After yesterday's post about Common Bottlenose Dolphins, I'll finish off cetaceans in one swoop with today's post. I know that it's been a little wobbly in terms of taxonomic consistency this week in a couple of moments, but I figure I've been pounding out these daily posts for 7 months now and I'm due a little grace.
One big surprise is that when I leave for my August 1st to August 23rd
Snowleopard Road Trip, I won't be alone. I wasn't even planning to embark on a zoo trek this summer, but
@twilighter (
Konstantin Yordanov) came up with the idea and asked me a few months ago. He's a Bulgarian zoo nerd living in Norway and we met up in Sweden in 2022 to visit a couple of zoos together. Konstantin and I have stayed in touch ever since and via hundreds of WhatsApp messages and at least a half-dozen 'Zoom' meetings we've planned out our big trip. Other than the first day (when I'm by myself visiting some small zoos) and the last day (when Konstantin will be by himself), the middle 21 days we are together the entire time. We will likely also meet a couple of other zoo nerds for visits along the way. All the nights in motels will be a 50% savings for each of us due to teaming up on this trip. Plus, we get along really well and both of us are major zoo nerds, huge movie buffs, and also massive soccer/football fans. We are going to have a blast!
Now back to cetaceans...and for the benefit of the 'taxonomic police':
From the family
Monodontidae, I've seen
Beluga Whales at
7 zoos.
From the family
Delphinidae, I've seen
Common Bottlenose Dolphins at
13 zoos,
Killer Whales at
3 zoos,
Pacific White-sided Dolphins at
3 zoos,
Commerson's Dolphins at
1 zoo, a
False Killer Whale at
1 zoo and
Short-finned Pilot Whales at
1 zoo.
From the family
Iniidae, I've seen an
Amazon River Dolphin at
1 zoo.
From the family
Phocoenindae, I've seen
Harbour Porpoises at
3 zoos.
Cetaceans: 9 species
Common Bottlenose Dolphin –
13 zoos
Beluga Whale –
7 zoos
Harbour Porpoise –
3 zoos
Killer Whale –
3 zoos
Pacific White-sided Dolphin –
3 zoos
Amazon River Dolphin –
1 zoo
Commerson’s Dolphin –
1 zoo
False Killer Whale –
1 zoo
Short-finned Pilot Whale –
1 zoo
I've seen
Beluga Whales at
7 zoos:
1- Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) – Beluga Whale – 1986
2- Point Defiance Zoo (USA) – Beluga Whale – 2005
3- SeaWorld San Diego (USA) – Beluga Whale – 2006
4- Shedd Aquarium (USA) – Beluga Whale – 2008
5- Georgia Aquarium (USA) – Beluga Whale – 2008
6- Mystic Aquarium (USA) – Beluga Whale – 2012
7- SeaWorld San Antonio (USA) – Beluga Whale – 2015
Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) is a facility that has had a lot of cetaceans over the decades. In fact, 6 out of my 9 cetacean species have been held here at one time or another. At one point there was a total of 5 Beluga Whales in the same pool, which is now home to Steller Sea Lions. Even up until the mysterious deaths of the last Belugas in 2016, the aquarium had plans for a large-scale
Arctic complex that would be 2.5 times larger than the existing whale pool, but it all crashed down into nothing and now the aquarium will never again showcase cetaceans to the public.
The very first time I ever visited
Point Defiance Zoo (USA) I saw Beluga Whales, but they didn't last much longer as this exhibit has been home to Harbour Seals and California Sea Lions ever since.
You can see a Beluga Whale in this photo from
SeaWorld San Diego (USA), in the heavily themed
Wild Arctic complex. That's a lot of fake snow and ice!
@DelacoursLangur
The Beluga Whale pool at
Shedd Aquarium (USA) is entirely indoors within the bowels of the vast
Oceanarium. The facility has done well with Belugas over the years and there's been a recent birth, but is the exhibit really large enough for the pod? I'm not sure that it is.
Georgia Aquarium (USA) also has an all-indoor Beluga Whale exhibit and both Shedd and Georgia are hugely popular aquariums that each receive approximately 2 million annual visitors. The whales are a big draw and at Georgia they can be seen in the
Coldwater Quest zone and also via the
Oceans Ballroom area.
@geomorph
My favourite Beluga Whale exhibit is the one at
Mystic Aquarium (USA), with a 750,000-gallon pool, a cave viewing area, a green backdrop and a long series of underwater viewing windows (just out of sight of my photo).
Contrast the naturalistic appearance at Mystic with my image of the Beluga Whale exhibit at
SeaWorld San Antonio (USA). The glitz and glamour of SeaWorld!
I've seen
Harbour Porpoises at
3 zoos:
1- Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) – Harbour Porpoise – 2011
2- Dolfinarium Harderwijk (Netherlands) – Harbour Porpoise – 2019
3- Fjord & Baelt (Denmark) – Harbour Porpoise – 2022
From 2008 to 2017,
Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) had (at times) the only Harbour Porpoise on display in a North American facility, although for years it was only a behind-the-scenes animal. 'Daisy' was a rescued porpoise who was often kept alone, but did spend some time in with the Beluga Whales and that was always interesting to see. 'Jack' was another Harbor Porpoise at the Vancouver Aquarium and he lived there from 2011 to 2016.
