Orcas abandoned in shuttered marine park filmed in algae-infested pool months after closure: ‘Must leave now’

By 

Ben Cost

Published May 15, 2025, 9:48 a.m. ET2/2

https://nypost.com/2025/05/15/science/orcas-abandoned-in-shuttered-marine-park-filmed-in-algae-infested-pool/

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France’s last two captive orcas were filmed stranded in an algae-infested marine park near Cannes months after the park closed, leaving the fate of the marine mammals uncertain.

Animal activists have circulated footage of the killer whales’ plight in the hopes that the French government will rehome them before it’s too late.

“The orcas need to be removed from dangerous conditions that are posing significant risks to their health and safety,” pleaded Marketa Schusterova, co-founder of the animal advocacy group TideBreakers, which shared the heartbreaking video, South West News Service reported.

Wikie and Keijo.
Drone footage shows Wikie and Keijo trapped in Marineland.TideBreakers / SWNS

Marineland Antibes reportedly shuttered on Jan. 5, in line with France’s bans on dolphin and whale shows enacted in 2021, leaving the two orcas, Wikie, 23, and her 11-year-old son, Keijo, trapped inside their pens along with 12 dolphins.Skip Ad

Heartrending aerial footage shows the cetaceans languishing in algae-choked pools in a derelict stadium, like a scene out of a post-apocalyptic SeaWorld.

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“The situation in Marineland Antibes is an emergency and needs worldwide attention,” lamented Schusterova. “These are the last two remaining orcas in captivity in France and they should be moved quickly.”

The cetacean pens at Marineland.
Managers at Marineland (pictured), which is still legally responsible for the animals until they can be rehomed, stressed that Wikie and Keijo “must leave now” for their own welfare.Anadolu via Getty Images

Unfortunately, campaigns to rehouse the majestic beasts have so far fallen flat with French authorities, who are blocking efforts to transfer the animals to a marine zoo in Japan.

Meanwhile, Spanish authorities rejected a proposal to move the animals to Loro Parque marine park in Tenerife, claiming that the facility — which is already home to four orcas — did not have enough space to “house the specimens in optimal conditions,” BBC reported.

One of the orcas trapped in Marineland.
“The orcas need to be removed from dangerous conditions that are posing significant risks to their health and safety,” pleaded Marketa Schusterova, co-founder of the animal advocacy group TideBreakers, which shared the heartbreaking video.TideBreakers / SWNS

Lori Marino, president of the Whale Sanctuary Project, is currently campaigning to have Wikie and Keijo rehomed to their site in Nova Scotia, Canada, which she feels could be the “only option left.”

While their previous rehoming plea was rejected by France’s ministry of ecology earlier this year, the group has re-upped the bid to move them to said sanctuary, which they claim will give them more space to roam than the usual pool.

Dolphins stranded at Marineland.
Twelve dolphins are also stranded at the park.TideBreakers / SWNS

The team reportedly has experts from a whale sanctuary that was designed to house Keiko — the orca who starred in the 1993 family movie “Free Willy.”

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“If you don’t even have a site, you’re years away from being a viable sanctuary,” said Marino, arguing why the Nova Scotia location might be the only viable choice. “We have a whole crew who know how to build and run a sanctuary.”

She added, “They have done it before, and I think we are the only team who has any experience in doing this.”

Time is reportedly running out for the stranded mammals.

Managers at Marineland, which is still legally responsible for the animals until they can be rehomed, stressed that Wikie and Keijo “must leave now” for their own welfare.

“Marineland reaffirms the extreme urgency of transferring the animals to an operational destination,” they declared.

Unfortunately, releasing Wikie and her son into the wild is not an option, as they were “both born in captivity” and therefore would likely not survive long, according to Schusterova.

“After entertaining the public for years, we should still provide them with a clean and safe environment to live out their remaining years,” she said.

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