SeaWorld San Diego SeaWorld ending orca breeding

Im pleasantly surprised how much" pro-cetaceans in captivity" there is on this thread. Quite simply if Killer Whales were not suitably adapted for captivity they would not have survived,indeed prospered,for generations.Really enclosure size is not the biggest problem here..even the female at Miami Seaquarium seems in good health(as evinced by her upright dorsal fin and longevity) those that come up with the "not large enough" complaint re enclosure size should consider that the same point could, and is, made about any other captive species.Condors,elephants,..any species that naturally migrates - where do you stop?Oh..and by the way,what is to stop Sea World importing captive -bred Killer Whales from Japan for instance? Ive yet to see a statement that says they wont get any more animals...just that THEYRE stopping breeding(or have I missed that one?).

I've never understood the "where do you stop?" argument. Surely the answer is obvious: with species/exhibits where captivity doesn't demonstrably and negatively impact welfare. That's true regardless of your thoughts on captive cetaceans.

In the case of orcas, there clearly are (and certainly have been) health and longevity issues. Even you recognize that by citing age and dorsal fin erectness as welfare metrics, so I'm not sure how you've decided orcas have "prospered for generations". To again state what feels like the obvious, the mere act of surviving in captivity does not indicate good welfare and some species (including humans) kept in awful conditions will breed.
 
You simply clearly showed that animal rights ideology lacks internal logic by itself.

Giving birth and caring for young is vital part of natural behavior of any mammal, especially in very social, slowly maturing species. Adult-young interactions are significant part of behavior of killer whales, not just the mother, but all members of the group. By arguing to stop breeding, animal activists force killer whales to significant abnormal behavior.

By activists' own logic, killer whales don't care and didn't consent that in the best interest of their kind is to go extinct by not breeding.

Besides, activists are guilty of what they themselves disagree with: picking human opinion what animals should do and enforcing it on the animals.

Going more broad: the ideology on 'animal rights' is flawed inherently, and that is why it creates paradoxes and solves no problems. Not breeding killer whales is not objectively more humane than letting killer whales enjoy their maternity and life in multi-generational herds.

Not to belabor the point, but the circular logic here is yours. If the stated goal of animal rights activists is to end the keeping of orcas in captivity, then it would best achieve that purpose by ending the breeding of whales (as Sea World has stopped acquiring new whales other than by breeding). Your argument seems to be that since animal rights activists say they care about the whales, they should therefore insist that all whales be allowed to breed (because breeding is natural and encourages the social behavior engaged in by whales in the wild), but this would of course have the end result of perpetuating a population of captive orcas.

Simply to say that breeding is natural and therefore it is inhumane to not allow breeding ignores the fact that animals in captivity are necessarily "deprived" of the "opportunity" of engaging in many forms of natural behavior. It's the very nature of the beast. Beyond orcas, many other captive animals of many other species are not allowed to breed (for many different reasons). Even if breeding of orcas were continued, there are many other significant "natural" behaviors which orcas would not and could not exhibit in captivity (and the same holds true of many other species).

As I have stated numerous times in this thread, I am no way a supporter of the full agenda of various animal rights groups, as it relates to anti-captivity efforts or any of their other positions. But to say that their support of the ending of the orca breeding program reveals the fallacy of their positions is an illogical and throroughly unpersuasive argument.
 
Actually I do not stop with orcas. I believe most zoo exhibits I have seen - including aviaries - are too small.

So how can an aviary for any large bird of prey be big enough then?Or for cranes,pelicans,storks and on and on. Even I have a bugbear with the clipping/pinioning of birds that are naturally flighted i.e. most ducks and geese.The problem with the "nothing is big enough"school of thought re. enclosures is actually that there is no end to it, and its all based on some vague notion of correctness according to the observers threshold..and the times we live in,for instance,when London opened its Lion House in 1877 one journalist wrote that the Lions now live in surroundings approximating to wildest Africa - this for plain,barred cages,30 feet long at most!
 
