Otago Daily Times

Marine parks fuel murky cetacean trade

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EIGHT beluga whales jump in unison out of a bright blue indoor pool, flipping their tailfins and spewing fountains of water, as a packed audience cheers and snaps photograph­s.

Whale shows like the one at Chimelong Ocean Kingdom, in Zhuhai, on China’s southern coast, are proliferat­ing at new marine parks across the country, driving demand for threatened species, scientists, executives and activists say.

Orcas and beluga whales are among the marine animals caught up in a shadowy trade in which individual cetaceans, often caught illegally, sell for millions of dollars, they say.

Marine parks and aquariums are opening monthly in China and more than 36 largescale projects are set to launch in the coming two years. This comes as many live animal shows in the United States and Europe are being scrapped due to widespread opposition.

‘‘We’ve had great progress in shutting down marine parks in the West but China is saying, ‘it’s my turn now’,’’ said Ric O’Barry, founder of advocacy group the Dolphin Project.

Lured by booming domestic tourism, companies such as Haichang Ocean Park, Guangzhou R&F Properties, Dalian Shengya and Chimelong Group are spearheadi­ng the rapid growth of the industry.

Haichang’s Shanghai

Ocean World, which is due to open in November, and Chimelong’s Ocean Kingdom are preparing live orca shows for the first time in China.

O’Barry, who captured and trained dolphins and orcas before launching a campaign against captive marine mammals in 1970, said China was the main driver of the industry globally.

More than 60 marine parks already operate in China, ranging from largescale developmen­ts such as Chimelong’s Ocean Kingdom to small facilities that are typically addons to big property projects, industry executives say.

Chimelong, Haichang, Dalian Shengya, Zhonghong Group and Rizhao Ocean Park did not respond to repeated requests for comment. R&F said its planned resort would only include wild captured cetaceans if they had been rescued, or came from reputable zoos and aquariums.

Cities often initiate marine park projects as an eyecatchin­g way of raising their profiles, and offer developers vast tracts of land and cheap loans to build them.

Noble Coker, president of Apex Parks and Entertainm­ent Services, which works with theme parks in Asia, said marine facilities were often a secondary considerat­ion in an overall deal to acquire land from municipal government­s.

Developers benefited from the quick developmen­t and sale of residentia­l or commercial property, he said, and elements like marine parks were typically paid for by the property sales.

‘‘All of the incentives for the developers are in the short term, so the 20year moral and ethical impacts of the park or aquarium they are building are rarely, if ever, considered,’’ Coker said.

Illegal captures

Since 2014, 872 cetaceans — which include whales, dolphins and porpoises — have been put into captivity in China, according to the China Cetacean Associatio­n.

There are at present no local government regulation­s or internatio­nal standards to monitor the trade, said Lucio Conti, vicepresid­ent for marine facilities at Atlantis Sanya, a resort in China’s tropical Hainan province.

Conti said Atlantis was working with the government to establish an animal welfare standard at a time when there was growing illegal trade of endangered wildlife.

‘‘If you go to the fishermen here on the island, they can get you whatever you want. They can get you a whale shark, they can get you every species, endangered or not, because there is no such control.’’

China’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism referred a request for comment to the State Forestry and Grassland Administra­tion, which is in charge of wildlife issues.

The administra­tion referred questions to the State Oceanic Administra­tion, which in turn referred questions to the Ministry of Natural Resources. That ministry referred questions to the Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Ministry, which did not respond to a request for comment.

Many Chinese marine parks feature whale sharks, belugas, dolphins and manta rays. But no orcas — or killer whales, known for their distinctiv­e black and white colouring — have been displayed publicly up to now.

At least 13 Russian orcas were imported to China between 2013 and 2016, according to Cites, the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species. Another two were sent in 2017 and more were to be imported this year, Oxana Fedorova, head of Dolphin Project Russia, said.

Cites did not reveal the companies involved.

WHALE WATCHING A wave of Chinese marine parks is fuelling a murky trade in cetaceans, writes

Farah Master, of Reuters, from Hong Kong. ❛We’ve had great progress in shutting down marine parks in the West but China is saying, ‘it’s my turn

now’

Whale and Dolphin Conservati­on, a UKbased group, said Chimelong Ocean Kingdom had nine orcas, Shanghai Haichang Polar Ocean World had four and two more were at Wuxi Changqiao Ocean Kingdom.

Russia, which is the sole supplier of wild orcas and beluga whales to China, in July announced an investigat­ion into the illegal sale of seven killer whales.

Four companies were involved in the sale of the orcas to China, a statement from the Russian Prosecutor­general’s Office said. It did not name the companies or the destinatio­n of the orcas.

Russia approved a capture quota for 13 orcas in 2018.

Several killer whales have already been caught in Russia’s Sea of Okhotsk, activists monitoring the hunt in August said.

‘‘The problem is the demand that is being created in China,’’ said Fedorova, who worked with the team, organised by Ocean Friends. She said the team of seven had been threatened, shot at and robbed by the hunters.

The activists said they were unable to record the captures on film because their drone was shot down. However, a photograph from Ocean Friends showed transporta­tion tanks on a

Russian ship called Jurii Shvezov holding two orcas. A representa­tive from Kupets, the company that owns the ship, said it was engaged in the transporta­tion of orcas and did not catch them. She declined to comment further.

Replacemen­t cycle

Naomi Rose, a Washington based marine mammal scientist at the Animal Welfare Institute, said the captures were unsustaina­ble and inhumane.

The prospect of high profits would continue to attract a criminal element, she said.

‘‘When you have that much money involved — where an animal is worth several million dollars — you are going to have crime and danger.’’

In captivity, the rate of mortality was extremely high, activists said. This forced companies to continuall­y repurchase marine animals.

‘‘They just suffer in captivity. Especially for orcas; they are the most unsuitable to be put in a tank. Their culture is in the wild,’’ said Taison Chang, chairman of the Hong Kong Dolphin Conservati­on Society.

Squalid conditions and poor welfare practices are growing concerns amid the increasing flood of marine parks.

In June, for example, an online video showed a trainer from Ocean World in China’s port city of Dalian applying bright red lipstick on a beluga whale. The company later apologised and promised to strengthen the animal protection­s, local media said.

Activists worry that once China’s biggest players start orca performanc­es, it will spawn a copycat effect at smaller, less experience­d parks around the country.

A customer watching the beluga show at Ocean Kingdom with his wife and son said he had not realised belugas were endangered and he had enjoyed the show.

‘‘It’s not cruel for them,’’ he said. ‘‘They feed them and didn’t beat them.’’

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Outside, inside . . . Trainers and belugas after a show at the Beluga Theatre in Chimelong Ocean Kingdom, Zhuhai.
PHOTO: REUTERS Outside, inside . . . Trainers and belugas after a show at the Beluga Theatre in Chimelong Ocean Kingdom, Zhuhai.
 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Fishbowl . . . A constructi­on site at Haichang Ocean Park, Shanghai.
PHOTO: REUTERS Fishbowl . . . A constructi­on site at Haichang Ocean Park, Shanghai.

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