London (AFP) - Two beluga whales performing in a Shanghai aquarium are to be flown to a new sanctuary in Iceland, giving hope to more than 3,000 captive cetaceans as the popularity of marine shows wanes.
Little
White and Little Grey will be taken next year from Changfeng Ocean World to
Klettsvik Bay, organisers told a press conference at the Sea Life London
Aquarium on Tuesday.
The
12-year-old female cetaceans will still be in human care in the netted-off sea
inlet as it is thought they will never survive on their own in the wild.
But the
founders said it will give them a better life -- and help research into how
captive whales could one day be prepared for release out of human dependency.
British-based
Merlin Entertainments operates attractions including Legoland, The Tussauds
Group and the Sea Life aquarium.
It took
over Changfeng Ocean World in 2012 and started looking for a new environment to
house Little White and Little Grey.
Originally
from Russian Arctic waters, it is thought they were two or three years old when
captured. They weigh around 900 kilogrammes and are around four metres long.
Their
30-hour transfer planned for next year will involve stretchers and transport
semi-submerged in tanks, by truck, chartered flight and then ferry.
'Showing
the way'
They will
be assessed in a care pool before being released into Klettsvik Bay at Heimaey,
one of the Westman Islands off the south coast of Iceland.
The bay,
which is leased, measures up to 32,000 square metres with a depth of up to 10
metres.
Klettsvik
is where Keiko, the killer whale in the 1993 film "Free Willy", was
flown in 1998. The orca was fully released in 2002 but did not fully adapt to
life in the wild and died 18 months later in a Norwegian fjord.
"We hope that by showing the way with our sanctuary, we will help to encourage the rehabilitation of more captive whales into natural environments and one day bring an end to whale and dolphin entertainment shows," said Andy Bool, head of the Sea Life Trust charity.
"We hope that by showing the way with our sanctuary, we will help to encourage the rehabilitation of more captive whales into natural environments and one day bring an end to whale and dolphin entertainment shows," said Andy Bool, head of the Sea Life Trust charity.
Campaigners
have criticised Merlin for continuing the beluga whale shows ahead of the
transfer and pointed to the irony of choosing Iceland as a destination since it
openly defies an international ban on hunting whales.
The
Shanghai whales are being trained to hold their breath for longer, become
physically stronger to cope with tides and currents, and are putting on blubber
to help them cope with the colder water temperatures.
A third
beluga whale at the aquarium, Jun Jun, died from a bleed on the brain in June
last year, aged 17.
Belugas
typically live for 40 to 60 years.
More than
3,000 whales and dolphins are kept in captivity and it is hoped that up to
eight other belugas could join Little White and Little Grey in the future.
"There
is a real alternative now for these animals," Bool told AFP.
"The
argument has been in the past that you can't just put them back in the sea --
and that's right. But hopefully, people will see what we're doing and want to
replicate it."
Cathy
Williamson, from the Whale and Dolphin Conservation charity, said public
support for aquarium shows was waning.
"The
world's first whale sanctuary presents a pathway towards the end of the keeping
of whales and dolphins in captivity," she said.


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