Schlagwort-Archive: ORCA

Urge Richard Branson and Virgin to Stop Promoting SeaWorld!

PETA

Action Alert

Please ask Virgin to do the right thing by halting all SeaWorld promotions effective immediately!

https://secure.peta.org/site/Advocacy;jsessionid=6E0072B9423F139B81E36E76F98F37DD.app338a

Dear SYLVIA,

The documentary Blackfish blew the lid off SeaWorld’s biggest secret, and consumers have never been more aware of how orcas suffer tremendously in captivity. This summer, Southwest Airlines listened to its customers and announced that it is cutting ties with SeaWorld after 25 years. Now, we need your help to convince Virgin to stop promoting SeaWorld, too.

Virgin says, „We are having productive discussions with the chief executive of SeaWorld, who has as a first step assured me that they will not capture wild cetaceans.“ For the orcas, dolphins, and other animals imprisoned at SeaWorld now, this is not enough.

Use this link to send a polite message to Sir Richard Branson and the CEO of Virgin so that they hear how important it is to the public to end marine animal suffering.

https://secure.peta.org/site/Advocacy;jsessionid=6E0072B9423F139B81E36E76F98F37DD.app338a?cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=5663&utm_campaign=100316%20Urge%20Richard%20Branson%20Virgin%20Stop%20Promoting%20SeaWorld&utm_source=PETA%20E-Mail&utm_medium=Alert

Please forward this message to friends, family members, and coworkers and share the alert on social media.

Thank you for everything that you do to help animals.

For all animals,

PETA

VICTORY: California Becomes First State to Ban Breeding of Captive Orcas

PETA
Breaking News

Dear SYLVIA,

Today, California became the first state to ban the breeding of captive orcas—ensuring that future generations will not endure the deprivation, stress, and frustration of being trapped inside a tiny concrete tank. Thanks to Assemblymember Richard Bloom, who introduced the California Orca Protection Act, state legislators learned how orcas suffer and die prematurely in captivity, and today, Gov. Jerry Brown signed this important bill into law.

The California Orca Protection Act prevents all California marine parks from breeding orcas for captivity and ensures that SeaWorld can’t reverse its decision to stop its sordid orca-breeding program moving forward. This monumental achievement follows the admission by SeaWorld’s CEO that the company stopped breeding orcas because „the data and trends showed it was either a SeaWorld without whales or a world without SeaWorld“—as well as last year’s California Coastal Commission ruling that SeaWorld San Diego could not build new tanks if it continued to breed orcas.

This is a huge win for orcas. Thousands of you responded to PETA’s action alert asking you to contact government officials and speak up for orcas kept inside tiny concrete tanks in California, and this victory could not have been achieved without your support.

As PETA celebrates this historic move, we encourage you to take the next step and urge federal legislators to support the Orca Responsibility and Care Advancement (ORCA) Act, which would ban the breeding of captive orcas throughout the U.S.

http://www.peta.org/action/action-alerts/federal-bill-end-orca-captivity/

‚Til the tanks are empty,

Tracy Reiman
Tracy Reiman
Executive Vice President
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

Click to update your e-mail preferences or to unsubscribe.
Please do not respond to this e-mail. Instead, click here to contact PETA.
This e-mail was sent by PETA, 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510 USA.

We need your help for two urgent campaigns

TwitterFaecbookYoutube

Dear Supporter

This month we need your support for two very important campaigns. Please help us protect endangered orcas AND put an end to Japan’s whaling.

This is urgent – a group of orcas needs our help now.

The ‘Southern Residents’ are a highly endangered group of 85 orcas living off the north west coast of the USA and the south west coast of Canada. Will you help to ensure their survival?

The population was devastated when an estimated 47 orcas were captured by the aquarium industry in the 1960s and 70s. The Southern Residents were declared ‘endangered’ in 2005 and 2,560 square miles of ocean was given federal protection. This meant the orcas should be safe from newer dangers like naval activities, prey depletion, increasing boat noise, and coastal development.

Sadly, in spite of a decade of protection, the population has still not recovered. We are calling on US authorities to grant greater protection NOW, before it’s too late.

Your voice counts. Please support our campaign by signing the petition. And if you want to raise funds to help us continue our campaigns, scroll down to join Team Orca.

 

SIGN OUR PETITION TODAY

Southern Resident orcas. Image: CWR/Rob Lott
Slaughtered minke whales

Japan’s whalers slaughter more than 200 pregnant females

Last week we were all horrified and deeply saddened by the news that the Japanese whaling fleet had returned home having killed 333 minke whales: 103 males and 230 females, 90% of whom were pregnant.

Remember that it’s not too late to join the campaign – if you haven’t done so already, please sign and share our petition.

Slaughtered whales

Progress on Japan’s whaling

A formal question has been put to the European Commission and European Council, asking if there will be any further condemnation of Japan by the EU over the Japanese government’s decision to resume research whale hunts in Antarctica over the next 12 years.

This is great progress for our campaign as it means that the issue is being discussed within the EU. An answer will have to be given at the next meeting in April and I’ll let you know what this response is in your next update.

Thank you so much to everyone who has signed our petition and supported this campaign.

Join Team Orca

Join Team Orca

WDC fundraisers do the most fantastic things to support our campaigns. If you are up for a challenge why not join Emily, who jumped out of a plane; John, who is cutting off all his hair or Gemma, who ran a half marathon? Have a look at our brand new fundraising pack and join Team Orca!

