Shedd Aquarium Shedd Aquarium

Thank you for clarifying, @birdsandbats , I had wanted to ask but was a little embarrassed to do so.

It's a shame this species looks likely to disappear from captivity; the article could be read to imply Georgia may breed the two sawfish but they noticeably avoid suggesting it outright.
 
I noticed the sawfish removal back in march but it seems I forgot to make note of it in this thread. It was replaced by whitespotted guitarfish now in the tank.
 
I noticed the sawfish removal back in march but it seems I forgot to make note of it in this thread. It was replaced by whitespotted guitarfish now in the tank.
Their website only mentions one guitarfish. Is this accurate to your observations?

New Whitespotted guitarfish is definitely an upgrade in rarity...
If it is true that Georgia Aquarium has two of the last or the last two guitarfish, by your post, whitespotted guitarfish are even more rare, right?
 
Ebirah was being sarcastic here. Whitespotted Guitarfish are fairly common.
I was initially confused by Ebirah766's post. Sea Life Minnesota has them, and there were eight pups in their touch tank in December. If I recall correctly, Mystic Aquarium had them for a brief stint while another facility was doing repairs on their enclosure, too.
 

On November 1st, the aquarium announced their names, Willow and Suri.

Meet Willow and Suri! | The moment you have all been waiting for is finally here! The results are in from your votes for Otter 929’s name. Drumroll please... Meet Willow,... | By Shedd Aquarium | Facebook

On December 1st, the aquarium announced they hired a new Vice President of Animal Care, Andrew Pulver, who was the Director of Husbandry at the National Aquarium in Maryland.

https://www.sheddaquarium.org/about-shedd/press-releases/andrew-pulver-announcement


On November 8th, the aquarium announced her name, Beatrix.

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https://www.sheddaquarium.org/about-shedd/press-releases/green-anaconda-naming
 
From above:
"On December 1st, the aquarium announced they hired a new Vice President of Animal Care, Andrew Pulver, who was the Director of Husbandry at the National Aquarium in Maryland."

I am hopeful that Pulver was not part of the close down the cetacean exhibit band wagon at the National Aquarium. I think it was mostly the CEO Racanelli. That would be very bad for the Shedd collection if he brings that to the Aquarium.
 
From above:
"On December 1st, the aquarium announced they hired a new Vice President of Animal Care, Andrew Pulver, who was the Director of Husbandry at the National Aquarium in Maryland."

I am hopeful that Pulver was not part of the close down the cetacean exhibit band wagon at the National Aquarium. I think it was mostly the CEO Racanelli. That would be very bad for the Shedd collection if he brings that to the Aquarium.
Downsides: the loss of a successful beluga and Pacific white-sided dolphin program, as well as bending the knee to the vocal slacktivist minority.
Upsides: Steller's sea lions and walruses, anyone?
 
Ebirah was being sarcastic here. Whitespotted Guitarfish are fairly common.

I was initially confused by Ebirah766's post. Sea Life Minnesota has them, and there were eight pups in their touch tank in December. If I recall correctly, Mystic Aquarium had them for a brief stint while another facility was doing repairs on their enclosure, too.
I was recently reading about guitarfish and learned that there are actually three "white-spotted guitarfish;" Rhinobatos albomaculatus, Rhynchobatus djiddensis, and Rhynchobatus australiae. Which one are you referring to? Are the other two in public facilities?
 
I was recently reading about guitarfish and learned that there are actually three "white-spotted guitarfish;" Rhinobatos albomaculatus, Rhynchobatus djiddensis, and Rhynchobatus australiae. Which one are you referring to? Are the other two in public facilities?
Shedd keeps Rhynchobatus australiae, I would assume the same for other aquariums.
 
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