The Cetacean Sanctuary: A Sea of Unknowns

Animals (Basel). 2024 Jan 21;14(2):335. doi: 10.3390/ani14020335.

Abstract

Housing cetaceans in netted sea pens is not new and is common for many accredited managed-care facilities. Hence, the distinction between sanctuary and sea pen is more about the philosophies of those who run these sanctuary facilities, the effects of these philosophies on the animals' welfare, and how proponents of these sanctuaries fund the care of these animals. Here, I consider what plans exist for cetacean sanctuaries and discuss the caveats and challenges associated with this form of activist-managed captivity. One goal for stakeholders should be to disregard the emotional connotations of the word "sanctuary" and explore these proposals objectively with the best interest of the animals in mind. Another focus should be related to gauging the public's understanding of proposed welfare benefits to determine if long-term supporters of donation-based sanctuary models will likely see their expectations met as NGOs and their government partners consider moving forward with cetacean sanctuary experiments.

Keywords: cetacean; naturalistic enclosures; sanctuary; sea pen; welfare; whale.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.