
06-04-2006
personally, i am not very fond of keeping dolphins in captivity. like elephants, they require alot of space that really can't be provided. many species, such as orca's do appalingly badly in captivity - dying young etc..
river dolphins - had it not been for their endangered status would actually make better candidates for captivity than marine species. not only would the aquarium have the convienience of keeping them in freshwater, but most species, especially the amazon dolphins, are well adapted to being in somewhat confined spaces. in the amazon, the entire forest seasonally floods and much of the plants are adapted to being underwater for part of the year. during this time the dolphins literally swim through the jungle, eating fish and even fruits that fall into the water. i have seen them in rediculously narrow bodies of water and apparently they can sometimes become trapped in very small lakes in the forest and have to wait there until the forest floods again. therefore you would think that they would do well in a confined aquarium, however of the many amazon river dolphins that have been captured for display - i believe only two males are left at an aweful aquarium in germany (another died a couple of years ago at a US zoo). apparently many suffered from not being provided with a shallow bank in which to sleep. unlike marine species, river dolphins do not swim and sleep at the same time. intead they swim into the shallows and lie with their blowhole above the surface. many zoos, not providing this, caused slow and painful deaths to their sleep depraved dolphins!!!
there are plenty of people who want to import more captured dolphins from venezuela - so far though, the US government has fortunately been saying no.
Last edited by patrick; 06-04-2006 at 06:41 PM.
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