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During the presentation at Ocean Voyager today, it was explicitly mentioned that two of the manta ray were members of a new species and that Nandi was not. They mentioned Yushan a lot. I can only imagine trhe majesty of seeing four whale sharks in this tank at once. There were also a dozen divers in at one point, including one in a skeleton-sort of outfit. Are divers in Ocean Voyager a daily occurence?

I spoke with an educator by the Sharks section who told me the aquarium is involved in a research project involving Sand Tiger Sharks and that they "come and go' based on this program's needs. I asked if they had trouble getting along with the other species and was told no.

The Asian small-clawed otter are off-display and appear to have been so for a while; the exhibit seems to be under construction. The sea otter were also signed as off display, which was disappointing, but this looked more like a 'for the day' situation.

It was pretty crowded throughout the day and probably only a fraction of what it is at peak times.
 
During the presentation at Ocean Voyager today, it was explicitly mentioned that two of the manta ray were members of a new species and that Nandi was not. They mentioned Yushan a lot. I can only imagine trhe majesty of seeing four whale sharks in this tank at once. There were also a dozen divers in at one point, including one in a skeleton-sort of outfit. Are divers in Ocean Voyager a daily occurence?

I spoke with an educator by the Sharks section who told me the aquarium is involved in a research project involving Sand Tiger Sharks and that they "come and go' based on this program's needs. I asked if they had trouble getting along with the other species and was told no.

The Asian small-clawed otter are off-display and appear to have been so for a while; the exhibit seems to be under construction. The sea otter were also signed as off display, which was disappointing, but this looked more like a 'for the day' situation.

It was pretty crowded throughout the day and probably only a fraction of what it is at peak times.


They’re trying to breed the sand tigers down in Marineland. Going to guess that’s what the research project is.
 
During the presentation at Ocean Voyager today, it was explicitly mentioned that two of the manta ray were members of a new species and that Nandi was not.
Excellent, yeah that would be consistent with the info I have - Talulah and Blue are Atlantic mantas (Mobula yarae), while Nandi is a reef manta (Mobula alfredi).
There were also a dozen divers in at one point, including one in a skeleton-sort of outfit. Are divers in Ocean Voyager a daily occurence?
Yeah, it seems like it’s probably semi-daily in some form or another, because they allow paying customers to dive in the tank about twice or thrice a week and probably have their staff in there every other day in some capacity.
I spoke with an educator by the Sharks section who told me the aquarium is involved in a research project involving Sand Tiger Sharks and that they "come and go' based on this program's needs. I asked if they had trouble getting along with the other species and was told no.
I had heard the same of late, so good to have it corroborated. I imagine @Persephone is correct about the specific content of the research - there’s a lot of aquaria participating in that breeding effort through the AZA. Ripley’s Myrtle Beach was the first one to do it successfully here in the US. Honestly, maybe a hot take, but given how common sand tigers are in aquaria I don’t think it’s a great loss for them to only be temporary/“coming and going” residents. The tank is plenty full and active without them.
 
The skeleton diver is probably there because when it gets around Halloween, Georgia Aquarium's take on the holiday is a sunken ship / ghost pirate theme. When it's Christmas, they have diving Santa and elves in Ocean Voyager for that season.

Last I was there, I also got to see that the divers in Ocean Voyager can help with marriage proposals by holding that one crucial sign.

I have been having trouble trying to see the Asian small-clawed otters too, but I thought it was because they get put up for the night, since the aquarium can have varying closing times.
 
I stopped by again today. The only 'news' addendum is the sea otters were still off display. I asked the educators and one of them said pretty directly that it's just "annual routine maintenance" and nothing more.

I also saw the harbor seals in with the belugas. :)

I know many of you will think 'duh' but there was such a world of difference in crowding between Sunday and Monday, more drastic than I've seen at some other institutions. River Scout in particularly benefited a lot from not being crowded.

They’re trying to breed the sand tigers down in Marineland. Going to guess that’s what the research project is.
I had heard the same of late, so good to have it corroborated. I imagine @Persephone is correct about the specific content of the research - there’s a lot of aquaria participating in that breeding effort through the AZA. Ripley’s Myrtle Beach was the first one to do it successfully here in the US.
That's really cool and I hope that's the case. It would be great to have more captive breeding programs for sharks, especially as sharks overall and Sand tigers in particular are such charismatic species.

Excellent, yeah that would be consistent with the info I have - Talulah and Blue are Atlantic mantas (Mobula yarae), while Nandi is a reef manta (Mobula alfredi).
It's great that the aquarium is already integrating this into their education efforts. I was a little impressed they had brought it in so quickly!

Yeah, it seems like it’s probably semi-daily in some form or another, because they allow paying customers to dive in the tank about twice or thrice a week and probably have their staff in there every other day in some capacity.
Yeah, this is the real reason I asked - I knew they had dive programs but I had been wondering more about the frequency.

