Takara helps guide her newborn to the water’s surface at SeaWorld San Antonio, Wednesday, April 19, 2017 (Picture: SeaWorld/AP)

This orca will be the last to be born into captivity at a SeaWorld.

The young whale was born at the tourist attraction in San Antonio, Texas, just over a year after the theme park decided to stop breeding orcas following animal rights protests and declining ticket sales.

The Orlando-based company said the orca – the last in a generation of whales bred in confinement – was born Wednesday afternoon.

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SeaWorld did not immediately name the calf because the park’s veterinarians had not yet determined whether it was male or female.


The mother, 25-year-old Takara, was already pregnant when SeaWorld announced in March 2016 that it had stopped breeding its orcas. The gestation period for orcas is about 18 months.



Preparing for the birth, SeaWorld’s chief zoological officer, Chris Dold, said he expected the the event to be bittersweet, because it would be the last such event at any of the parks.

But just hours after the calf was born about 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dold said, SeaWorld staff only felt like celebrating. SeaWorld said mother and calf both appear healthy.

The orca is the last to be born into captivity at SeaWorld (Picture: AP)

‘These are extraordinary moments,’ he said while traveling to the U.S. from Abu Dhabi, where SeaWorld is developing its first new park without orcas.

‘It’s a tempered celebration only because we’re focused on the health of these guys.’

SeaWorld decided to stop breeding orcas, and phase out its world-famous killer whale performances by 2019, after public opinion turned against keeping orcas, dolphins and other animals in captivity for entertainment.

The backlash intensified after the 2013 release of ‘Blackfish’, a documentary critical of SeaWorld’s orca care. It focused on the orca Tilikum, which killed trainer Dawn Brancheau in Orlando in 2010, dragging her into the pool before shocked visitors after a ‘Dine with Shamu’ show.

Tilikum, which sired 14 calves over nearly 25 years in Orlando, died of bacterial pneumonia in January.

A killer whale leaps into the air for a back dive during a performance at SeaWorld in San Antonio, Texas. (Picture: Getty)

The newborn calf is fathered by Kyuquot (pronounced ky YOO kit) at the San Antonio park by natural means.

It brings SeaWorld’s orca population in the U.S. to 23. All the orcas are expected to remain on display and available for researchers for years to come in Orlando, San Diego and San Antonio.

SeaWorld has said it plans to introduce new ‘natural orca encounters’ in place of theatrical shows. This summer, the San Diego park will unveil a new, educational attraction in a revamped pool, and new orca attractions eventually will follow in San Antonio and Orlando.

The calf will be visible to visitors either in the orca stadium pool at the San Antonio park or in two adjacent pools. Observations about the calf and Takara by SeaWorld trainers will be provided from the moment of birth to researchers trying to fill gaps in their data about wild killer whales.

Dold said veterinarians at the San Antonio park told him the calf was born normally – tail first – after about an hour and a half of smooth labour.

SeaWorld hold a press conference after Tilikum dragged veteran trainer Dawn Brancheau to her death in the water (Picture: Getty)

Both orcas were swimming calmly, including taking breaths at the water’s surface, and trainers would be watching for the calf to begin nursing.



Birth control and ‘social management’ will prevent future orca pregnancies, said spokeswoman Suzanne Pelisson Beasley.

SeaWorld has not collected a wild orca in nearly 40 years, and most of its orcas were born in captivity.

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Researchers have said they worry that SeaWorld’s decision to stop breeding orcas will slowly reduce their ability to study orca health, growth and behavior, limiting them in coming years to collecting data from a small pod of aging whales.

Heather Hill, a St. Mary’s University comparative psychologist who plans to monitor the sleeping habits of Takara and the calf over the coming year, said it was frustrating to see research opportunities at SeaWorld undermined by public opinion amid federal cuts to science funding.

‘This will be one of the first times we’ll be able to see not just a mother with a newborn calf but also a newborn calf with siblings,’ Hill said.

This is Takara’s fifth calf. Two of her other offspring remain at the San Antonio park, while one lives at SeaWorld Orlando and another has been loaned to a park in Tenerife.

SeaWorld has no current plans to separate Takara and the newborn in the future, or to move any of its other orcas, Dold said.