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Another trainer injured at Seaworld
SAN DIEGO: A killer whale at SeaWorld Adventure Park was getting a sonogram to prepare for possible artificial insemination when she knocked her trainer off a low wall Tuesday.
The 35-year-old trainer, who hit her head and side after the bump from the 5,900-pound whale, had minor injuries and was released from the hospital Tuesday afternoon, park officials said. ``She just lost her balance,'' spokeswoman Darla Davis said.
The 19-year-old whale named Orkid was getting her weekly ultrasound when she knocked the trainer off the wall next to the whale's tank, said Dave Koontz, another park spokesman. He said it was unclear if the whale intended to head-butt the trainer or accidentally bumped into her. SeaWorld monitors all of its female orcas for potential insemination. The park is reviewing the mishap.
All but three of the 25 calves born in SeaWorld parks were conceived naturally, but the park hopes to use artificial insemination to bring genetic diversity to its whale population, said Dr. Todd Robeck, corporate director of animal reproduction for Anheuser-Busch Entertainment Corp., which owns SeaWorld. ``It's a lot easier to fly semen around the world than to fly a whale,'' Robeck said.
Whales are trained to roll on their sides so that veterinarians can put ultrasound probes against their flanks and monitor their ovaries.
Last November, Orkid grabbed a trainer and pushed him under water during a show at Shamu Stadium, tearing a ligament in the trainer's left ankle. Koontz said trainers do not believe Orkid's behavior was aggressive.
However, the Marine Connection feels this latest incident, explained by SeaWorld as just another unfortunate accident, does raise the question of why, for the second time in under a year, this whale has injured a trainer. Stress related diseases amongst captive marine mammals are common, therefore could stress and/or frustration be the reason incidents such as this are on the increase?
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