WDC Website · Contact us · Make a donation

***

ICH  BIN  LUISE

What SeaWorld Won’t Tell You About Dawn Brancheau’s Death

What SeaWorld Won’t Tell You About Dawn Brancheau’s Death

SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau began her Dine With Shamu show on February 24, 2010, just as she had many times before, but this particular show included a gruesome finale that left Brancheau’s body without her left arm or part of her scalp, among other injuries. Dawn Brancheau was declared dead shortly after the show, but still, six years later, SeaWorld claims no responsibility for the vicious attack. So just how did one of SeaWorld’s most experienced and celebrated trainers end up crushed and drowned by the jaws of the marine park’s largest attraction?

“We don’t know for sure what motivated Tilikum. But there’s no doubt that he knew exactly what he was doing. He killed her.”

A Killer Whale Is Born

Former SeaWorld trainer Jeffrey Ventre blamed Tilikum for Brancheau’s death, but the truth begins with the wild orca’s capture near Iceland in 1983. At just 2 years old, he was torn from his mother and their ocean home and sent to the rundown marine park Sealand of the Pacific. Food was withheld from him as a training technique, and he endured attacks from the two dominant female orcas, whom he was forced to live with. After years of performing eight shows a day, seven days a week, Tilikum dragged Sealand trainer Keltie Byrne to the bottom of the pool, where he and the other orcas stripped her of all her clothing and left bite marks and bruises on her skin. It took nearly two hours to retrieve her body. Not long after Keltie’s death, Sealand closed its doors, and its orcas were purchased by SeaWorld.

“My understanding of the animal’s past was very limited. In fact, there had been 30 incidents between killer whales, and trainers prior to my being hired at the park. And I didn’t know about any of them until after I left SeaWorld. So I think that’s a serious mistake on SeaWorld’s part that they weren’t letting people know the history of all the animals.”

Former SeaWorld Trainer Samantha Berg

History Repeats Itself

As Dawn Brancheau lay next to Tilikum, petting him in just a few inches of water, she likely had no reason to suspect that she was about to be torn apart. According to one of SeaWorld’s own employees, the event was unpredictable and the orca gave no indication that he was about to grab her. Even if Brancheau had spotted signs that Tilikum might act aggressively, would SeaWorld’s star performer have done anything differently? Maybe not—trainers were expected to continue performances, regardless of any signs that an orca might act out.

In one case, trainers ended a show after an orca began to ignore signals, swim rapidly, and grab at one of the trainer’s arms. In response, SeaWorld’s vice president for animal training criticized their actions in a two-page document claiming that the show should not have been ended early because it brought unnecessary attention to the incident. He argued that the trainers should have used other resources before canceling the show, despite SeaWorld’s official position that trainers could end a show at any time if they felt uncomfortable.

Why were SeaWorld trainers being forced to interact so closely with these enormous wild mammals? This was precisely the issue at the center of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) investigation. The agency cited SeaWorld for multiple violations and demanded that the company stop putting trainers at risk by making them interact with orcas during shows.

The Truth Comes Out

SeaWorld finally gave up on appealing its violations, but not before OSHA presented damning evidence that seems to imply that SeaWorld may be responsible for its own trainer’s death. OSHA found that in the 20 years leading up to Brancheau’s death, the park generated 100 reports of aggression and precursors to aggression—including 12 incidents resulting in the injury or death of a trainer—and according to SeaWorld’s own corporate curator for zoological operations, there were times that the company didn’t document incidents at all, which can be evidenced by SeaWorld’s failure to generate an incident report for Dawn Brancheau’s death and for a third death that Tilikum may have previously been involved with.

SeaWorld had previously been warned of the potential danger of incorporating Tilikum into its marine park when obtaining a permit for the orca from the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), long before Dawn Brancheau’s death. Upon applying for the permit, SeaWorld hadn’t even looked at the incident report about the Sealand trainer’s death, and after being urged by the NMFS to do so, SeaWorld attributed the previous attack to a design flaw at Sealand. SeaWorld reiterated multiple times while obtaining the license that its safety measures, training, and park facilities were superior to those of Sealand and would prevent such an event from occurring at its park.

Questions Remain

More than six years after the “accident,” there are still concerns about Dawn Brancheau’s last day as a SeaWorld trainer that have grave implications. Why did the marine park wait for 27 minutes to call for paramedics after Tilikum pulled Brancheau into the water? Was the park using this time to remove witnesses whose accounts didn’t match the story that SeaWorld was trying to create to make it seem as if her ponytail had triggered Tilikum’s reaction? Perhaps most importantly, why did SeaWorld’s then-owner try to blame his own orca trainer for her death—even after the OSHA investigation uncovered that the same safety measures and recall signals that had failed to prevent Dawn Brancheau’s death had been failing for years? And why did SeaWorld continue to rely on those failed measures?

“Let’s face it, in these types of incidents, I don’t recall any whale responding to any hand slap, food bucket, or any other distraction we tried to implement.”

Internal SeaWorld document

The evidence in the judge’s decision seems to indicate that SeaWorld tried to downplay the risks and dangers that its trainers would encounter while working with captive orcas and to cover up its own failures in the incident that led to Dawn Brancheau’s death. SeaWorld wasn’t even willing to put the life of its own star trainer before profit, so why should anyone trust that it would ever put the well-being of its captive animals first?

To help all animals held captive by SeaWorld, please never buy a ticket, visit the parks, or support SeaWorld in any other way, and urge the marine park to stop raping orcas!

Brought to you by

and 501 Front St.
Norfolk, VA 23510