And i would also postulate that breeding to multiple generations is more than mere survival,Lions and Tigers bred in the Tower of London..but not,as i remember it,ever to second generation.
 
So how can an aviary for any large bird of prey be big enough then?Or for cranes,pelicans,storks and on and on. Even I have a bugbear with the clipping/pinioning of birds that are naturally flighted i.e. most ducks and geese.The problem with the "nothing is big enough"school of thought re. enclosures is actually that there is no end to it, and its all based on some vague notion of correctness according to the observers threshold..and the times we live in,for instance,when London opened its Lion House in 1877 one journalist wrote that the Lions now live in surroundings approximating to wildest Africa - this for plain,barred cages,30 feet long at most!

The same argument could just as easily be made for your point-of-view. Where does the size doesn't matter argument end? Would you be happy to see a lion in a 30-foot long cage? What about 3-foot long? 3-inches? It’s a silly point for either side to make.

Actually, I agree that these judgements are usually based on personal biases, but I don't see how your viewpoint is any different. Perhaps more importantly, ignoring visitor perceptions on whether an animal's needs are met (regardless of whether they actually are) is more injurious to the future of zoos than any anti-orca campaign.

As for the postulation that second generation calves are indicators of good welfare, see my previous post.
 
If the stated goal of animal rights activists is to end the keeping of orcas in captivity, then it would best achieve that purpose by ending the breeding of whales

You are now desperately trying to rationalize your position straight against what activists say themselves.

Activists want to end keeping animals in captivity by many means. Sometimes by freeing animals (they tried it with killer whales, which didn't integrate, at other times they freed farm animals to their death, which they proclaimed they 'died as free'). Otherwise by killing animals (some aquariums had their fish poisoned).

Not breeding killer whales is position of activists, not of killer whales themselves. By the whole concept of activists ideology, they (being humans, too) are not allowed to make decisions for killer whales.

Simply to say that breeding is natural and therefore it is inhumane to not allow breeding ignores the fact that animals in captivity are necessarily "deprived" of the "opportunity" of engaging in many forms of natural behavior.

Rights by definition are absolute and not exchangeable. You cannot say, that since animals are deprived of some rights, it is OK to deprive them additionally of their right to breed.

Activists also insists that 'right to freedom' means that human has no right to determine what animal should do. Then by definition, an activist himself has no right to determine whether individual killer whale should breed, or better not because of benefit of the species. Only the whale can. This is exactly the same logic which activists apply to not breeding animals although the species benefits from public education.

The whole concept of 'animal rights' is internally illogical, and that it why it will produce paradox every time it is applied.

Strictly speaking, every visitor to Sea World happens to be biologically an animal and a living, feeling creature. So an activist (being a human) cannot force him to anything, because humans cannot enforce their will on other animals. They are individual rights, and it is not for others to decide what others do with their rights.
 
The same argument could just as easily be made for your point-of-view. Where does the size doesn't matter argument end? Would you be happy to see a lion in a 30-foot long cage? What about 3-foot long? 3-inches? It’s a silly point for either side to make.

Actually, I agree that these judgements are usually based on personal biases, but I don't see how your viewpoint is any different. Perhaps more importantly, ignoring visitor perceptions on whether an animal's needs are met (regardless of whether they actually are) is more injurious to the future of zoos than any anti-orca campaign.

As for the postulation that second generation calves are indicators of good welfare, see my previous post.

Well this one can go round and round cant it?As for public perceptions of captive circumstances..well by and large they claim to want enormous enclosures and then moan when they cant see anything! By and large the captive record speaks for itself and in recent decades Killer Whales have done reasonably well in captivity,the whole Keiko episode proved that,for many people, principle comes before fact.The money wasted there could and should have been put to more productive conservational use..instead of forcing the animal to die.56 Killer Whales currently live in captivity...probably hundreds or more cetaceans have died at the hands of man whilst we are all arguing about them. SeaWorlds whales are a minor side issue to the main event but the fact remains that idiots such as PETA and others dont care about that as long as they get their way.In visiting over 700 zoos around the world over many years,I have only once ever observed the public getting as excited about animals as i do,and that was at the Shamu show(not that im a show fan at all).I believe also that SeaWorld failed palpably to harness that excitement... but thats a different story!
 
