News

A California panel approved SeaWorld’s plan to expand its killer whale habitat, but with a key condition: It can’t breed any of the 11 whales there.
Lolita, the orca held in captivity at the Miami Seaquarium, is too confined, according to an audit by USDA.
In a report released this month by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Office of the Inspector General, an audit of killer whale Lolita’s tank at Miami Seaquarium found that it may not meet ...
Lolita the Orca: Whether Her Tank Is Too Small Depends on How It's Measured. The orca Lolita has lived in captivity and performed three times a day at the Miami Seaquarium for more than 44 years.
Li’i, a 40-year-old Pacific white-sided dolphin that once shared a tank with Miami Seaquariam’s late Lolita the orca, has been relocated to Texas’ SeaWorld San Antonio.
In another post on their page, the group revealed a video of the orca "languishing" in his tank while captive dolphins repeatedly swim in circles around their own concrete tank in the background.
After half a century in a tank, the beloved orca Tokitae, also known as Lolita, was about to be freed. Then her life ended, and a moment of reckoning began.
A California panel approved SeaWorld’s plan to expand its killer whale habitat, but with a key condition: It can’t breed any of the 11 whales there.
A California panel approved SeaWorld’s plan to expand its killer whale habitat, but with a key condition: It can’t breed any of the 11 whales there.