Endangered Listing Could Lead to Retirement for Lone Orca at Miami Seaquarium

PETA, ALDF Petition Pays Off: Lolita to Gain Protected Status Under Endangered Species Act

For Immediate Release:
February 4, 2015

Contact:
David Perle 202-483-7382

Miami

Ten years after excluding Lolita—the lone orca at Miami Seaquarium—from the Endangered Species Act (ESA) despite covering all other Southern Resident orcas, the National Marine Fisheries Service today announced a rule granting Lolita the same status under the ESA as the rest of her family in the wild. The move comes as the result of a petition by PETA, the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF), Orca Network, and others.

The listing also opens the door to further action, as the groups believe that the conditions in which Lolita is held at Miami Seaquarium—in a tank that’s smaller than even the minimum standard required by federal law, without a companion of her own species for the past 35 years, and without shelter from the blazing sun—violates the ESA’s prohibition on harming and harassing protected animals. PETA plans to push for Lolita to be retired from performing and transferred to a seaside sanctuary that’s waiting for her in her home waters off Washington’s San Juan Islands. If possible, Lolita may even be released back into her family pod. In the wild, Southern Resident orcas often spend their entire lives with their mothers. Lolita recognized her pod’s calls decades after being captured, and her mother—estimated to be about 86 years old—is still thriving.

“This orca has been trapped for decades in the tiniest orca tank in North America and, for the past 10 years, deprived of the protection from harm and harassment offered by the Endangered Species Act,” says general counsel to PETA Jeffrey Kerr. “Now that this protection is rightfully hers, PETA will continue to push for her release into the sea, where she belongs.”

“The Endangered Species Act should have been applied to this orca ever since it was applied to the rest of her family pod,” says ALDF Executive Director Stephen Wells. “The ALDF will keep working to see to it that she’s given every protection due to her—including freedom from the appalling conditions at the Miami Seaquarium.”

For more information, please visit PETA.org and ALDF.org.

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