Skip to content
Advertisement

In this July 5, 2017 photo, Lori Marino, president of The Whale Sanctuary Project, poses for a photo in St. George, Utah. Marino, an outspoken critic of keeping whales and dolphins in captivity, is trying to create ocean-based sanctuaries for retiring show animals. A former U.S. Navy research whale that has contributed to groundbreaking science for the past 30 years is again making waves after being sold to a marine amusement park in Hawaii. Animal-rights activists say Kina, a false killer whale, deserves a peaceful retirement in an ocean-based refuge, but is instead being traumatized by confinement in concrete tanks at Sea Life Park. But Kina's former Navy trainer and a longtime marine mammal researcher say no such sea sanctuaries exist, and the park is the best place for the 40-year-old toothy cetacean. (AP Photo/John Locher)

In this July 5, 2017 photo, Lori Marino, president of The Whale Sanctuary Project, poses for a photo in St. George, Utah. Marino, an outspoken critic of keeping whales and dolphins in captivity, is trying to create ocean-based sanctuaries for retiring show animals. A former U.S. Navy research whale that has contributed to groundbreaking science for the past 30 years is again making waves after being sold to a marine amusement park in Hawaii. Animal-rights activists say Kina, a false killer whale, deserves a peaceful retirement in an ocean-based refuge, but is instead being traumatized by confinement in concrete tanks at Sea Life Park. But Kina's former Navy trainer and a longtime marine mammal researcher say no such sea sanctuaries exist, and the park is the best place for the 40-year-old toothy cetacean. (AP Photo/John Locher)

Featured Photo Galleries