WDCS has just received news of the capture of a female killer whale, or
orca the first known capture from a population living in one of the
remotest regions on Earth.
The 5-metre female was captured on Friday, September 26th, 2003, in
Avacha Gulf, Kamchatka, Eastern Russia, by captors working for the
Utrish Aquarium on the Black Sea. The following day, she was
transferred to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky where she is currently being
held in a sea pen in the bay, but the indications are that the female
will shortly be moved to the Utrish Aquarium, reportedly for
"research" purposes.
WDCS has long feared that such a capture would take place. For the past
three years - despite strong representations from WDCS and orca
scientists and experts all over the world - the Russian authorities
have issued capture permits, although previous capture attempts have
been unsuccessful. This year, the captors have permits to capture up
to 10 orcas (4 from the Kamchatka region, the remaining 6 in Sakhalin
and Ohkotsk districts) and they are expected to continue trying to
catch more orcas throughout October.
WDCS has a special interest in the orcas of Kamchatka. Since 1999, WDCS
has funded the Far Eastern Russia Orca Project (FEROP), a long-term
Russian-Japanese-British initiative. Breathing life into what was a
previously unstudied population, this pioneering project has used photo-
identification techniques to reveal the presence of at least 151 orcas
resident in the main study area of Avacha Bay - sadly now also a
capture site. Acoustic analysis has enabled valuable comparison of call
types, variations and use, helping to establish kinship among local
pods and communities.
All the findings to date on the orcas? diet, foraging and
socialising behaviour, as well as their communication - suggest that
these orcas are a largely ?resident? population, comparable to those
resident off British Columbia, Canada, and Washington State, USA, and
likely possessing the same strong social bonds.
In 2001, a letter signed by more than 25 international orca scientists
was presented to the Russian authorities asking them not to allow any
orcas to be captured in Russian waters. The letter warned of the
possible consequences of taking individuals from populations about
which very little is known and for which any removals would have
seriously negative implications.
In addition, there is no previous experience of capturing and keeping
orcas in Russia. Any animals targeted are likely to suffer greatly from
stress and potential harm during the capture itself and during the
subsequent ordeal of long-distance transportation to the final captive
facility. Those animals remaining in the pod are also likely to be
traumatised by the capture process. The long-term danger is that
Russian waters will become a regular source of orcas for the captivity
industry, with disastrous consequences for the individuals and
populations targeted.
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