Arab Times

Aquarium requests to resume study:

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Officials at Mystic Aquarium are asking that they be allowed to resume research on four beluga whales, which was halted following the death of the fifth whale imported this spring from Canada.

The request is part of a three-page report made public Monday by the National Marine Fisheries Service detailing the Aug 6 death of a male whale known as Havok.

The report was posted at the same time the aquarium issued a public statement that a female whale named Jetta, reported to be gravely ill last week, is improving and being watched closely.

“While it is too early to be optimistic, there have been incrementa­l improvemen­ts in the whale’s white blood count, overall gastric health, appetite, and stabilizat­ion of her weight,” said Stephen Coan, the aquarium’s president and chief executive officer. “We are by no means out of the woods and we have a long way to go before we can say there has been a significan­t recovery.”

Coan said the aquarium has flown in experts from around the country to assist in the treatment of Jetta.

It is not yet known if Jetta’s condition is related to those that caused the death of Havok, who was found, Coan said, to have gastric ulcers and other pre-existing problems, including a deformed heart. A cause of death has not been determined.

“As this was an isolated health event and in no way related to the research being conducted, we respectful­ly ask for permission to resume research sampling on the other animals listed on the permit to accomplish our important research goals,” Mystic said in its report to NMFS, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

Jetta and Havok were a mong five whales imported in May from Marineland in Niagara Falls, Ontario to Mystic, which specialize­s in beluga research. The aquarium plans to study them and use blood, saliva and other biological samples to help it better understand the health of whales in the wild.

The aquarium said in its report that Havok’s death was not caused by that research.

“This case was an unpredicta­ble health issue in an animal that had been cleared by qualified veterinari­ans in Canada to transport,” the aquarium said in its report, which was submitted to NOAA on Aug 17, before Jetta was found to be ill. “We have, and will continue to, ensure that medical conditions in one whale do not pose risk to the others. This case has no impact on the health of our other animals.”

NOAA spokespers­on Kate Brogan said the agency is working closely with the federal Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to review Mystic’s report.

Connecticu­t-based Friends of Animals and other activists unsuccessf­ully sought to block the transport of the whales in a lawsuit last fall.

Steven Hernick, an attorney for Friends of Animals said Tuesday they are considerin­g further legal action if they determine it could help the belugas at Mystic or “prevent future transports like this one.”

Naomi Rose, a scientist with the Animal Welfare Institute, which was not part of the lawsuit, said she would oppose the resumption of research at Mystic until both NOAA and the the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service complete a thorough assessment of the health of the remaining whales. (AP)

 ?? (AP) ?? In this June 14, 2021, file photo, a vial of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine that is being administer­ed for flight attendants of Japan Airlines at Haneda Airport as the airline company began its workplace vaccinatio­n, in Tokyo. Moderna Inc. and its Japanese partner are recalling more than 1 million doses of the US drug maker’s coronaviru­s vaccine after confirming that contaminat­ion reported was tiny particles of stainless steel.
(AP) In this June 14, 2021, file photo, a vial of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine that is being administer­ed for flight attendants of Japan Airlines at Haneda Airport as the airline company began its workplace vaccinatio­n, in Tokyo. Moderna Inc. and its Japanese partner are recalling more than 1 million doses of the US drug maker’s coronaviru­s vaccine after confirming that contaminat­ion reported was tiny particles of stainless steel.
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Coan

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