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Sea lions and dolphins may join Rimpac
In addition to the more than 40 ships, six submarines, 160 aircraft and
almost 19,000 military personnel taking part in upcoming biennial Rim of the
Pacific naval exercises there are some unlikely
participants with unique capabilities. They include four California sea
lions and, possibly, six bottlenose dolphins.
The marine animals will be flown in from San Diego for simulated mine
recovery in the case of the sea lions, and simulated mine detection by the
dolphins.It's a lesser-known aspect of the Rimpac exercises, which focus on
high-tech sub hunting, manoeuvres, beach landings and ship-sinking
exercises, but whose mechanics can't match natural skills.
At 100 yards underwater in the dark, a dolphin can tell if a diver is facing
away or toward the animal, said Tom Lapuzza, spokesman for the Navy's Marine
Mammal Programme in San Diego. Sea lions have incredibly good underwater
hearing and can dive to 1,000 feet to attach a recovery line to a simulated
mine. Lapuzza estimates the recovery efforts of the marine animals save the
Navy $1 million a year. The animals' efforts are "incredibly valuable" to
the Navy, he said.
"There are a number of mechanical systems that work to some degree in those
areas, but not as well as the Navy would like them to work," Lapuzza said. "... Unmanned vehicles are becoming better at finding mines and being able
to deal with them, but they are still not as good as the dolphins are."
Rimpac 2006, scheduled to run from June 26 through to July 28, will bring
together military forces from Australia, Canada, Chile, Peru, Japan, the
Republic of Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States for training off
Hawai'i.The state Department of Agriculture processes temporary import
permits for the animals, and said in 2002, the Navy brought in four dolphins
for Rimpac. Other records were not immediately available.
Lapuzza said the unit that operates the mine-hunting dolphins has three sets
of resources: divers, unmanned vehicles and the dolphins. "For sure the divers and unmanned vehicles are going," he said. "They are
thinking about taking dolphins, but are not sure they are going to do that
yet."
The programme also has its detractors. Wayne Johnson, who's on the board of
Animal Rights Hawai'i, said the military's use of marine animals is a "major
concern," and that they should not be "trained, confined and used for
warfare." "These animals are highly sensitive, deeply intelligent creatures,
and to use them for warfare is to abuse them," Johnson said.
He has the same concerns for dolphins kept in captivity for hotel and theme
park shows, which he said is like "putting an eagle in a canary cage."
"These animals need to swim free and swim long," Johnson said.
Lapuzza noted that animal-rights proponents may say it's wrong to ride
horses or to milk cows and butcher beef, but another way to look at it is "we're sending in a couple dolphins for something that is safe for them to
do and they'll come back fine, and in return for that, a whole shipload of
sailors will go through safely."
Work to improve mechanical devices to perform the same work and replace the
marine animals also is proceeding, "and we're moving ahead with that mission
plan fairly soon," Lapuzza said. In real-world scenarios, dolphins mark
swimmers or mines without touching the explosive devices, he said.
The Navy started using marine mammals in the early 1960s, when military
researchers began looking into how sea mammals' highly developed senses —
like dolphins' sonar — could be used to find mines and do other tasks. The
up to $15 million Marine Mammal Program has 75 dolphins and 30 sea lions at
its San Diego facility. Lapuzza said the animals are kept in enclosures
during the day, but are released without restraint into the bay five days a
week, and always come back. Some of the animals were based in Hawai'i at
Kane'ohe Bay from 1969 to 1993, when the base closure commission closed the
lab and the animals were moved to San Diego.
In 1970, dolphins were deployed to Vietnam out of Hawai'i to detect
saboteurs attempting to blow up an ammunition pier in Cam Ranh Bay, and in
2003 they were used in the waters off Umm Qasr in Iraq, Lapuzza said. The
four sea lions will be transported to Hawai'i by military cargo carrier at
the end of Rimpac for simulated mine recovery, he said.
The sea lions are kept in cages with pools of water, and dolphins are
transported in 10-foot-long fiberglass boxes suspended in a sling and enough
water to enable them to float, Lapuzza said.
(source: Honolulu Advertiser)
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