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Dolphins displaced by Katrina get new home

Sixteen dolphin evacuees from Hurricane Katrina are on their way to their new home in a luxury resort in the Bahamas.
ROMAGNOLI HUYSER FOSTER
Staff from the Gulfport Marine Oceanarium work with dolphins in Gulfport, Miss., on Sept. 15, after they were recovered in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Separated in temporary locations since then, they are now being moved to a permanent home in the Bahamas.Steve Helber / AP file
/ Source: The Associated Press

Sixteen dolphins from a marine park that was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina — including several that were swept out to the Gulf of Mexico and later rescued — have been moved to a resort in the Bahamas.

The dolphins, which have been housed at temporary locations around the country, were transported to Mobile, Ala., and loaded onto an airplane for the final stage of their trip, officials said.

Another dolphin was left behind because she is ill, said Stacey Coltraine, a former trainer of the dolphins, and will be flown to the Bahamas when she is healthy.

The mammals lived at Marine Life Oceanarium in Gulfport, doing jumps and other tricks in programs for tourists, before it was severely damaged by Katrina on Aug. 29.

Some of the younger dolphins had been moved inland to hotel swimming pools ahead of the storm. Eight others were pulled out to sea during the storm when their Oceanarium tank was destroyed. Biologists located them Sept. 10 by performing aerial surveys, and they were rescued with a few days.

While the dolphins were well cared for at their temporary locations on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, and in Florida, Baltimore and in New Jersey, officials were concerned that cold weather and the effects of separation could soon take a toll.

The dolphins will be reunited and live in seven interconnected resident pools at Atlantis, a resort on Paradise Island.

The resort will also take on 24 sea lions and 22 exotic birds from Marine Life.

The dolphins have been at the center of a legal battle between the two owners of Marine Animal Productions, the company that owns the dolphins. One of the two, Dr. Moby Solangi, had opposed moving the dolphins out of the United States.