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Orcapedia - Captain Paul Watson
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INTRODUCTION
Marine mammals from the order cetacea include whales, dolphins, and porpoises. Orcinus orca are the largest members of the family Delphinidae although they are commonly referred to as killer whales. Other names used are Orca, blackfish, and grampus. Orcas are odontocetes, meaning they have teeth as opposed to baleen. Although they have a cosmopolitan distribution, their numbers are only around 50,000. Orcas are at the top of their trophic level and have no predators. Their diets range between ecotypes and can include fish, birds, cephalopods, elasmobranchs, and marine mammals such as other whales, porpoises, and sea otters. They eat on average 4% of their body weight each day.
Resident Orcas live in a matrilineal society in which sons remain with their mother (the matriarch) throughout their lives, while daughters may leave in order to form their own matriline. Several matrilines will come together to form a pod and spend time together.
Males can grow up to 32 feet in length and weigh up to 22,000 pounds, while females can grow up to 29 feet in length and weigh 16,000 pounds. Females are reproductive between the ages of 11 and 45 and have a gestation period between fifteen and eighteen months. Orcas are polygynandrous, both males and females having multiple mates throughout a breeding season and they do not interbreed within their own pod. Mating usually in the summer, but can occur during any season. Calves are born tail first between 7 – 8 feet long and weigh an average of 400 pounds. Females give birth around once every five years and will have around three to five calves in their lifetime (take note in Chapter 4 of when the females in captivity are forced to reproduce). Males become sexually mature between 12 - 15 years.
In the wild, females live on average 50 years while males live on average 30 years. The oldest recorded female Orca was J2 (Granny) from the Southern Resident community who was 105 years old when she passed away in the fall of 2016. The oldest recorded male, J1 or Ruffles, lived to around 60 years old. Life spans in captivity are two and a half times shorter than their wild counterparts.
Sexual dimorphism is shown in the pectoral flippers, girths, tail flukes, and dorsal fins in the males, which can grow to six feet tall. The dorsal fin acts like a keel on a sailboat, stabilizing the whale. Orcas can be identified by their saddle patches, the light area behind the dorsal fin, which can be compared to a human fingerprint in that no two are alike.
Orcas use echolocation to locate their prey and their ears are well developed. This highly attuned sense of hearing does not bode well in a small concrete pool of captivity where reverberations from loud music, cheering crowds, construction work, and banging on glass view windows are constantly bombarding the animals.
Different pods have unique dialects, further differentiating Orca ecotypes. Calves are not born with a full set of repertoire sounds, rather they are learned from the adults. Take note in Chapter 4 where each whale originates from and which Orcas they are forced to live with in captivity.
The Southern Residents off the Northwest Pacific Coast of the United States can swim up to 100 miles a day in search of food and can reach speeds up to 32 mph. Take note in Chapter 4 of the pool tank dimensions captive Orcas are forced to live in.
Orca sightings are common along the coasts of the U.S. North Pacific, Argentina, Australia, Norway, east and west coasts of Canada, Antarctica, Galapagos, Europe, Bahamas, New Zealand, and Iceland. Although sightings are rare, one could see them while whale watching in Hawaii as well.
CHAPTER 1: The Beginning
Since the mid 1800’s, marine mammals have been caught and imprisoned for entertainment. P.T Barnum displayed dolphins and belugas and in the late 1800’s the Brighton Aquarium in England displayed harbor porpoises. By the 1870’s whales and dolphins were being captured and sold to parks in the United States and Europe. Marine Studios opened in Florida in 1938 and housed bottlenose dolphins. Marineland of the Pacific opened in 1954 and closed in 1987 when SeaWorld San Diego purchased the park. Miami SeaAquarium opened its doors in 1955 and to this day continues to house an Orca, a lone female named Lolita. In 1946, the International Whaling Commission (IWC) was formed by fifteen whaling nations in order to regulate whaling and maintain whale stocks. Japanese whalers slaughtered 1,178 Orcas between 1954 and 1997 and the Norwegians killed an average of 57 Orcas per year between 1938 and 1980 (~2,394). In the 1950’s, the US Navy regularly shot at Orcas for target practice.
A Browning machine gun was installed on a lookout point on the Campbell River, near the northeast side of Vancouver Island, B.C. after local fishing organizations met with the Department of Fisheries to find a solution to stop Orcas from eating their salmon. In the end, the Department of Fisheries determined it was too dan-gerous for passerbys and the gun was never fired.
In 1956, the US Navy was sent to destroy the entire population of Orcas in Iceland (see appendix for newspaper clipping). According to Guardians of the Whales by Obee and Ellis, ...one-quarter of the Orcas caught for aquariums in the 1960s and ‘70s bore bullet wounds.
The first Orca was captured in 1961. A lone female Orca was spotted near Newport Harbor off the southern tip of California on November 18, 1961. Frank Brocato from Marineland of the Pacific was in charge of collecting the whale for the park’s marine mammal collection. Frank and