Dolphin Outlook, Barcelona Bans Captive Dolphin Facilities, Male Tourist Picks up Dying Dolphin, Empty the Tanks Events Today, Taiwanese Humpback Dolphin, Canada closer to banning Dolphin & Whale Captivity, A Whale of A Week

Barcelona Spain’s City Council has officially declared that it will not allow the establishment of new captive dolphin facilities!
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The declaration, read on Friday, April 27, 2018 affirms that the city “…will not allow the exhibition or the breeding of cetaceans the property of which falls directly or indirectly to the City Council”.**Source: El Periodico, 4/27/18

This is a huge step towards the city becoming completely free of captive cetaceans. We ask that the Barcelona Zoo, home to six captive bottlenose dolphins, make arrangements to retire the mammals to a proper marine sanctuary. Congratulations to our friends and colleagues at FAADA (Foundation for the Adoption, Sponsorship and Defence of Animals) for all their hard work in achieving this important victory.

Mexico City is banning dolphin shows, taking a lead on animal rights
A dolphin performs tricks at a recent Six Flags show in Mexico City.
A dolphin performs tricks at a recent Six Flags show in Mexico City. A dolphin performs tricks at a recent Six Flags show in Mexico City. Credit: Emily Green/PRI
At Six Flags in Mexico City, massive signs encourage people to visit the popular dolphin show. It happens twice a day, featuring dolphins doing tricks on command as an emcee rallies the crowd with booming pop music.

There is no mention of the fact that the popular spectacle will shut down soon. A vendor at the exhibit even denies the show will end. 

But the exhibition will have to close by the end of January, thanks to a new law in Mexico City banning the use of dolphins and other marine mammals in shows, therapy sessions and scientific experiments. The law passed on Aug. 1 with unanimous support.

“Having Mexico City itself take this enormous step is very important, and we think sends a strong signal to the rest of Mexico and Latin America that this is something they need to think about,” says Mark Palmer, associate director of the International Marine Mammal Project, which advocates against the captivity of whales and dolphins for circus shows.
a young swimmer poses a dolphin while an adventure park photographer takes a picture.
Six Flags in Mexico City offers the chance for people to swim with dolphins. Here, a young swimmer poses a dolphin while an adventure park photographer takes a picture. Credit: Emily Green/PRI

Mexico’s capital is not alone in taking this step. Several Latin American countries have placed bans or tough restrictions on keeping marine mammals in captivity. Switzerland banned importing and France barred the keeping or captive breeding of dolphins and whales. India has also forbidden the acquisition of dolphins for entertainment purposes, going so far as to deem them “nonhuman persons.” And in the United States, dolphin and whale shows — while still legal in some states — are in decline, according to Palmer.

Other Mexican locales offering popular dolphin shows — from Cancún to Puerto Vallarta — are not affected by Mexico City's new legislation.

For now, few people at Six Flags appear to know about the new law. Many are opposed to shutting down the exhibit.
Ronaldo with dolphin
Ronaldo with dolphinBrazilian soccer star Ronaldo and Suzana Werner play with a dolphin as they swim in an aquarium Aug. 6, 1998, in a Cancún, Mexico, beach resort. Credit: Reuters

“It’s a very good show. It’s a way to know all the virtues the animals have,” says Tony Aguilar, who came with his wife and 12-year-old son.

Indeed, proponents of such shows argue that they educate people about animals they would otherwise have no direct contact with.

That was the experience of 9-year-old Patricia Lira. She got into the pool with the dolphins and was overcome with excitement by the experience.

“The dolphins are very beautiful because you can sing with them, dance and listen to them,” she says. Lira describes their texture as similar to Nutella — the popular hazelnut-chocolate spread — and explains they make sounds through their nose. The idea that she would no longer be able to swim with the dolphins seemed beyond comprehension.

But Xavier López, who introduced the law banning the show, says the dolphins don’t live in adequate conditions. Among the problems, he says, is that Mexico City is polluted, it’s over 7,000 feet above sea level, and the facilities where the dolphins are held are “practically concrete tanks with chlorinated water.”
Keiko, a 5-ton killer whale best known for the "Free Willy" movies, is lowered into a pen in Icelandic waters
Keiko, a 5-ton killer whale best known for the "Free Willy" movies, is lowered into a pen in Icelandic watersKeiko, a 5-ton killer whale best known for the "Free Willy" movies, is lowered into a pen in Icelandic waters Sept. 10, 1998, after he was found ailing in a Mexico City aquarium. Keiko died at the end of 2003, following years of attempts to coax him back to the open sea. Credit: Reuters

López also points out that the Six Flags in Mexico City was home to Keiko, the killer whale who famously starred as Willy in the 1993 movie “Free Willy.” At the time, Keiko was living in a small tank. A worldwide campaign after the film led to his rescue and eventual release into the wild, although Keiko never fully adapted to life at sea and died of pneumonia.

