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What is the major controversy between orcas and SeaWorld?

Controversial captivity At facilities like SeaWorld, the roughly seven-meter long, 4,500-kilogram animals are kept in cramped enclosures, often completely alien to their natural habitats. Orcas in captivity often display signs of chronic stress and extreme boredom, such as listlessness, stomach ulcers, and self-injury.



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Sea World also came under fire for their dolphin and orca breeding programs (which ceased in 2016). Males were masturbated by their trainers for sperm, and females were forcibly impregnated. One orca, Tilikum, fathered 21 calves, but it was reported that only half had survived.

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SeaWorld has been the subject of controversy before. Tilikum pulled SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau into the water in 2010, killing her after a show at the theme park. In the wake of Brancheau's death, SeaWorld removed trainers from the water and implemented new safety procedures.

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Tilikum pulled SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau into the water in 2010, killing her after a show at the theme park. In the wake of Brancheau's death, SeaWorld removed trainers from the water and implemented new safety procedures.

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Tilikum was sold to the United States' SeaWorld theme park chain for performance shows and breeding. The whale's semen was collected and used for artificial insemination to breed a number of captive orcas for SeaWorld's shows and also for its sister park, Loro Parque in Spain.

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The demand to see orcas up close was high, and Griffin launched Namu Inc., a whale-catching company, to supply marine mammal parks with orcas from the Salish Sea. Griffin's top customer was SeaWorld. Griffin captured a calf from Puget Sound and killed her mother with a harpoon gun.

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Shamu /?æmu?/ (unknown – August 16, 1971) was a female orca captured in October 1965 from a southern resident pod. She was sold to SeaWorld San Diego and became a star attraction. Shamu was the fourth orca ever captured, and the second female. She died in August 1971, after about six years of captivity.

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PETA notes that “dolphins [at SeaWorld] are being impregnated, sometimes forcefully after being drugged.” Even moreso, PETA highlights how although orca whales generally stick within their pods their whole lifetime in the wild, “SeaWorld transfers orcas between facilities to regularly 'balance' the genetic pool of ...

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Soon after, Tilikum was sold to SeaWorld. Eight years later, a man who had apparently sneaked into SeaWorld during the night was found dead on Tilikum's back. As the years passed, Tilikum was considered by many expert observers to have become increasingly depressed and unstable.

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SeaWorld often keeps dolphins, whales, and other animals trapped with incompatible tankmates. The tension leads to fights and even fatal injuries. Staff members drug some animals to try to relieve their endless frustration.

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That fact stems not only from the world-class care they are provided with but the love and affection they receive on a daily basis from a whole host of passionate trainers. Well there you have it. By the Dodo's own deduction, SeaWorld's whales are loved, happy and have a great relationship with their trainers.

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SeaWorld Orlando has always known that Tilikum, a 12,000-pound orca that killed trainer Dawn Brancheau on Wednesday, could be a particularly dangerous killer whale. SeaWorld trainers were forbidden from swimming with Tilikum, as they often did with the resort's seven other orcas.

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