Marine mammal used in pioneering research back in limelight
WAIMANALO, Hawaii — Compared with other marine mammals, 40-year-old Kina has lived a particularly winding and high-profile life.
She went from the open ocean off Japan, to a Hong Kong amusement park, to a classified U.S. Navy program, to a Hawaii research lab. Along the way, studies using the false killer whale — a dark-grey member of the dolphin family with a big, round beak — led to major discoveries on whale hearing and aided in the development of modern military sonar .
“The work that (researchers) have done over the years is quite valuable, and certainly groundbreaking,” said Robin Baird, a marine biologist with the non-profit Cascadia Research Collective, a scientific and education group based in Olympia, Washington.
Now, Kina is again making waves, this time with her latest move to an Oahu marine park. Animal-rights activists say the 13-foot-long (4-meter), toothy mammal and her captive companions deserve peaceful retirements but are instead being traumatized as tourist attractions confined to concrete tanks.


