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Dolphins in Captivity

Published on May 06, 2019

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Dolphins in Captivity

Mary Briggs and Kate Suder
Photo by Leo Reynolds

Background Information

  • The bottlenose dolphin is the most common species found in captivity
  • Often brought into captivity for entertainment
  • Even dolphins that are rescued end up staying in captivity for no real reason
  • Environment: These dolphins are tropical/coastal Shallow/Surface water creatures Saltwater creatures, tolerate freshwater Active day & night
Photo by DrPleishner

No cold regions
They can be found in coastal areas such as:
Mediterranean Sea
Atlantic Ocean
Black Seas
Pacific Ocean

Relationships

  • Relationships: Family is everything(social creatures)
  • Dolphin Predators: Sharks (Tiger, Dusky) Killer Whales Humans
  • Dolphin Prey:
  • Fish Shrimp
  • Squids

The Negative Impacts

  • Ecosystem
  • Population
  • Change in Diet
  • Habitat
Photo by FreeWine

Positive Impact(1)

  • Marine Mammal Protection Act-1972(Not Effective) the capture of wild dolphins and other marine mammals is acceptable as long as the individual applies for and receives a permit from the National Marine Fisheries Service. Reasons you get a permit: Scientific research Public display Accidental captures by fishermen (this provision allows for the deaths of millions of dolphins in the nets of the tuna fishing industry) Conservation 30 Days
  • The Marine Mammal Protection Act has three requirements that facilities must meet before a capture permit can be granted. offer an education or conservation program facility must be open to the public on a regular basis. only keep a marine mammal on public display
Photo by srgpicker

Positive Impact(2)

  • The Animal Welfare Act-1979 Space requirements (i.e., the size of a dolphin's tank) 6 feet-can swim up to 40 miles a day Quality of water and sanitation Transportation and handling Food quality and diet Veterinary care USDA-regulations Marine parks and facilities are not required to obtain a permit to export their marine mammals to foreign zoos or aquariums
  • A Unique Plan Visit sanctuaries/conservation sites instead of the zoo/marine parks (END DEMAND) What this means: Marine parks have a 4-5 star rating No demand = No marine parks thus lowering the demand for dolphins/whales How to do this: Expose marine park cruelty on social media Protest Create an alternative for example ecotourism Fund conservation programs(charge entry)
  • Unique Plan: Conservation: $1.3 Million to save a single species Bottlenose Dolphin: $30,000-100,000 for the dolphin plus $10,000 a month Both options are costly but there is only one option that keeps dolphins alive By creating a safe tourist attraction dolphins would be able to be bread and let into that wild without the demand/dangers of hunting.
Photo by Sebastien

Sources

Photo by SandyCsizmar