You are now desperately trying to rationalize your position straight against what activists say themselves.

Activists want to end keeping animals in captivity by many means. Sometimes by freeing animals (they tried it with killer whales, which didn't integrate, at other times they freed farm animals to their death, which they proclaimed they 'died as free'). Otherwise by killing animals (some aquariums had their fish poisoned).

Not breeding killer whales is position of activists, not of killer whales themselves. By the whole concept of activists ideology, they (being humans, too) are not allowed to make decisions for killer whales.



Rights by definition are absolute and not exchangeable. You cannot say, that since animals are deprived of some rights, it is OK to deprive them additionally of their right to breed.

Activists also insists that 'right to freedom' means that human has no right to determine what animal should do. Then by definition, an activist himself has no right to determine whether individual killer whale should breed, or better not because of benefit of the species. Only the whale can. This is exactly the same logic which activists apply to not breeding animals although the species benefits from public education.

The whole concept of 'animal rights' is internally illogical, and that it why it will produce paradox every time it is applied.

Strictly speaking, every visitor to Sea World happens to be biologically an animal and a living, feeling creature. So an activist (being a human) cannot force him to anything, because humans cannot enforce their will on other animals. They are individual rights, and it is not for others to decide what others do with their rights.

I do not dispute that many animal rights groups have espoused illogical positions and carried out cruel and counterproductive efforts based on poor, unfounded notions. The main point of my argument is simply that the "victory" some animal rights activists cite in the ending of Sea World's orca breeding is not inherently contradictory to an ultimate goal of ending the keeping of orcas in captivity.

Looking back over our disagreements here, I think I see where you're coming from: I believe (though by all means, let me know if I'm wrong) that your point is that if one approaches this from an animal rights position, then it's inherently contradictory for animal rights groups to see any victory in a program which may curtail a "right" of animals (in this case, you assert the right to breed). I respond in several ways: first, I think there is a problem necessarily ascribing this position to the animal rights movement as a whole as if it were some unified monolith. Different organizations (and different individuals belonging to those organizations) under the umbrella of "animals rights" or "anti-captivity" groups have very different agendas and different rationales for opposing Sea World's orca program.

Second, even if I were to ascribe to the rights-based approach you assert is common to all these organizations, your assertion that rights are "by definition absolute and not exchangeable" is problematic. If one were approaching this from a human rights perspective (and no, I'm not arguing that human rights and animal rights should be approached from the same perspective - that contrary to my position in every sense; I'm merely speaking for the sake of comparison), most (if not all) "rights" are far from absolute. I don't know that all animal rights activists would agree that these rights are absolute - most importantly, many would probably say that the key "right" is the right of these orcas to be free from captivity. In the sake of preserving that right for all orcas in the future, it might be necessary to curtail the "rights" of some animals already in captivity to protect those not yet born into captivity (and to prevent any others from being born into captivity). In this sense, I see your point that taking an absolute "animal rights" position carries with it inherent contradictions. However (again stressing that I do not agree with a "rights-based" approach to the issue of animals in captivity), I think there's a more nuanced way for people who oppose captivity to approach this issue (as I willing to bet not all of those in the animal rights movement take such an absolutist rights perspective): the ultimate "right" is the right of animals not to be held in captivity, and in service of this "right", it might be necessary to deprive some animals in captivity of the "right" to breed in order to avoid future animals from being deprived of the "right" to be free. Of course, many animal rights proponents are unsatisfied with Sea World's announcement because they want to see the whales "returned to the wild" or managed in "sea pens," (a point with which I vehemently disagree), but I think there is a principled position that one could take that would see this decision as the best possible way to insure the "rights" of orcas to be free are ultimately protected in the future. It's not too far from my own position: while I do not subscribe to the animal rights position, I believe that the needs of orcas are not being substantially served in the way they are currently managed in captivity and that the only way to ensure that all orcas needs be met is to phase out breeding (even if that necessarily means that the orcas still in captivity live out their lives in less-than-ideal situations, as the alternative is unfeasible and more damaging).