I saw a Harbour Porpoise at
Dolfinarium Harderwijk (Netherlands) in a quiet area of the park. It's interesting to note the line of rocks on the cement pull-out area.
My third time seeing Harbour Porpoises was at
Fjord & Baelt (Denmark), a facility that has done a lot of research with the species.
I've seen
Killer Whales at
3 zoos:
1- Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) – Killer Whale – 1986
2- SeaWorld San Diego (USA) – Killer Whale – 2006
3- SeaWorld San Antonio (USA) – Killer Whale – 2015
Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) had Killer Whales in a tank that would be cringeworthy today and for years that same bucket of water has held a few Harbour Seals and that's it. Back in 1986 when I first visited the aquarium as an 11 year-old, seeing the Killer Whales leap out of the water was a fantastic experience. I was awestruck by the size of the animals. Now, as an adult, of course my perspective has shifted and I cannot imagine just how stressed those huge, powerful mammals were swimming around and around in that tiny cement tank for years.
* I found this image via Google (it's an old postcard)
Even the huge
SeaWorld San Diego (USA) Killer Whale tank is nowhere near large enough to accommodate the needs of these magnificent creatures.
@geomorph
SeaWorld San Antonio (USA) also has a large tank and has held Killer Whales for years. I recall sagging dorsal fins on some of the whales I've seen in captivity, illustrated in this photo.
@Megakillerwhale
I've seen
Pacific White-sided Dolphins at
3 zoos:
1- Shedd Aquarium (USA) - Pacific White-sided Dolphin - 2008
2- Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) - Pacific White-sided Dolphin - 2011
3- SeaWorld San Antonio (USA) - Pacific White-sided Dolphin - 2015
Shedd Aquarium (USA) has had Pacific White-sided Dolphins for years and here's a superb shot of two of them:
@Moebelle
Pacific White-sided Dolphins taking part in a show at
Vancouver Aquarium (Canada):
More diving Pacific White-sided Dolphins, this time at
SeaWorld San Antonio (USA):
@Elephantlover
I have seen 4 cetaceans just once each, at 4 different facilities. None is more memorable and iconic as 'Baby', an
Amazon River Dolphin that lived at
Duisburg Zoo (Germany) from 1975 to late 2020. It was a wonderful visit for me in 2019, sitting on a bench and marveling at a species that I will probably never see again.
@Noodles
Here is my solitary image of two
Commerson's Dolphins, swimming upside down inside their tank in the
Journey to Atlantis section of
SeaWorld San Diego (USA) in 2006. There is something remarkable about seeing mammals with black-and-white markings, whether it is zebras, these dolphins, skunks, Malayan Tapirs or Giant Pandas. Really cool.
Vancouver Aquarium (Canada) had a False Killer Whale named 'Chester' from 2014 to 2017 and he was a joy to watch. Unfortunately, between 2016 and 2017 the aquarium had a horrible run of luck that saw the deaths of the remaining False Killer Whale, Harbour Porpoise and Beluga Whales.
@bubblywums
SeaWorld San Diego (USA) has had trained
Short-finned Pilot Whales for probably 20 years. Seeing them dive out of the water during shows is quite stunning, although I'm not so sure that many zoo nerds would approve of this sort of 'trick' behaviour:
@Moebelle
Non-primate or carnivore mammals:
Asian Elephant -
61 zoos
Giant Anteater -
57 zoos
African Elephant -
53 zoos
Tree Kangaroos -
33 zoos (2 species: 24 zoos with Matschie's, 9 Goodfellow's)
Virginia Opossum -
26 zoos
Koala -
25 zoos
Short-beaked Echidna -
22 zoos
Tamandua -
21 zoos
Wombats -
18 zoos (2 species: Common, Southern Hairy-nosed)
Aardvark -
15 zoos
Common Bottlenose Dolphin -
13 zoos
Tasmanian Devil -
10 zoos
Beluga Whale -
7 zoos
Platypus -
5 zoos
Cuscuses -
4 zoos (3 species: 2 zoos with Spotted, 1 Ground, 1 Sulawesi Bear)
Harbour Porpoise -
3 zoos
Killer Whale -
3 zoos
Pacific White-sided Dolphin -
3 zoos
Gray Short-tailed Opossum -
2 zoos
Murine Mouse Opossum -
2 zoos
Amazon River Dolphin -
1 zoo
Commerson's Dolphin -
1 zoo
Common Brushtail Possum -
1 zoo
Common Ringtail Possum -
1 zoo
False Killer Whale -
1 zoo
Peruvian Dwarf Opossum -
1 zoo
Short-finned Pilot Whale -
1 zoo
Striped Possum -
1 zoo
* On the top of page 60, I have my final lists for
Carnivora (130 species) and
Primates (141 species) = 271 species at the 551 different zoos/aquariums I've visited.