One major flaw is that the dome inexplicably opens at 10:00 and a full half an hour after the rest of the building, and since it is by far the most popular attraction, that means a lot of standing around waiting for it to open. It was the same case back in 2011, which seems ridiculous. Why not prepare to have it open at 9:30 with everything else?
Interesting that there was such a long wait, although I shouldn't be surprised. Back in February last year, it was almost a walk-in, but I was visiting on a weekday during the off-season.I visited the California Academy of Sciences on March 25th, 2024, and my only previous visit was back in 2011. I was with my wife and 4 kids and so I didn't make a detailed list of species and instead of a full review I'll simply post a few observations.
Overall, my impression was a largely positive one as this facility is superb. We watched the new Planetarium show, called Spark: The Universe in Us, spent some time looking at penguins in the African Hall, ventured up to the 2.5-acre Living Roof, enjoyed the two gift shops, wandered through Color of Life in the East Hall, and marveled at some of the artifacts in the Collections Gallery.
The true highlight is the Rainforest dome, with its winding pathway that goes up several stories and then visitors take an elevator to the very bottom, aquatic section. One major flaw is that the dome inexplicably opens at 10:00 and a full half an hour after the rest of the building, and since it is by far the most popular attraction, that means a lot of standing around waiting for it to open. It was the same case back in 2011, which seems ridiculous. Why not prepare to have it open at 9:30 with everything else? During my visit, the dome actually opened 20 minutes late, at 10:20, due to an escaped beetle! One would have thought it was a King Cobra the way a couple of employees were running around inside with big nets. (I'm fairly certain it was an Atlas Beetle) Later in the day, it was an hour-long wait just to set foot inside the dome and so it's vital to go there first thing in the morning.
We spent 5 hours at this facility and I would highly recommend a visit for all zoo nerds. There's an Alligator Swamp with a single white gator, along with a trio of Alligator Snapping Turtles, and a ton of tanks in the Steinhart Aquarium. We gazed at 'Methuselah', an 86 year-old Australian Lungfish that is the oldest captive fish on the planet. There's also a number of lizards and snakes, along with a staggering total of fish and jewel-box tanks. The new "Venom: Fangs, Stingers and Spines" gallery has a lot of creatures that can cause harm to humans, the Amazon Tunnel is superb, Twilight Zone is a darkened area, and the 25-foot deep, 212,000-gallon Philippine Coral Reef exhibit is world-class.
Which enclosure are the T. compressicauda in?These species have been kept at the Academy for a while but I believe no one has mentioned the caecilians +Typhlonectes natans and +Typhlonectes compressicauda
Apologies, all I remembered was that there was a new aquatic caecilian species on display that replaced T. natans in one tank. I was rushing to finish the list before I went to bed so I wrote T. compressicauda without checking the signage.Which enclosure are the T. compressicauda in?
That makes sense, I didn't remember 2 caecilian terrariums. Are the Oku clawed frogs offshow now?Apologies, all I remembered was that there was a new aquatic caecilian species on display that replaced T. natans in one tank. I was rushing to finish the list before I went to bed so I wrote T. compressicauda without checking the signage.
The species was actually Kaup's caecilian Potamotyphlus kaupii.
The Kaup's caecilian were kept in the rainforest dome in a mixed paludarium habitat with Allison's anoles.
The T. natans were kept in a mixed species tank with the Surinam toads Pipa pipa in the rainforest section of the rainforest, which held Lake Oku clawed frogs previously.
Correct, sadly the frogs have been off display since the caecilians and Surinam toads took over last year.That makes sense, I didn't remember 2 caecilian terrariums. Are the Oku clawed frogs offshow now?
On the same topic of the Twighlight Zone exhibit, I talked to Matt Wandell the other day and one species that Steinhart (when he was still there) were working on trying to display was the Genus Grammatonotus which is an insane looking group of Deepwater basslets that live around 400ft + deep. Unfortunately they weren't successful because he calls them "the most delicate fish imaginable", even with the rebreather chamber they use to collect Mesophotic Fish, the individuals wouldn't even make it past 200 ft coming back up before passing away. His main theories are that "they're so skittish, they die of stress / heart attack, or so damn delicate they can't survive from going from 450ft depth to 220ft depth".Lots of updates from a recent visit, here are the highlights for now.
More information will be added later
A - mark means the species is now off display, and a + means it has been put on display
- A tank has been changed into a tropical Atlantic-themed tank and several new species are now on display, +Ridged slipper lobster Scyllarides nodifer, +Jack-knifefish Eques lanceolatus, +banded butterflyfish Chaetodon striatus, +Glassy sweeper Pempheris schomburgkii, +twospot cardinalfish Apogon pseudomaculatus, as well as corals and invertebrates
- -Common eastern bumblebees Bombus impatiens are now off-display
- The -fire urchin in Venom is off-display and replaced by a +hybrid angelfish Centropyge flavissima x c. vroliki specimen along with what look like dartfish.
- A +tentacled snake Erpeton tentaculatum is now on display in the tank in Venom which held the fishing spider.
- A +water scorpion Ranatra quadridentata is on display in Venom.
- The -yellow-rumped caciques Cacicus cela are now off-display in the rainforest.
- It seems like the -red barbier Baldwinella vivanus are now off-display in the deep reef exhibit
- A +peacock mantis shrimp Odontodactylus scyllarus has replaced the -flamboyant cuttlefish Metasepia pfefferi
- A macro algae tank now holds +lettuce sea slugs, Elysia crispata
- These species have been kept at the Academy for a while but I believe no one has mentioned the caecilians +Typhlonectes natans and +Typhlonectes compressicauda
- -Red scorpion Rhopalurus junceus is off display while a +emperor scorpion Pandinus imperator is on display
- A +beautiful fruit dove Ptilinopus pulchellus, is kept with the Gouldian finches
More information will be posted later, as well as media, especially on the newly opened California State of Nature exhibit.
- A +Spanish flag (bass) Gonioplectrus hispanus, is on display in the Caribbean biotope tank outside of the deep reef exhibit, this species is not exhibited much, especially far out of its native range
- a single +Congo (potato) puffer Tetraodon miurus has been added to display, this species is not yet represented in zoochat's media
- A pair of +red-crested turacos Tauraco erythrolophus have been added to the rainforest dome
- A single +bicolor basslet Lipogramma klayi is on display in the deep reef exhibit, this rare and sought after species only has one photo on zoochat
What a shame that they weren't successful. They probably haven't been brought to the trade yet either? Always cool to hear about species that facilities are still trying to learn how to care for.On the same topic of the Twighlight Zone exhibit, I talked to Matt Wandell the other day and one species that Steinhart (when he was still there) were working on trying to display was the Genus Grammatonotus which is an insane looking group of Deepwater basslets that live around 400ft + deep. Unfortunately they weren't successful because he calls them "the most delicate fish imaginable", even with the rebreather chamber they use to collect Mesophotic Fish, the individuals wouldn't even make it past 200 ft coming back up before passing away. His main theories are that "they're so skittish, they die of stress / heart attack, or so damn delicate they can't survive from going from 450ft depth to 220ft depth".
Unfortunate it didn't work out because they're so striking, but I thought that was an interesting piece of info that was revealed from 2016ish when the exhibit opened.