Is this the first time a proboscis worm has been mentioned on Zoochat?
I uploaded photos from the Tokyo Sea Life Park and Osaka Aquarium today but I won't bother doing reviews of them.
One of the neat things with Japanese aquariums is the range of extraordinary soft toys they sell in their gift shops. Frilled Sharks, Coelacanths, Dumbo Octopus, Giant Isopods, Tuna, Squid, Arapaima - stuff you'd likely never see in a Western aquarium's gift shop.
I left my pack in the luggage room at the hotel for the day, and headed off to the Tokyo Port Wild Bird Park, formerly known as the Oi Bird Park which is a preferable name because it is shorter and quicker.
It is also a good place if you want to see invasive Red-eared Sliders - they were everywhere. Some stretches of water were just a mass of little black heads poking out of the water.
Oh it's not that I'm not into Aquariums - I love Aquariums and have worked at several, and I kept fish myself for decades. The thing is more that if I'm visiting several big Aquariums quite close together and don't write reviews immediately then they all run together in my mind. With Osaka specifically, though, it was such an awful visitor experience with the packed crowds and dark corridors and tiny tanks for marine mammals that I was there for less than an hour before I left. A lot of the tanks I didn't even get to see into because of the number of people there. It is a really badly-designed Aquarium for a place like Japan.I was surprised at first that you didn't think Osaka Aquarium was worth a review (given it's one of the largest and most well-known in Japan I believe?) but then I remembered you weren't that into aquariums. That said, if you really find yourself enamored by "little bizarre creatures", I think you'd like Monterey Bay Aquarium at the moment; a lot of their weird deep-sea invertebrates look like the ones you photographed at the Sea Life Park.
No, I wouldn't have been able to choose and would have spent too much money - they are all great! However, they are also all available on AliExpress for cheaper than in the gift shops so anyone in the world can buy them. I was looking the other day at them and they also have species I haven't seen in the shops like Goblin Sharks and Deepsea Anglerfish.I know you're probably traveling light, but please tell me you splurged to buy at least one of those. I know several people on my side of the pond who would be over the moon to own some of those plushies.
Osaka - wildlife
My third day in Osaka was rained out - it was hammering down - so I spent it inside on the internet and doing Zoochat stuff. Then the next four days ended up all being spent looking for birds. I had decided to skip the Suma Aqualife Park in Kobe, and the Oji Zoo (also in Kobe) hadn't even made it to the "maybe" stage because it is by all accounts deplorable. I contemplated a facility in Osaka called NIFREL but when I looked it up was pretty quickly taking it right back off the table again.
The one other place I wanted to visit was the Biwa Museum, which has a large aquarium with freshwater fish endemic to Lake Biwa (in Japan) and Lake Baikal (in Russia). Lake Biwa is about an hour by train north of Osaka and the lake itself was supposed to be a good birding location. Unfortunately Google sent me to the wrong place.
I'd looked up the travel directions but Google had decided I actually wanted to go to Biwa Base (which also has an aquarium) instead of the Biwa Museum, and the two places are on opposite sides of the lake to one another. I didn't realise this until I was at the station of Katata, which is actually next to the lake (on the wrong side for the Biwa Museum) but where I was going to be transferring to a second train. Initially I thought, well I'll just go to Biwa Base instead then, that's fine, but I checked their times and they weren't even open on this day.
I could see on my map that Katata was beside the lake, and from the platform I was on I could also see forested hills a few streets away in the other direction, so I simply stayed put in Katata and changed this to a bird day rather than an aquarium day.
I wasn't sure I'd be able to find a way into any of the forest I could see, but walking in a straight line up the road away from the station ended up taking me directly to Kasugayama Park. The park seems like a pretty good birding area - I probably wouldn't go out there specifically from further afield but if a person was staying in or near Katata for some reason then this would be a very good spot to check out.
The forest here seemed like it might be good for Copper Pheasants, but instead I got a different lifer with a flock of White-bellied Green Pigeons in a tall bare tree. There were all the usual forest birds around as well, with jays, Pekin Robins, various buntings and tits, as well as some Long-tailed Rosefinches and a Red-throated Flycatcher. A second lifer for the day was a Ruddy-breasted Crake in a reedy pool just by the entrance as I was leaving.
