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
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.