Life Like Robot Dolphins Created And Could Replace Live Animals At Aquariums

Robot dolphins that offer a cruelty-free way to interact with the super-smart mammals could be making their way to aquariums in China.

The animatronic machines look just like real dolphins and can swim in tanks and even respond to questions with a nod of the head.

Built by San Francisco-based Edge Innovations, the machines could one day replace live animals in aquariums in the wake of bans on the wildlife trade.

Marine parks across the globe face rising pressure to abandon exhibits of whales and dolphins. Activists say keeping the animals in captivity is cruel.

"The marine park industry has had falling revenues for over a decade due to ethical concerns and the cost of live animals," Roger Holzberg, who designs robot dolphins in California, told The Guardian on Monday.




"Yet the public hunger to learn about and experience these animals is still as strong as ever.

"We believe that it’s time to reimagine this industry and that this approach can be more humane, and more profitable at the same time."

Edge's robot Flippers cost $20million (£16million) a pop can apparently last for ten years in salty water without any maintenance.

They're modelled after the bottlenose dolphin and are remotely operated by a person who can trigger actions such as nodding at aquarium visitors.

Edge says the contraptions can swim for up to 10 hours on a single charge of their batteries.

They weigh 270-kilos, about the same as the real thing, and have been designed by Hollywood animatronics experts to swim like them, too.

"Inside that robot is a skeleton where the major elements look very much like a real dolphin," Holzberg, a former creative director for Disney, said. 




"The detail goes so far as to actually integrate fat bladders to be sure that the buoyancy and the feel of it when you actually touch it or move with it or bump against, it feels like its real life counterpart."

Robot animals may become a staple of zoos of the future as activists push for their removal from captivity.

Whales and dolphins, for example, are social, intelligent creatures who can travel up to 62 kilometers a day in the open ocean.

In captivity dolphins typically live for around 20 years. In the wild they live for between 30 and 50 years.

Marine parks argue that showing the animals to the public up close promoted education about endangered or vulnerable species.

Parks also engage in conservation work and breeding programmes.


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Source: The Sun, EDGEFX, CBC
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