HONOLULU, April 15, 2005

A 'Wholphin' Is Born

New Arrival's Mom Is Whale-Dolphin Hybrid; Dad's A Dolphin

  • Kekaimalu, right, a 19-year-old wholphin, swims with her as yet unnamed calf in a training tank at Sealife Park in Honolulu on Thursday.

    Kekaimalu, right, a 19-year-old wholphin, swims with her as yet unnamed calf in a training tank at Sealife Park in Honolulu on Thursday.  (AP)

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(AP) 
There have been reports of wholphins in the wild, he said.

Kekaimalu, whose name means "from the peaceful ocean," was born 19 years ago after a surprise coupling between a 14-foot, 2,000-pound false killer whale and a 6-foot, 400-pound dolphin. The animals were the leads in the park's popular tourist water show, featured in the Adam Sandler movie "50 First Dates."

Kekaimalu has given birth to two other calves. One lived for nine years and the other, born when Kekaimalu was very young, died a few days after birth.

Park researchers suspect the wholphin's father is a 15-foot-long Atlantic bottlenose dolphin named Mikioi.

"He seems to be totally oblivious to this happening," Lenzi said.

False killer whales do not closely resemble killer whales. They grow to 20 feet, weigh up to two tons and have a tapering, rounded snout that overhangs their toothed jaw.

Atlantic bottlenose dolphins reach a maximum size of 12 feet and can weigh up to 700 pounds.

Sea Life Park officials said they hope to decide on a name for the baby wholphin soon and move her to a large display tank in a few months.


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