Unlike Keiko, the dolphins at the Six Flags exhibit aren’t headed for freedom. Instead, they will be moved to another water park owned by Dolphin Discovery (which owns the Six Flags in Mexico City). The company, which operates other dolphin shows in Mexico, declined to comment.

Yolanda Alaniz, a dolphin advocate and major proponent of the Mexico City legislation, says she considers the new law a success, despite its limitations. She is already gearing up to try to extend the prohibition on dolphin shows across the country.

“It was an excellent example we think should be replicated throughout Mexico.”
You can help save dolphins like this one! Add your name now.
California Senator Dianne Feinstein just introduced a landmark bill in Congress that would require the California drift gillnet fishery for swordfish to transition to cleaner fishing gears that reduce bycatch and save critical species from needless suffering and death.

This would be a huge step forward in our fight to protect marine life from deadly swordfish drift gillnets, and encourage the fishery to transition to more efficient equipment. We’re counting on your voice to make this a reality.

Tell NJ’s senators to support S. 2773 and protect at-risk species from deadly drift gillnets

Mile-long drift gillnets off the California coast have a long history of entangling and killing many species of ocean wildlife. California drift gillnets trap and kill more dolphins than all other West Coast and Alaska fisheries combined.

We know what to do: There are better ways to catch fish. Deep-set buoy gear is an effective and profitable alternative to catch swordfish with less wasted catch than drift gillnets. During the last seven years of experimental trials, not a single whale, dolphin or sea turtle was caught with buoy gear.

Sen. Feinstein’s bill comes after years of effort by Oceana, and thousands of dedicated supporters like you voicing their support, to clean up the California swordfish drift gillnet fishery.

Even when the Trump Administration withdrew a proposed rule last summer that would have protected some of the ocean’s most endangered species from drift gillnets, we refused to back down. Oceana filed a lawsuit challenging the Administration’s actions.

You can ensure we don’t lose momentum during this critical moment. If passed, S. 2773 would demand West Coast fisheries abandon mile-long walls of deadly nets and switch to cleaner alternatives, like buoy gear, for healthier, abundant seas.

We have a responsibility to speak up for the voiceless before it’s too late. Thank you for helping us get this far – now let’s ensure progress continues for marine life.
A small dolphin recently beached itself in a popular destination spot in in Yangjiang, China. As it lay there dying, onlookers were shocked and upset to watch the sick creature during its last moments of life. But they were even more shocked when a male tourist walked up, threw the dolphin over his shoulder, and then put it in his car and sped off. 

Sign the petition demanding that authorities find the man who stole this dolphin and charge him to the fullest extent of the law!

Dolphins are a protected species in China, meaning that what this man did was illegal. It's also unspeakably cruel. He even had the nerve to look at other beachgoers and smirk while he had the creature slung over his shoulder. 

Dolphins are extremely social and emotionally sensitive animals. Scientists say they're as intelligent as great apes and even human children. But this man didn't seem to care. Instead, he added more trauma and suffering to this dolphin's already painful last moments. 

Speak out for this dolphin. Tell the Yangjiang City Police to treat this case as seriously as possible by signing the petition now!

Taiwanese humpback dolphin
Victory: Taiwanese Humpback Dolphin Gets U.S. Protection
There are fewer than 75 wild Taiwanese humpback dolphins left in the world. But good news this week: In response to a petition from the Center and allies, the National Marine Fisheries Service protected these incredibly rare dolphins under the Endangered Species Act.

The long-snouted, mottled-gray mammals are threatened by gillnet fishing, pollution, boat traffic and development along Taiwan's west coast, including proposed construction of large wind farms. The endangered listing will let the United States provide expertise and resources to support Taiwan in conserving these animals.

"This could save these dolphins from extinction," said Abel Valdivia, an ocean scientist at the Center. "International cooperation is the key to saving certain critically endangered species."

Read more in our press release.
Let's All Empty the Tanks! 🐬
Today on May 12, be a voice for the voiceless and join thousands of activists across the world during the 6th annual Empty the Tanks event.

Despite the industry’s ads depicting happy, smiling faces, no dolphin has ever willingly been captured from the wild for “life" in captivity, nor chosen to be bred for entertainment.

#TheCove, Taiji, JapanBrutality in the cove as the captive selection of bottlenose dolphins takes place, Taiji, Japan. Credit: DolphinProject.com

Thanks to you, real progress is being made. Mexico City has just banned dolphinariums, legislating that existing institutions that keep dolphins captive must relocate the mammals within six months. The Dominican Republic has passed a resolution that prohibits the sale of dolphins. And, Barcelona, Spain’s City Council has just officially declared that it will not allow the establishment of new captive dolphin facilities. Let’s keep the positive momentum going – this Saturday, May 12, say NO to the dolphin show!

CLICK HERE to find an event near you.