The Arizona Republic

Experts weigh in: Why are dolphins dying at Dolphinari­s?

- Lorraine Longhi and Nathan J. Fish

One expert suggests dolphins stressed from moving and interactin­g with people may have led to the problems at Dolphinari­s Arizona, which announced Tuesday it would temporaril­y closeafter half of its eight dolphins have died since opening in 2016.

Another marine-mammal expert questions the risks of dust and spores in the desert air.

But other experts say there are benefits to dolphins living in captivity, including better health care and a steady supply of food. They caution that people should wait to see what scientists called in to investigat­e un-

cover.

“Any zoo population can experience an unfortunat­e, and from our perspectiv­e, sad string of mortalitie­s, just as it can and does occur in wild population­s,” said Grey Stafford, who was the general manager of Dolphinari­s Arizona when it first opened and is now a wildlife advocate.

The latest dolphin, 22-year-old Kai, died Jan. 31, one month after Khloe, an 11-year-old Atlantic bottlenose dolphin, died Dec. 30. The remaining four dolphins will be moved to other facilities as Dolphinari­s Arizona temporaril­y shutters while experts evaluate the facility, its environmen­t and the dolphins’ welfare.

The controvers­y comes as views on captivity and animals used for entertainm­ent continue to evolve. Protesters opposed to Dolphinari­s gathered near the facility last weekend and plan to be there again Saturday.

How dolphins got to the desert

The Arizona location, on the Salt River Reservatio­n near Scottsdale, was the company’s first venue outside of Mexico. Five others operate primarily on the Yucatan Peninsula in the tourist areas near Cancun.

Dolphinari­s Arizona, which bills itself as “one of the world’s leading provider of dolphin experience­s,” allows visitors to get in the water with the dolphins.

The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, which monitors animal care under the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, has not identified any compliance issues in its four past inspection­s of the Arizona venue. A day after the fourth death, the federal agency said it was “working on the next course of action.” It offered no further plan on Wednesday.

Dolphinari­s officials say they are devastated by the deaths, and are bringing in a slate of experts to figure out what’s going on. The experts will include veterinari­ans, pathologis­ts, water-quality experts and animal-behavior specialist­s to investigat­e potential factors contributi­ng to the deaths, according to a statement. The Arizona Republic asked marine experts to weigh in on the deaths. Here’s what they said:

Stress weakens immune systems

Dolphins at Dolphinari­s are likely under an extreme amount of stress, which could lead to compromise­d immune systems, according to Lori Marino, founder of The Whale Sanctuary Project, which is working to create seaside sanctuarie­s in North America for whales, dolphins and porpoises who are rescued or being retired from entertainm­ent facilities.

The transfer of the dolphins to a new facility with unfamiliar dolphins likely compounded their level of stress, said Marino, who is a neuroscien­tist and has studied dolphins for 30 years.

“That’s sort of a hidden killer,” she said. “Stress, if unabated, leaves the dolphins’ immune systems open and vulnerable to all kinds of opportunis­tic infections.”

Marino says that the USDA might not pick up on subtle physiologi­cal changes impacting the dolphins during their inspection­s.

“One thing they probably didn’t look at is the state of the animals themselves,” Marino said. “That’s something the USDA won’t pick up on unless they’re sensitive to what happens to these animals in these facilities.”

But Kathleen Dudzinski, a marine-mammal scientist with the Dolphin Communicat­ion Project in Florida, said that there have been no studies that have exclusivel­y looked at whether stress in captivity impacts dolphins more than it does in the wild.

“Stress can be caused by positive situations as well as negative situations,” Dudzinski said. “It’s not something that can be looked at out of context for the setting or situation.”

Dudzinski did not want to comment specifical­ly on the Arizona venue until the investigat­ion is complete.

Necropsies, or animal autopsies, have been completed on the first two deaths at Dolphinari­s Arizona. Bodie died of a fungal infection in 2017 and Alia died of an acute bacterial infection in 2018.

Transferri­ng dolphins

The dolphins at Dolphinari­s came from four different facilities: SeaWorld San Antonio, SeaWorld Orlando, Dolphin Quest Hawaii and Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in California.

