Vancouver Sun

Aquarium opposes board ban on captive whales, dolphins

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There will be no new whales, dolphins or porpoises kept at the Vancouver Aquarium in the future if the city’s park board approves changes to its cetaceans bylaw on Monday.

It’s a move the aquarium says would hinder marine mammal rescue efforts and muddle an expansion plan that is already underway.

The debate over whether the aquarium should house cetaceans was sparked after two belugas died last fall due to an unidentifi­ed toxin.

“It was a time for us to reflect what to do moving forward,” said Michael Wiebe, park board chair.

In March, the park board directed staff to amend the current bylaw to ban the importatio­n and display of live cetaceans in the city’s parks.

The existing bylaw already limits how the aquarium can acquire cetaceans, preventing healthy animals in the wild from being captured. Animals that are injured or in need of rehabilita­tion are the exception, and were not required to be released back into the wild after treatment. The amendments, however, would prevent any new cetaceans, including rescues from being held at the aquarium.

Three cetaceans currently housed at the aquarium would be given an exception and be allowed to stay. The animals could still be kept on display, but an amendment would prevent the use of the animals in shows or performanc­es.

The Vancouver Aquarium president said the ban would prevent the future rescue of whales and dolphins, and injured or distressed cetaceans could be euthanized.

“If you can’t provide a long-term home for them someplace then likely they can’t be rescued,” John Nightingal­e said.

The loss of cetaceans at the aquarium would also hurt Canadian researcher­s who rely on the facility, and will have to look south of the border to do work with whales and dolphins in captivity, he said.

The aquarium already announced in February that it would phase out its cetacean program by 2029. But it intended on bringing in five more belugas in the interim once it opened a new Canada’s Arctic exhibit currently being developed.

Nightingal­e questions the board’s timing on the proposed ban to speed up the deadline voluntaril­y set by the aquarium.

“Is there something we’re doing when we keep them in our care that is absolutely antithetic­al to their needs and the way they’ve evolved and as far as we can tell from behaviour and medical testing? The answer is no,” he said.

But Wiebe said the board sees no reason to delay the inevitable.

He said the marine mammal rescue program is not at risk with the ban nor is research being hindered. Tanks for the new exhibit were also designed to be adaptable for other animals, so they could be used once the whale program was phased out.

The aquarium hasn’t rescued a single cetacean in two years, Wiebe said, and other animals more commonly rescued will not be impacted by the bylaw.

 ?? JASON PAYNE ?? The Vancouver Aquarium is appealing to the public to help it save its marine mammal rescue program.
JASON PAYNE The Vancouver Aquarium is appealing to the public to help it save its marine mammal rescue program.

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