Baja Dolphins
L A   P A Z
DOLPHIN DEATH
CAMP

Baja California Sur, Mexico

 

And then there were three...

Capuchino has died, making it 4 dolphins that have died brutally in the La Paz death pens... the Mexican government is finally acting and getting the funds to move the 3 remaining dolphins to Puerto Vallerta's dolphin exhibit.

Unfortunately La Paz still has plans to build a dolphinarium in the future, as soon as they find the money. Hopefully like most things go in Mexico, this will never materialize.

   WRP

 

Mexico to transfer dolphins from park after 4 die


Associated Press
Oct. 20, 2003


MEXICO CITY - Mexican authorities on Monday ordered three bottle-nose dolphins transferred to another facility after four died at a Baja California aquatic park.

A combination of stress, lowered immune response and polluted water caused an infection that killed a male dolphin named Capuchino Monday, and those factors played a role in the deaths of three other dolphins at the same park since Sept. 23.

"Tests of the three dolphins that died previously, the dolphin Capuchino who died today, and the three surviving dolphins, all show evidence of such infections," said federal environmental prosecutor Jose Luis Luege.

Luege's agency said the deaths were also part of "an emergency situation" caused by Hurricane Marty, which hit the peninsula Sept. 22, presumably contributing to water-quality problems.

The three surviving dolphins were being held at the Dolphin Learning Center in the resort of La Paz, near the southern tip of the Baja California peninsula.

The deaths came while the animals after federal authorities took control of all seven of the park's dolphins in October 2002 following complaints by activists that pens at the park were too shallow.

The animals remained confined at the same park pending a plan to release them.

But the deaths - and a recommendation by experts against releasing the animals in their current weakened condition - convinced authorities to move the remaining dolphins.

They will be transferred in the next week or so to an aquatic park in the Pacific coast resort of Puerto Vallarta, which is better equipped to house them.

La Paz is planning to build a multimillion dollar aquarium to house such species, but that won't be ready for some time.

Authorities did not specify how they will be transferred, but dolphins are often loaded aboard containers and transported by air.

The dolphins will be held in cleaner water in Puerto Vallarta, will be given treatment for their infections and will eventually be donated to the local family-welfare agency to use in environmental awareness programs, the government announced.

"They (experts) concluded that their release would in no way be justified, given that it wouldn't contribute to the survival of the species and would, on the other hand, place the surviving dolphins at much greater risk," Luege said.

The announcement that poor water conditions played a role in the dolphins' deaths appeared to contradict a Sept. 29 statement, in which the same government agency said the first two dolphins died of a throat blockage and a liver infection.

At that time, the environmental prosecutor's office said one apparently died after swallowing an object that blocked his esophagus.

In August, authorities concluded that the deaths of two dolphins at another Mexican park - Parque Nizuc on the Caribbean coast - were due to similar liver and intestinal problems, not to any infection passed on by animals recently imported from the Pacific Ocean's Solomon islands.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

dolphin capture in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico

F I N S   D o l p h i n a r i u m

At low tide the waters are less than 4 feet deep, the location is also very close to the highway with heavy trucks passing 24 hours a day, the treated waste water from La Concha Beach Resort flows into the bay just a few hundred feet away and in the summer months the waters of La Paz reach a temperature of 90º degrees or more - too warm for the dolphins.

Eight dolphins were captured in Magdalena Bay in mid-December 2000:

   Ricky (male) age 7 - 8 years (died Sept. 2003)
   Nachito (male) age 6 - 7 years
   Capuchino (male) age 4 - 5 years
(died Oct. 2003)
   Quinta (male) age 20 years (died Sept. 2003)
   Concha (female) age 19 years (died Sept. 2003)
   Luna (female) age 8 years (died Feb. 2001)
   Aqua (female) age 12 years
   Salcita (female) age 4 - 5 years

 

Caretaker Explains Death Of Dolphins   
To the public, as well as government officials
.

BY DAVID FLORES

Following the death of dolphins Quinta, Concha and Ricky at the controversial La Paz swim with the dolphins facility early this month, many conservationists are demanding the release of the remaining dolphins. The animals died choking on debris and sewage flowing into their pen during hurricane Marty. Profepa, Mexico’s federal environmental watchdogs, and Semarnat, the Mexican natural resources and fisheries ministry, has launched an investigation into the exact cause of their death.

Full story here, from the Gringo Gazette.

 

Three Dolphins Die in La Paz Center
.....Killed by debris washed into their pens by the hurricane.


BY DAVID FLORES

Quinta, a 20 year old alpha male, Concha, a six month pregnant 19 year old female, and Ricky, a seven or eight year old male died last week at the La Paz swim with the dolphins facility. The dolphin center has been at the center of controversy since December 2000, when eight bottlenose dolphins were captured in the Lopez Mateos Lagoon, near Magdalena Bay on the Baja Peninsula by Dr. Javier Enriquez, at the time the owner and developer of the dolphin center. On February 3rd , 2001, the first eight year old female dolphin named Luna died.

Full story here, from the Gringo Gazette.

 

We know that removal of female dolphins, from the wild can produce seriously harmful consequences to their populations over the long term.

And the effects of stress from capturing a few dolphins can actually result in the death of more in the pod, since the capture activities can be highly stressful to the entire group.
(even those who are not selected for capture)

 

CAPTIVE DOLPHINS
Factoid

LA PAZ DOLPHINARIUM
Gringo Gazette Oct. 2003

EXTREME CRUELTY TO DOLPHINS
La Jornada Feb. 2001

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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