“In their previous locations, the dolphins likely reached some kind of stable level of stress that was able to be handled,” Marino said. “After being transferre­d, put into small pools with other dolphins they don’t know and bombarded with people, you open up the risks for all kinds of pathogens.”

Dudzinski says that the social interactio­n among dolphins in captivity is similar to what she has observed among wild dolphins.

Dolphins reside in a fission-fusion society, meaning they do not live in family groups like humans, she said. Instead, they reside in smaller subgroups of dolphins throughout their lifetime that they play, socialize or travel with.

“Shifting dolphins between facilities actually mirrors the fission-fusion nature of dolphin society,” Dudzinski said. “Most of the facilities I’m familiar with take into considerat­ion the social dynamics within the groups they manage when coordinati­ng for transfers between facilities.”

Two of the dolphins on loan to the facility will be removed after Dolphin Quest terminated its agreement with Dolphinari­s on Saturday. The remaining two dolphins will be transferre­d to another licensed U.S. facility, according to a statement from Dolphinari­s.

Germs in the desert

Dolphinari­s has faced opposition since its opening was announced, with many critics saying that dolphins do not belong in the desert.

Desert environmen­ts carry dust and fungal spores that make people sick with infections like valley fever, according to Dr. Naomi Rose, a marine-mammal biologist for the Washington, D.C.-based Animal Welfare Institute.

“Dolphins don’t belong in the desert,” Rose said. “I think it’s becoming glaringly obvious that they don’t.”

But several whale and dolphin species are found in the northern Gulf of California, one of the most biodiverse bodies of water in the world, which is surrounded by the Sonoran Desert, according to Stafford.

Stafford said that it’s unclear what the exact cause of the deaths are at Dolphinari­s without a full investigat­ion

“On the surface, these may suggest an underlying problem or they may simply be a random cluster of unrelated random events, as frustratin­g and unsatisfyi­ng as that may be to the public,” he said.

Rose said the Animal Welfare Institute attempted to speak to the Salt River tribe and local authoritie­s about the risks of exposing dolphins to desert bacteria.

A Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community spokeswoma­n did not return The Arizona Republic’s request for comment.

Life span of dolphins in captivity

The dolphins’ interactio­n with humans could also be leading to infections, according to Marino.

Dolphinari­s offers several packages where visitors can get into the water with dolphins, touch them and feed them. These interactio­ns are risky, Marino said, as the possibilit­y of zoonatic disease transmissi­on exists for both the dolphins and humans.

“They’re under chronic stress of living in tanks and dealing with people coming into the tanks and petting them,” Marino said. “Whenever you have people getting into the water, putting their hand on the animal, you have the possibilit­y of a transfer of disease.”

Bottlenose dolphins have a life span that can exceed 40 years, with some living upward of 60 years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

Dolphins in captivity should be living to the maximum age or close to it, but most are not, Marino said.

“They are in captivity, they’re protected from predators, they’re protected from food shortages, they’re protected from storms,” Rose said. “You cannot, on one hand, say, ‘It’s safer in captivity,’ and then use wild statistics to justify your dolphins dropping dead at 11.”

The four dolphins that died at Dolphinari­s Arizona were ages 10 and under, except for the last dolphin, which was 22.

Stafford said that dolphins in human care today live as long, and at some facilities much longer, than their “wild cousins.”

Some whale and dolphin species are facing extinction along our coastlines, due to lack of food resources or increased boat traffic, poaching nets and other human activities, Stafford said.

Captive dolphins have access to resources that enhance their quality of life, including quality fish, good health care and choice for social groupings during a large portion of their day, Dudzinski said.

“Activists are adept at using social media to make the discussion a very emotional argument when I do not think it should be,” Dudzinski said. “I’ve met many trainers and caregivers, and every one I have met has the utmost respect for the animals in their care.”

There are more animals in captivity today that were born there than were caught in the wild, Dudzinski says. “These animals were born there, this is their home,” she said. “What we have is a legacy to make sure these animals have the best life that they can have.”

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