an organism such as a whale shark or a redwood tree, or a giant squid, is not sapient.
I think we can be pretty sure about trees, because trees don't think anything at all as far as we can tell.
However, for some animals the question arises wheather there is a profound difference between them or us or wheather the only difference is that we're smarter.
Sapient, by root of the word, means "Knowing". Knowing what exactly? what does an Organism have to know to quallify as sapient? that's a rather tough call to make. The usual definition chooses self-awareness, but that again is tough to define. Is self-awareness simply "memento mori"? if so, humpback whales most probably qualify for self aware. They seem to be very aware that and aproximately when their and the lives of those around are going to end. Is it the abstract concept of language? if so, it's a tough call to make when we don't understand the language (which doesn't neccesarily need to be audible, btw.) Although huge progress was made on that area (we can "talk" to bees now, who would've thought??), we can't be positively sure that we understand a language of a species enough to savely conclude that it's merely inherited behaviour that isn't conciously used.
Also, wheather a behaviour is simply trained behaviour or a sign of genuine creative problem solving can be really hard to tell. For example, I have seen a documentary where they had a Bonobo light a fire with a firelighter that it had to take out of a backpack first (on verbal command! like, "get the lighter from the pack and light the fire!). This behaviour might be purely trained, like a Dog is trained to retreive your sticks. Then again, the ape sat into a kind of golf car they had standing around, and after some experimenting actually got it working and drove around (straight into the next tree of course, but still). Then he tried around some more to finally find the reverse, and slammed the little car backwards into another tree. He seemed to have a lot of fun, because he shifted back into first gear, slammed it into the tree in front of him, reversed, gave the tree behind him another hit and repeated the procedure until he got bored.
Now the question is: This ape was intelligent enough to figure out how this small car worked. Given enough time and the right circumstances, would he have started using it for getting from one point to another faster? It wasn't really possible there to observe this, because there were no roads, so the ape could get pretty much anywhere faster by using the trees. But you could still say that he is non-sapient in a way, because doubtless he wouldn't have had the ability to invent a car, even if he had need for one. But he could still use it. In this, by the way, he would be pretty similiar to alot of people, me included. I haven't invented anything in my life, I'm only using stuff the way I'm told to use it. So, am I sapient or am I just a very well trained animal?
The only answer I could give to this question is of theological nature, not of scientific. Scientificaly it might proove veeery tough to define exactly what sapient is and what isn't, without accidentaly including some very smart examples of some animal species and excluding some retarded (in the literal meaning) examples of the human species (I hope noone takes offence in the formulation. It is utterly against my conviction to devalue retarded people or even deny them human status, I wrote this only to show the problems that can come up with a purely objective definition of sapinece).