To hopefully end on a more positive note (I'm really not trying to be antagonistic in any way), I would end this by restating that I do see your point and agree that anyone adopting such a rigid, absolutist position on animal rights is taking an untenable position that will almost certainly be logically unsupportable. I'm (perhaps naively) simply taking the position that there may be a way for anti-captivity proponents to view Sea World's decision as positive that is not inherently illogical.
 
I've never understood the "where do you stop?" argument. Surely the answer is obvious: with species/exhibits where captivity doesn't demonstrably and negatively impact welfare. That's true regardless of your thoughts on captive cetaceans.

In the case of orcas, there clearly are (and certainly have been) health and longevity issues. Even you recognize that by citing age and dorsal fin erectness as welfare metrics, so I'm not sure how you've decided orcas have "prospered for generations". To again state what feels like the obvious, the mere act of surviving in captivity does not indicate good welfare and some species (including humans) kept in awful conditions will breed.

I feel the need to nitpick here,as the "obvious" answer you give is merely your personal answer. Citing dorsal fin erectness as a welfare metric is a very poor choice,as it indicates absolutely nothing of animal welfare,even anti-captivity "scientists" like Naomi Rose have said that in the past. Another interesting thing to take note of is a recent study done by the Oxford Journal of Mammalogy which indicates highly similar life-history parameters between Northern and Southern residents and SeaWorld whales. It's also worth noting that orca captivity is still relatively young. Only now would the first female animals brought into captivity be reaching average age (as seen with Lolita and Corky),and we are seeing males reach and begin to exceed average age (Tilikum,Ulises). Average age is a poor indicator in this case,however,as we all know the beginnings of a captive breeding program are often rife with failures. In about 20 years we should have a much more accurate idea of how orcas fare in captivity due to many individuals being able to reach average age in that time frame.
 
This argument is completely unreasonable. Activists believe that keeping Orcas is wrong. In fact, they believe it is deeply evil. So why on earth would they support continued captive breeding in order to preserve family groups? I am sure they are unhappy about the solitary endgame, but in their worldview it is necessary, the lesser of two evils.

If you want to disagree with them, then you need to do it from first principles. This particular point really doesn't contribute anything to the debate.

With all due respect, you're in China so I'm not really going to worry about whether you think my point contributes to the debate. The statement is still accurate and I believe it does contribute since they keep saying Sea World separates families blah blah blah and while allowing them to die off technically isn't separating families, it's allowing the numbers to dwindle down to one and then none and when it's down to just one or two, it's caused something the activists are against...solitary orca in captivity because they're social animals.

The parks have tried separating males from females in the past, in Florida at least, and mating still managed to happen. Birth control does not work 100% and females have still ended up pregnant. So I don't know how they plan to prevent all pregnancies. I've never been to Florida so I don't really know what the pool layout is like there, but I suppose in San Diego they can keep the males in the main show pool and the females in Close-Up since the gates between the pools would potentially allow for mating. That would require a LOT of monitoring of the females' estrus schedules, however and it's entirely possible something can throw off a schedule, just like it can in humans. Starting a cycle even one day later could result in a pregnancy for a whale.

I don't like that they've chosen to end the breeding program. I do think they should cut down on it, though.
 
I feel the need to nitpick here,as the "obvious" answer you give is merely your personal answer. Citing dorsal fin erectness as a welfare metric is a very poor choice,as it indicates absolutely nothing of animal welfare,even anti-captivity "scientists" like Naomi Rose have said that in the past. Another interesting thing to take note of is a recent study done by the Oxford Journal of Mammalogy which indicates highly similar life-history parameters between Northern and Southern residents and SeaWorld whales. It's also worth noting that orca captivity is still relatively young. Only now would the first female animals brought into captivity be reaching average age (as seen with Lolita and Corky),and we are seeing males reach and begin to exceed average age (Tilikum,Ulises). Average age is a poor indicator in this case,however,as we all know the beginnings of a captive breeding program are often rife with failures. In about 20 years we should have a much more accurate idea of how orcas fare in captivity due to many individuals being able to reach average age in that time frame.

