Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Sea World: Baby dolphin born in front of theme park visitors

- By Dewayne Bevil dbevil@ orlandosen­tinel.com

Sea World Orlando visitors can now spy the baby dolphin born at the theme park last week. Actually, visitors literally have been there since the beginning of the calf’s life. First-time mother Bree gave birth in the Dolphin Nursery attraction with guests watching.

Bree birthed her offspring midafterno­on on Sept. 29. There were no complicati­ons, Jon Peterson, vice president of zoological operations, said Tuesday.

“If you’ve never seen a dolphin birth, it could look like drama,” Peterson said. “You’ve got her swimming. She’s got flukes and tails hanging out, and she’ll make a hard turn and flip. That’s a very natural birthing move.”

Sea World’s education staff was on hand at the birthing to explain to visitors.

“For an everyday guest that comes into our park … to see a birth and get to hear about it, watch the excitement and see it take its first breath? I think that’s one of the coolest things you can ever do,” Peterson said.

The newborn, who has yet been given a name yet, and her mother are under 24-hour surveillan­ce for a few more weeks. Observers are monitoring for good nursing, weight gain and eating habits, Peterson said, along with making sure the other dolphins are getting along with the addition.

“It’s really no different than if you brought a new baby home and you already have a couple of children,” he said.

There are seven dolphins in the nursery, which was remodeled a few years ago to give park guests better views of the dolphins. SeaWorld Orlando is home to 47 dolphins.

Technicall­y, it’s SeaWorld’s second dolphin birth of the coronaviru­s pandemic era. The first occurred two days after the theme park closed to the public in March. That calf is named Spark.

“Spark would have been the first baby ever seen by our guests, but, unfortunat­ely, COVID sort of threw a wrench in that,” Peterson said.

Spark lives in the same pool with the newborn, who as a 1-week-old weighs 36 pounds and is about 4 feet long. Eventually, she’ll be about 500 pounds and about 7 feet long.

“Her mom’s a big mom, so I’d expect her to be on the bigger side, geneticall­y,” Peterson said. “Everything we’re seeing right now is right on the marks to the milestones we expect.”

 ?? WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? A newborn dolphin born to first-time mother Bree swims in the Dolphin Nursery pool at SeaWorld on Tuesday.
WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL A newborn dolphin born to first-time mother Bree swims in the Dolphin Nursery pool at SeaWorld on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States