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| The animals are being kept at a holding facility in Srednyaya Bay in the Far Eastern town of Nakhodka (AFP Photo/Sergei PETROV) |
Moscow (AFP) - Russia is to free captured killer whales over the next month, but will not return them to their original habitat despite expert advice, a scientist said Wednesday.
The animals
will instead be released from their pens in Russia's Far East and may
"disrupt vacationers" at resorts nearby, said Vladislav Rozhnov, who
was involved in talks over their fate.
Nearly 100
belugas and orcas were captured last summer and kept in small pens by
commercial firms who had planned to deliver them to aquariums, including in
China where the industry is booming.
Ten killer
whales, or orcas, will be released "in late May to early June",
Rozhnov said during a briefing at the Russian environment ministry.
He said it
would be more ideal to transport them to where they had initially been
captured, as Russian and foreign scientists have advised, but this was deemed
too costly.
Instead
they will be freed in the bay where they have been held near the town of
Nakhodka -- more than 1,300 kilometres (800 miles) south from where they were
actually caught in the Sea of Okhotsk.
There is a
risk that the whales will "stay near the pens where they were fed"
and bother humans, he said.
"Science
gives recommendations, but the decision is taken by government
authorities," said Rozhnov, who heads the Severtsov Institute of Ecology
and Environment and -- with other agencies -- is part of a council on the fate
of the whales.
"We
hope that the released animals will go north and return to their native
waters," he said.
'Aggressive' orcas
The
environment ministry said in a statement that transporting the animals to the
Sea of Okhotsk could injure the animals and cause stress. Constructing
rehabilitation enclosures at a faraway release site would be too complicated,
it added.
"Due
to constraints of time, the realisation of this is difficult," the
ministry said.
Russian
officials last month met with US-based conservationists Jean-Michel Cousteau
and Charles Vinick, who visited the facility with the killer whales and 87
beluga whales, also captured last year.
Rozhnov
said there was no precise decision on the beluga whales, but that scientists
now were looking into genetic evidence of family ties between the captured
juveniles and known beluga groups in the wild.
In a
statement Wednesday, Cousteau's team warned that releasing the killer whales
near the facility where they were being held carried a "high number of
significant risks". They included potential conflict with people and boats
in the area due to "aggressive behaviours observed in some of the
orcas".
Such a
release "leads to likely long-term costs and diminished potential for
survival", the team said. They said the whales should be taken to where they
were captured following an "acclimatisation period" in remote
enclosures.
Russia is
the only country still catching wild orcas and belugas. The controversial trade
of marine mammals has boomed in recent years together with the aquarium
industry in China, which uses Russian animals in its new marine parks.
Although
some fisheries officials have defended the capture as a legitimate industry,
scientists argue it threatens the species' populations.


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