Bill to ban captivity of whales ‘wrong’
Vancouver Aquarium says marine parks are vital to understanding animals
VANCOUVER— Legislation to end the captivity of whales and dolphins would rob Canadians of vital research meant to defend such animals in the wild, says Vancouver Aquarium’s chief executive.
John Nightingale said Liberal Sen. Wilfred Moore’s plan to introduce a bill to ban cetaceans in marine parks is misguided because aquariums are essential to understanding the creatures and protecting them from climate change and pollution.
“I think the idea that animals ought to live free in nature is absolutely a natural human emotion, but we believe that is wrong,” Nightingale said Friday.
“I am fond of saying I wish we lived in a world where we didn’t need places like Vancouver Aquarium, but nature isn’t free. Humans are having a bigger and bigger impact . . . and we need to do a better job of reducing our impact.”
The aquarium is currently undergoing a $100-million expansion including larger whale and dolphin tanks. But it has faced shifting tides of public and political opinion since the release of Blackfish, a 2013 documentary about the marine park industry. Two Vancouver Aquarium-owned cetaceans have died this year — Hana, a dolphin who suffered a gastrointestinal disease last month, and Nanuq, a beluga who died of a broken jaw in February while on a long-term loan to Orlando SeaWorld.
Nightingale said both deaths were natural and there is “no evidence” to suggest cetaceans in captivity are any less healthy or active than those in the wild.
Moore told a news conference Thursday that keeping animals that live in large pods in the wild cooped up for entertainment is unjustifiably cruel and disturbing.
His bill would ban captive breeding, imports, exports and live captures of all whales, dolphins and porpoises in Canada, while allowing for the rescue of injured creatures.
Jeffrey Ventre, a former SeaWorld trainer who appeared in Blackfish, said all marine parks portray themselves as conservation entities contributing to science and education.
“It’s mostly a façade,” he said. “There might be a small educational component, but it’s not borne out in the peer-reviewed literature. There’s no scientific basis for that claim.
“SeaWorld alone is a multibilliondollar corporation. It’s in the interests of these companies to perpetuate captivity.”
Nanuq’s death means Vancouver’s aquarium now has two belugas, and six are on loan to various SeaWorld facilities in the United States.