Dear MARMAMers:

A weeks-old calf has died at Planète Sauvage, a dolphinarium in France. Here is 
the short press item on this death:

http://www.presseocean.fr/actualite/port-saint-pere-un-jeune-dauphin-meurt-a-planete-sauvage-29-08-2015-168169

For those who don't speak French, the article says:

A dolphin calf died following a fight between two adult females Friday in 
Port-Saint-Père. She was born on August 16.
"When a female gives birth, it is always a risky life stage," warned Martin 
Boye, scientific director of Wild Planet (Planète Sauvage).
"We placed the mother Tarel and her female calf in the nursery pool with 
another female. The whole team was mobilized to monitor this first-time birth. 
Friday, before the afternoon performance, there was an altercation between the 
two females," reported Boye. "The little one was struck. It was immediately 
fatal to her. The veterinary examination confirmed this," he added, clearly 
upset.

According to my sources, Boye also claimed that the death of this calf was 
"totally normal" and that females killing calves (accidentally or deliberately, 
is not clear) occurs in free-ranging populations. He also said that a video 
from a free-ranging population recording this kind of calf death exists, but 
hasn't been seen outside the scientific community.

I am aware that bottlenose dolphins kill harbor porpoises and that male 
bottlenose dolphins kill calves; however, I have never heard of females killing 
calves, accidentally or deliberately, during fights. Is this something that has 
been observed in free-ranging populations and if so, does video exist of it?

Thank you to the community for any information relevant to this situation.

____________________________
[13_AWILogo_ONLY]

NAOMI A. ROSE, PH.D.
Marine Mammal Scientist

ANIMAL WELFARE INSTITUTE
900 Pennsylvania Ave., SE
Washington, DC 20003
na...@awionline.org<mailto:na...@awionline.org>
T: +1 202 446 2120 ~ F: +1 202 446 2131 ~ C: +1 240 401 4269
www.awionline.org<http://www.awionline.org/>

P  Please consider the animals and their habitat before printing.
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to