The Star Malaysia

Captive belugas take first swim in open waters

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REYKJAVIK: Two beluga whales from a Shanghai aquarium have taken their first swim in open waters as part of their acclimatis­ation to an Icelandic sea sanctuary, conservati­onists.

Little White and Little Grey, two 13-year-old females, left the Changfeng Ocean World in June 2019 and were flown to Iceland’s Klettsvik Bay in the Westman Islands in specially tailored containers.

More than a year later, in August, they were moved from their landbased facility to care pools in the sea at Klettsvik Bay, the first time they had been in the sea since they were taken from a Russian research centre in 2011.

On Monday, the conservati­on charity Sea Life Trust said the belugas had been “released for the first time to fully explore the natural surroundin­gs” of the wider sea sanctuary at Klettsvik Bay.

The sanctuary is a 32,000sq m sea pen that will become their home.

After having been cared for by humans for so many years, it is unlikely the belugas would survive in the wild.

“We are introducin­g them gradually to the bay in little steps, but seeing them swim together and deep dive amongst the flora and fauna of the wider bay for the first time was amazing to witness and gave us a real sense that Little Grey and Little White are enjoying being back in the sea,” Sea Life Trust head Andy Bool said.

The belugas will continue to explore the wider area of the sanctuary while returning to the care pools as their health and well-being are monitored on a daily basis “over a short period of time”, the charity said.

The whales each weigh 900kg and measure four metres.

Originally from Russian Arctic waters, it is thought they were two or three years old when captured.

Belugas typically live for 40 to 60 years.

Klettsvik is also where Keiko, the killer whale from the 1993 film Free Willy, was flown in 1998.

The orca was fully released in 2002 but did not manage to adapt to life in the wild and died 18 months later in a Norwegian fjord.

 ?? — AFP ?? Home in the wild: The Sea Life Trust team watching Little Grey and Little White swimming in their bayside care pool in Klettsvik Bay in Iceland.
— AFP Home in the wild: The Sea Life Trust team watching Little Grey and Little White swimming in their bayside care pool in Klettsvik Bay in Iceland.

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