Lolita, come home. (In Brief).Message from Seattle to Miami: Give us back our whale. Seattle ants Lolita, star of the Miami Seaquarium The Miami Seaquarium is an aquarium located on Virginia Key in Biscayne Bay in the city of Miami, Florida, USA. The park was founded by Fred D. Coppock and Capt. W.B. Gray and was the first major marine park attraction in South Florida. Its grand opening was in 1955. tourist attraction Noun 1. tourist attraction - a characteristic that attracts tourists attractive feature, magnet, attractor, attracter, attraction - a characteristic that provides pleasure and attracts; "flowers are an attractor for bees" for the past 31 years and the nation's longest-performing killer whale killer whale or grampus, a large, rapacious marine mammal, Orcinus orca, of the dolphin family. Male killer whales may reach a length of 30 ft (9 m) and females half that length. . More than 5,000 people have signed petitions and hundreds of children have scrawled crayon drawings in protest. They are urging a resistant Arthur Hertz--chairman of the Seaquarium's parent company, Wometco Enterprises of Coral Gables Coral Gables, city (1990 pop. 40,091), Miami-Dade co., SE Fla., SW of Miami; inc. 1925. Founded at the height of the Florida land boom, Coral Gables is a noted planned city, with tree-lined boulevards and Mediterranean-style buildings. , Florida--to return his graceful money-maker to Washington's Puget Sound Puget Sound (py `jĕt), arm of the Pacific Ocean, NW Wash., connected with the Pacific by Juan de Fuca Strait, entered through the Admiralty Inlet and extending in two arms c. , where she was captured in 1970 at age six. To Miami, Lolita is a leaping crowd-pleaser. But to Seattle, Lolita is a potential savior of a Pacific Northwest symbol. The number of wild orcas in Puget Sound has plummeted from 98 to 80 in just six years, due to three presumed reasons--a lack of salmon to eat, a buildup of PCBs in their bodies from spending decades in toxic waters, and stress from being viewed too closely by motorboaters. Healthy Lolita, at age 37, is young enough by wild orca standards to mother a few calves--boosting hopes for the dwindling dwin·dle v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles v.intr. To become gradually less until little remains. v.tr. To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease. population. "Nobody can say with certainty she could produce a calf if returned in the next few years, but I think it's likely," says Howard Garrett, past president of the nonprofit Orca Conservancy in Greenbank, Washington. Returning Lolita is humane, adds Garrett. She could live to 60, or maybe even 90, in the wild. Yet, she is near the end of the typical captive orca's lifespan. Lolita still makes squeaky calls unique to her family, and biologists believe she would be welcomed like a long-lost relative, says naturalist Cindy Hansen, a whale-watching narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete. for Washington-based Mosquito Fleet. Although a FedEx district manager offered to fly Lolita home, the Seaquarium has declined. "Lolita is home," says Andrew Hertz, a Seaquarium vice president. He acknowledges, however, that she deserves a pool five times bigger than her current 500,000-gallon tank. A $17.5 million pool is expected to open within two years. Whether it will please critics remains to be seen. "Lolita is dependent on being hand-fed daily, and she has lost her abilities to hunt for food. She shares her habitat with Pacific white-sided dolphins--animals that could be part of her diet if she were in the wild," wrote Seaquarium General Manager Robert Martinez in a letter published in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel The South Florida Sun-Sentinel, owned by the Tribune Company, is the main daily newspaper of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and all of Broward County. Its main competitor in this area is the Miami Herald, out of neighboring Miami-Dade County to the south. . The protesters are undaunted. Hansen has mailed hundreds of colorful children's drawings to Wometco. Wrote one child: "We saw Lolita's family today. Please send her home." CONTACT: Orca Network, (360)678-3451, www.orcanetwork.org; Animal Rights Foundation of Florida, (954)917-2733, www.animalrightsfiorida.org. |
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