Yahoo – AFP,
January 6, 2017
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| Tilikum, an orca whale made famous by the US documentary "Blackfish", died at the age of 36 on January 6, 2017 (AFP Photo/Gerardo Mora) |
Miami (AFP)
- Tilikum, the killer whale linked to the deaths of three people and made
famous by the 2013 documentary "Blackfish" -- which criticized the
captivity of orcas -- died Friday, according to SeaWorld.
One of
SeaWorld's most prominent orcas, Tilikum had been fighting a bacterial lung
infection since March when he died at the marine theme park in Orlando,
Florida.
SeaWorld,
which owns several entertainment parks in the United States, said the
approximately 36-year-old killer whale had spent years with the company.
"Tilikum
passed away early this morning, January 6, surrounded by the trainers, care
staff and veterinarians that provided him around-the-clock world-class
care," SeaWorld announced on its website.
"Tilikum
had, and will continue to have, a special place in the hearts of the SeaWorld
family, as well as the millions of people all over the world that he
inspired," SeaWorld president and chief executive Joel Manby said.
The
official cause of death will not be announced until the completion of a
necropsy, the company said.
It noted
that Tilikum was near the upper end of the average life expectancy for a killer
whale, and faced "some very serious health issues," it said.
The animal
rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) tweeted a photo
of Tilikum on Friday along with the message: "R.I.P. Tilikum Dead after
three decades of misery."
Tilikum's
name means "friend" in the Chinook Jargon language spoken among
Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest.
The
black-and-white five-tonne bull orca, the largest killer whale in captivity,
had been linked to the deaths of three people.
In 2010,
Tilikum grabbed the ponytail of Dawn Brancheau, a SeaWorld trainer, and dragged
her underwater to her death in front of horrified onlookers at the end of a
show at SeaWorld Orlando.
The whale,
nicknamed "Tilly," was involved in the death of a part-time trainer
at the Sealand of the Pacific facility in Canada in 1991 and that of a man who
died in 1999 after he sneaked into SeaWorld to swim with the mammals after the
park closed.
CNN
featured Tilikum in a 2013 documentary "Blackfish" that covered those
fatalities and also sought to show the impact of captivity on these giant sea
creatures.
Animal
rights groups charge that orcas were kept in tanks that are too small, fed improper
diets and forced to perform tricks.
Under
public pressure, SeaWorld last March announced it would stop breeding killer
whales, and would no longer keep any of them in captivity after its current
generation dies.
With the
death of Tilikum, SeaWorld now has a total of 22 orcas at its three facilities
-- in Orlando; San Antonio, Texas; and San Diego, California.
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