MIAMI — The new owners of the Miami Seaquarium will no longer stage shows with its aging orca Lolita under an agreement with federal regulators. MS Leisure, a subsidiary of The Dolphin Company, said ...
More than 50 years after her capture, the Miami Seaquarium's Lolita, one of the oldest killer whales in captivity, will be returned to her home waters in the Pacific. Plans are underway to move Lolita ...
A plan announced to return Lolita, a killer whale held captive for more than a half-century, to her home waters in Washington's Puget Sound thrilled those who have long advocated for her to be freed ...
When Lolita died two years ago, the killer whale’s longtime home went into its own death spiral. The Seaquarium — battling animal-rights accusations and a landlord that wanted the attraction out — ...
Caregivers at a Florida ocean park are taking steps to eventually return a 57-year-old whale back to its home waters in Washington's Puget Sound after more than five decades of captivity. But the ...
MIAMI (AP) — Animal rights groups are appealing the dismissal of a lawsuit aimed at releasing Lolita the killer whale from Miami Seaquarium. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals announced the ...
Lolita the killer orca whale is returning to "home waters" after five decades of being in captivity, and Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay is a big reason why. On Thursday, the Miami Seaquarium ...
Beloved Southern Resident killer whale Tokitae, also called Lolita, was captured from her native waters in Penn Cove more than 50 years ago. For the first time since that traumatic event, her family ...
Lolita, the well-known killer whale also known as Toki, died Friday at the Miami Seaquarium. The 57-year-old orca was transported to the University of Georgia where a necropsy to determine cause of ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. SEATTLE (AP) — A plan announced last week to ...
Tokitae’s eye is shown through netting as she is trucked from Penn Cove on Whidbey Island, Wash., in 1970, in a scene from the documentary film “Resident Orca.” Terry Newby "Resident Orca" Courtesy to ...
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