15. Of the 194 killer whales in captivity since 1964, almost 2/3 didn’t make it passed 10 years in captivity. Less than 30 orcas survived more than 20 years in captivity. Average time in captivity has improved steadily over the decades, but is still very low.
"Don't be a sheep and do your own research."
how about you do your own research and stop listening to just what seaworld say.
you want examples, ok.---- (refering to taima who died giving birth yesterday)
"Dr. Chris Dold, vice president of veterinary services for Orlando-based SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment ... said SeaWorld has not had a mother killer whale die while giving birth in more than 25 years."
--> Samoa died during labor of a near full-term fetus in March 1992. Already forgotten? Two more females died during their pregnancies in 1991 and 2001.
"The company, which operates SeaWorld marine parks in Orlando, San Diego and San Antonio, says it has recorded 26 successful killer-whale births since its first in 1985. Losses of the fetus are more common, although Dold said the rate of killer-whale stillbirths is significantly lower in SeaWorld's parks than it is in the wild."
--> To my knowledge there is no scientific data of stillbirths in the wild to compare with. But almost a third out of the 37 known SeaWorld pregnancies didn't result in a live calf (7 stillbirths, 5 miscarriages). Two calves died after a couple days, two more didn't reach their third birthday. Hardly a record to brag about...
On CNN, Dold said "the birthing success rate is about 50 percent in the wild and 85 percent in a zoological situation."
--> The birthing success rate for killer whales in captivity is actually 74 percent, at SeaWorld it is just 68 percent. The "50 percent in the wild" that Dold cites is the estimated survival rate of a wild killer calf in its first year. If I'd count that, the captivity numbers get even worse.
And dont even get me started on the cooling pumps that can be heard underwater 24/7, the increased aggression between orcas and towards trainers, the stress related diseases. Different orca species actively avoid each other and never interbreed. Yet theme parks put animals from different races and regions in the same tanks and expect them to mate and eat the same food and get along (they often dont). the fact that in the wild orcas stay together for life yet in captivity they are regularly split up.
i love zoos, yes but i am not blind to the fact that some animals just dont belong in captivity.
(and too the other poster, yes i was refering to kshamenk and others, and Mundo Marino (which is a terrible place. the tank is old, rusty and broken) several people were arrested for the crime which they admitted but have yet to stand trial)