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White-bellied Green Pigeons - as you might be able to tell, today was a bit dreary with rain on and off throughout the day.
Back at the station I came across a pair of Grey-headed Lapwings on a patch of waste ground. I stopped at the station's convenience store for some food, then kept going to the lake shore. On the way I passed a smaller roadside lake area called the Inner Lake (little lake, big pond, whichever you would refer to characterise it as) which had Crested Grebes and some ducks, as well as all three white egret species together (Little, Intermediate, and Great). Lake Biwa itself, a bit further along, didn't hold a lot of interest.
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Grey-headed Lapwings
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I hadn't been able to track down any Copper Pheasants while at Karuizawa a week or so ago, and I wasn't sure where else I would have a chance to look later (if anywhere), so I did some searching on the internet to see if there was anywhere around Osaka. One place that came up was Minoh Park, on the outskirts of the city. There don't appear to be any records of the species from there on eBird, but I found some references and photos taken there on other websites.
Minoh Park is an easy site to reach: from Osaka station take a train to Ishibashi station (15 minutes), and then another train from there to Minoh station (5 minutes), and then you just walk up the road through the little village by the station until you reach the entrance. Easy as that. The main road through the park leads to a waterfall, which is the main attraction here (lots of white tourists turning up!) but as I found out there are trails all through the forest up and over hills. It's a really great birding area, although being winter and in forest the number of species seen each day probably only averaged about 20.
I spent three days up here looking for my pheasants (unsuccessfully!). On the first day it was quite warm and I ended up carrying my coat around all day, so the next day I left it back at the hotel - only to find that it got much colder that day and I got snowed on!
I got a couple of lifer birds in the forests at Minoh Park, the first being a Ryukyu Minivet (originally found only in the Ryukyu Islands south of the main Japanese islands, but which has self-colonised Kyushu and Honshu - some sources now call it the Japanese Minivet) and the second being the Grey Bunting which, despite sounding drab and basically being a finch coloured entirely in grey, is somehow a really pretty little bird. They were quite common up here.
Another bird, seen as a lifer just the other day at Kasugayama Park in Katata, was the White-bellied Green Pigeon which I saw much better here and of which I even got some good photos.
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White-bellied Green Pigeon - I really like the undertail patterning!
There were "warning" signs along the road through the park telling people not to feed the monkeys, so I was keeping an eye out for them. I had already seen the "Snow Monkeys" at Nagano but I wanted to see them a bit more naturally in forest without being surrounded by people holding selfie-sticks.
I didn't see any mammals on the first day up there. On the second I found a small group of Sika Deer which were my first on Honshu. I'd seen them on Hokkaido (subspecies yesoensis) - and years previously in China (subspecies sichuanicus) - so these were a "new" subspecies for me, although sources differ as to whether they should be considered nippon or aplodontus in this area.
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On the third day I finally came across a macaque, just the one, foraging on a slope on the other side of the river.
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An unexpected find at Minoh Park was an insectarium, which had a fantastic array of species, nice displays, and great signage. I definitely recommend visiting it if in this area.
I have put a review with a species list here:
Minoh Park Insect Museum (Osaka)
Photos are in the Japan Other gallery - starting at this photo, use the right arrow to go through them: Giant Flower Beetle (Mecynorhina torquata) - ZooChat.
Sorry, I read this when you first posted it and intended to reply but then forgot about it.Following on from your extinct Japanese Otter taxidermy photo, I was just reading up about the extinct Japanese Wolf. There are only four known taxidermies worldwide apparently. One is in the Ueno Zoo(?) while another is in the big Museum in Ueno Park. I don't suppose you got to see either of them?
I posted that on March 23 - almost a month ago! I got the first week (Tokyo) and second week (Osaka) done, but then things got stalled. I have some time now - so here is the third week, which is Tokyo again (and not really a week, but close enough), and then I can move on to the Ogasawaras.I should hopefully be able to just breeze through those next three weeks of posts...
