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New Zealand scientists alarmed at captive orcas' teeth

Every one of 29 whales owned by one company had damage to their teeth

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The first ever in-depth investigation of the teeth of captive orca has found them a sorry state, raising serious concerns for the charismatic mammals' overall health and welfare. Photo: Supplied

The first ever in-depth investigation of the teeth of captive orca has found them a sorry state, raising serious concerns for the charismatic mammals’ overall health and welfare.

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Anyone with a toothache knows how painful and distracting that can be - in orca which have around 48 large teeth, a sore tooth is likely no less painful or debilitating than for a person.

Now, a new study by a team of international researchers, including noted New Zealand orca expert Dr Ingrid Visser and Dr Carolina Loch of Otago University’s Faculty of Dentistry, revealed how every individual examined had damaged teeth.

The team investigated 29 orca owned by one company and held in the US and Spain.

“Every whale had some form of damage to its teeth,” said Professor John Jett of Florida’s Stetson University, the first author of the study just published in the journal Archives of Oral Biology.

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“We found that the more than 65 per cent possessed moderate to extreme tooth wear in their lower jaws, mostly as a result of chewing concrete and steel tank surfaces.”

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