In the interest of nitpicking, the article you cite is not a study done "by" the Oxford Journal of Mammalology; it's a study published within, and the first author of said study (the only one whose affiliation is available via the online journal) works for Sea World and Busch Gardens Reproductive Research Center. Moreover, even a brief search for other scholarly information reveals that the study's conclusions are not universally accepted.

I would agree that dorsal fin erect-ness is not in and of itself the best indication of fitness, but it's hard to argue that there is no correlation between whales being kept in captivity and the state of their dorsal fins.
 
azcheetah2 said:
With all due respect, you're in China so I'm not really going to worry about whether you think my point contributes to the debate.
What does this even mean?

Only Americans can have opinions? People in another country can't have opinions? Do you assume he is Chinese and that Chinese people can't have opinions? I am confuse.
 
I would agree that dorsal fin erect-ness is not in and of itself the best indication of fitness, but it's hard to argue that there is no correlation between whales being kept in captivity and the state of their dorsal fins.

I never said there wasn't a correlation,but probably the most accepted answer is that it is simply caused by gravity,for those wondering. While dorsal fin collapse does happen in the wild,it varies from population to population,with the New Zealand population having a rate of 23% of orcas with dorsal "deformity". Dr. Naomi Rose (iirc) has proposed that the reason for its prevalence in captive orcas is due to the amount of time the animal spends at the surface of the tank,and the surface tension puts pressure on their dorsal fins. Other past theories on dorsal collapse included "depression" or "diet" or "enclosed spaces",so at the very least this theory makes sense.
 
What does this even mean?

Only Americans can have opinions? People in another country can't have opinions? Do you assume he is Chinese and that Chinese people can't have opinions? I am confuse.

I'm gonna go with "subtle jab at China's animal welfare record".
 
I'm gonna go with "subtle jab at China's animal welfare record".

And if this *is* what azcheetah2 was aiming for, it was based on a somewhat hasty assumption as FunkyGibbon is a Brit :p
 
To hopefully end on a more positive note (I'm really not trying to be antagonistic in any way), I would end this by restating that I do see your point and agree that anyone adopting such a rigid, absolutist position on animal rights is taking an untenable position that will almost certainly be logically unsupportable. I'm (perhaps naively) simply taking the position that there may be a way for anti-captivity proponents to view Sea World's decision as positive that is not inherently illogical.

Very much in agreement with this.

I think there is a problem necessarily ascribing this position to the animal rights movement as a whole as if it were some unified monolith

I would extend this point further. The vast majority of people who watched Blackfish left with an anti-orcas-in-captivity stance (no need to go-over the arguments for the flawed documentary here). But they aren't pro-AR, they just think it is cruel. So most of Jurek's good points about paradoxes etc don't really apply to this group. And while it is clearly the activists who have driven the push against SeaWorld, it is the fact that there is broad public support for them that has given their arguments traction and actually created the pressure to force SeaWorld into stopping breeding.

With all due respect, you're in China so I'm not really going to worry about whether you think my point contributes to the debate.

I also do not understand this. What does my location have to do with anything? We aren't discussing this as a US specific matter, but rather as it affects the Zoo community as a whole (with the interesting subtext of exploring difference of opinion within ZooChat).

I'm gonna go with "subtle jab at China's animal welfare record".

Let's hope not, because that would fall somewhere between 'lazy ad hominem' and 'casual xenophobia'. The fact that I am not Chinese should really have nothing to do with it.

On an interesting sidenote, the number of Orcas in China is expected to rise from nine currently off show to more than 50 in the next ten years.
 
