Two beluga whales have been evacuated from an aquarium in war-torn Ukraine to Spain by road and plane in a ‘high-risk’ operation, officials at their new home said on Wednesday.
The whales, a 15-year-old male named Plombir and a 14-year-old female named Miranda, arrived ‘in delicate health’ at the Oceanagrafic aquarium in Valencia on Tuesday evening.
They had completed ‘a gruelling journey across the war zone’, the aquarium said in a statement.
They were first transported overland from the NEMO Dolphinarium in Kharkiv in northeastern Ukraine to the country’s southern port of Odesa, a 12-hour drive.
After health checks, they were taken across the border to Chisinau, the capital of Moldova, from where they were flown in a six-seat chartered plane to Valencia.
‘The high-risk, complex rescue operation presented numerous challenges and required multi-national collaboration,’ the statement said.
Experts with the Georgia Aquarium and SeaWorld in the United States took part in the rescue.
A team of medical and nutritional experts are looking after the belugas in Valencia, and two Ukrainian caregivers will stay with them for several weeks to help with their transition.
‘This courageous rescue constitutes a historic milestone worldwide in terms of animal protection,’ said the head of the Valencian government, Carlos Mazón.
Russian artillery fire against Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city, had intensified in recent weeks, with bombs falling just a few hundred metres from the aquarium where the whales lived.
The director of zoological operations at Valencia’s Oceanografic aquarium, Daniel Garcia-Parraga, said if the whales had stayed on in Kharkiv ‘their chances of survival would have been very slim’.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, the NEMO Dolphinarium in Kharkiv has evacuated several seals, sea lions and dolphins, but evacuating the belugas required months of preparations due to their size.
🌊 Así fue el rescate de Plombir y Miranda, dos belugas ucranianas trasladadas al Oceanogràfic
— Oceanogràfic València (@Oceanografic_vl) June 20, 2024
🌏 Una operación que ha tenido lugar debido a la gravedad de la situación en Járkov, ciudad de Ucrania donde se sitúa el Delfinario NEMO, lugar del que provienen ambos animales pic.twitter.com/qSMUJzBbCo
Sobrecogido y emocionado al ver que por fin, tras semanas de trabajo y múltiples riesgos y posibles problemas, Plombir y Miranda ya descansan en su nuevo hogar. Gracias inmensas a todos los implicados. Confiamos en la inmensa profesionalidad del equipo del Oceanogràfic. pic.twitter.com/aiLbWChEVE
— Carlos Mazón (@carlos_mazon_) June 19, 2024
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