Trainers at marine zoo take extreme measures to stop killer whale from mating with his mother: ‘Perverse new low’
And you thought your job was bad.
Trainers at a marine zoo in southern France say they have to manually sexually stimulate a male killer whale once a month to prevent him from inbreeding with his mother.
The mother-and-son orcas are being cared for at Marineland Antibes while a new home is found for the pair.
The site closed to visitors in January as it prepares to comply with a new French law banning whales from appearing in marine zoo performances.
The French government and animal-rights groups have yet to agree where Wikie, 24 and Keijo, 11 should be moved, leaving the aquatic mammals in limbo, the BBC said.
After aerial video captured Aug. 12 by marine activist group TideBreakers surfaced showing a trainer grasping Keijo’s flipper while another stimulated him as he wriggles around in the water, Marineland said it was a necessary step to relieve Keijo’s “tensions” as he reaches sexual maturity.
“In order to avoid inbreeding with his mother, but also to prevent them from fighting and injuring each other, Marineland decided to sexually stimulate Keijo [to relieve him of his] tensions,” the zoo told the outlet.
“This is natural and totally painless for the animals,” it said.
France’s ecology ministry — which is tasked with giving a green light to where the killer whales wind up — said Marineland told it that it performs the procedure once a month under consultation with a veterinary expert.