Well this one can go round and round cant it?As for public perceptions of captive circumstances..well by and large they claim to want enormous enclosures and then moan when they cant see anything! By and large the captive record speaks for itself and in recent decades Killer Whales have done reasonably well in captivity,the whole Keiko episode proved that,for many people, principle comes before fact.The money wasted there could and should have been put to more productive conservational use..instead of forcing the animal to die.56 Killer Whales currently live in captivity...probably hundreds or more cetaceans have died at the hands of man whilst we are all arguing about them. SeaWorlds whales are a minor side issue to the main event but the fact remains that idiots such as PETA and others dont care about that as long as they get their way.In visiting over 700 zoos around the world over many years,I have only once ever observed the public getting as excited about animals as i do,and that was at the Shamu show(not that im a show fan at all).I believe also that SeaWorld failed palpably to harness that excitement... but thats a different story!

We agree on most of this, but I think those conflicting and ill-informed opinions should be given more credence than you allow. If there's one thing this episode has proven, it's that public perceptions of animal welfare can have major ramifications for collection planning/management decisions, regardless of their veracity. We ignore that at our peril.

I'm not saying we should pander to ignorance, but we do need to meet visitor expectations. To my mind, that means reframing the eternal "visitor needs vs animal needs" debate. Within the "visitor needs" category, we have to consider not only factors such as animal activity and visibility, but also visitor perceptions about animal needs. If that means providing more space and disguising containment barriers, it's hardly the end of the world.

Likewise, if I complained at a museum or theme park, I'd be fairly miffed if the manager told me their galleries/rollercoasters were fantastic and I should "put up or shut up".

I feel the need to nitpick here,as the "obvious" answer you give is merely your personal answer. Citing dorsal fin erectness as a welfare metric is a very poor choice,as it indicates absolutely nothing of animal welfare,even anti-captivity "scientists" like Naomi Rose have said that in the past. Another interesting thing to take note of is a recent study done by the Oxford Journal of Mammalogy which indicates highly similar life-history parameters between Northern and Southern residents and SeaWorld whales. It's also worth noting that orca captivity is still relatively young. Only now would the first female animals brought into captivity be reaching average age (as seen with Lolita and Corky),and we are seeing males reach and begin to exceed average age (Tilikum,Ulises). Average age is a poor indicator in this case,however,as we all know the beginnings of a captive breeding program are often rife with failures. In about 20 years we should have a much more accurate idea of how orcas fare in captivity due to many individuals being able to reach average age in that time frame.

If all my post receives is nitpicking, then I'm happy ;)

Actually, you're misquoting me. I mentioned dorsal fin erectness as a welfare metric because Tim referred to it as such in his post. What I called "obvious" was this:

"I've never understood the "where do you stop?" argument. Surely the answer is obvious: with species/exhibits where captivity doesn't demonstrably and negatively impact welfare."

Granted that is my "personal answer", but nothing in your post suggests you disagree. I'd be interested to hear if you did, though. The main problem with it (at least in the context of this debate) is that demonstrating compromised welfare can be difficult. However, it has the benefit of moving us along from counterproductive arguments about how an inability to adequately care for one species means we must admit defeat on everything.

As for dorsal fin erectness, I won't repeat jibster but it concerns me that this sort of question has not and cannot be answered because of bias from both sides. I think you're setting the bar rather low if you'll be satisfied with an explanation simply because it's "plausible".

And to the point that average age is not an accurate measure: agreed (partially). Again, I questioned it because longevity was the metric given by Tim, who also argued that captive orcas have "prospered for generations". Given that statement, the poor record in the 60s and 70s was relevant, whereas it wouldn't have been if he'd only argued they were prospering now.

Having said that, too many SeaWorld apologists believe lifespan is irrelevant because it will improve in the future, but such complacency ignores a major issue. With Blue World cancelled, we'll unfortunately never know whether enclosures of that scope and complexity would have addressed it.

Incidentally, I found the latter half of Jurek's post fascinating.
 
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