A CRUMBLING CASE FOR CETACEAN CAPTIVITY?
MM-Education-and-Conservation-Report-Dec-9-2016-fi
MM-Education-and-Conservation-Report-Dec-9-2016-fi
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Today our volunteer will be meeting Tsunami.<br />
Dolphins are very tactile and love to be touched and rubbed.<br />
Here at Marineland our Bottlenose dolphins eat a diet of capelin, herring and some gelatin.<br />
Let’s see if Tsunami can find our next object.<br />
And she is off.<br />
It looks like she might have found something at the bottom of the pool and she’s headed back now.<br />
And she has it. One of King Waldorf’s objects has been collected.<br />
Alright now she will give a dolphin high five. Very nice.<br />
Don’t worry the dolphins aren’t done just yet. There are some more aerials to come from Sonar. Marina, Echo,<br />
Lida and of course Tsunami.<br />
And if you point your cameras to the centre platform you can get a picture of our Bottlenose dolphins.<br />
Let’s hear it one more time for Sonar, Marino Tsunami, Echo, and Lida.<br />
So now it’s time to see if we collected enough of King Waldorf’s objects to be able to open the chest.<br />
And we did it.<br />
On behalf of our marine mammal staff, our California sea lions, our Beluga whales and our bottle nose dolphins,<br />
we wish you a whale of a day here at Marineland.<br />
Thank you we hope you enjoyed the show.<br />
A Crumbling Case for Cetacean Captivity?<br />
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