Always excellent to hear. Honestly, I fully expect her to be there a long while barring any surprise health issues (and very much hoping for that not to come to pass). As I mentioned before, tigers can live quite a long time in captivity; all the previous ones that did so were not in as specialized a tank as S: POTD, nor were they provided as advanced of care as it was decades ago. Here’s to many more years and many happy returns for her and all of us who love visiting her. :)
That's great to hear. She was a little more showy today - she's very much a highlight of the complex for me, I felt a little bad how often I'd drop attention on the hammerheads, also a rarity I was excited about, to get another blurry shot of the tiger shark.

Out of the vaguest curiosity, did they happen to say how big she’s gotten now? When I visited in ‘22 she was stated to be 9 feet, but smart money says she’s grown larger in almost exactly 3 years.
I wish I'd seen this before I went in, I would have asked! No, unfortunately that did not come up.

Fwiw, if it's of interest, they told me there are's the one tiger (well-known) three silvertip sharks, and I believe fourteen great hammerheads, at least two of which were males, and that pretty much all of the current sharks are the same from the exhibit's opening..

The skeleton diver is probably there because when it gets around Halloween, Georgia Aquarium's take on the holiday is a sunken ship / ghost pirate theme. When it's Christmas, they have diving Santa and elves in Ocean Voyager for that season.
I saw a lot of the Haunted theming, yeah -- Santa in Ocean Voyager sounds like it would be pretty fun though!

Last I was there, I also got to see that the divers in Ocean Voyager can help with marriage proposals by holding that one crucial sign.

I have been having trouble trying to see the Asian small-clawed otters too, but I thought it was because they get put up for the night, since the aquarium can have varying closing times.
Sounds very cute about the proposal!

Whatever is up with the small-clawed otters, they weren't around yesterday all day or today from 4pm to 6pm.
 
Fwiw, if it's of interest, they told me there are's the one tiger (well-known) three silvertip sharks, and I believe fourteen great hammerheads, at least two of which were males, and that pretty much all of the current sharks are the same from the exhibit's opening..
Fourteen great hammerheads???? That is news to me, my goodness, that’s more than any aquarium has ever exhibited to my knowledge. When I was last there, there were only six (?), and they sent two to SeaWorld Orlando shortly thereafter (and possibly now gave another to Ripley’s Myrtle Beach, as they acquired one within the last year). Certainly it made me think that the sand tigers were removed at least in part because of the sheer amount of hammerheads they wanted to put in, breeding program aside. That’s truly remarkable if accurate.
 
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Fourteen great hammerheads???? That is news to me, my goodness, that’s more than any aquarium has ever exhibited to my knowledge. When I was last there, there were only six (?), and they sent two to SeaWorld Orlando shortly thereafter (and possibly now gave another to Ripley’s Myrtle Beach, as they acquired one within the last year). Certainly it made me think that the sand tigers were removed at least in part because of the sheer amount of hammerheads they wanted to put in, breeding program aside. That’s truly remarkable if accurate.
I was certainly surprised by the numbers as well! I had asked one educator on Sunday about how many of each species were in the tank, but doubted the numbers a little and was hesitant to report from that number alone; I asked a different educator a similar but different question the next day (number of individual animals total) and they said there were eighteen sharks present, and then quickly repeated the same species numbers and statistics, including trying to tell me the sex ratios (they have both male and female silvertips, but I forgot which they had two of) and the numbers matched.

Side note, but both days I visited I only saw three beluga, but I've read they have five? Do they all share the enclosure concurrently?
 
I was certainly surprised by the numbers as well! I had asked one educator on Sunday about how many of each species were in the tank, but doubted the numbers a little and was hesitant to report from that number alone; I asked a different educator a similar but different question the next day (number of individual animals total) and they said there were eighteen sharks present, and then quickly repeated the same species numbers and statistics, including trying to tell me the sex ratios (they have both male and female silvertips, but I forgot which they had two of) and the numbers matched.
So I’ve asked around to a few different contacts of mine, and the number I received from someone in GA’s back-end staff is seven great hammerheads. The silvertip and tiger numbers appear to be accurate though. I’m not entirely sure how that got so skewed…realistically I don’t believe you can actually hold 18 very large sharks in even a 1.2 million gallon tank. There were never that many when I went, even including sand tigers and the one silky. It’s possible the education staff is counting the zebra sharks held above S: POTD’s main section and just is a bit off on the totals? I really can’t be sure, but I trust this particular reporting I’ve had.
 
So I’ve asked around to a few different contacts of mine, and the number I received from someone in GA’s back-end staff is seven great hammerheads. The silvertip and tiger numbers appear to be accurate though. I’m not entirely sure how that got so skewed…realistically I don’t believe you can actually hold 18 very large sharks in even a 1.2 million gallon tank. There were never that many when I went, even including sand tigers and the one silky. It’s possible the education staff is counting the zebra sharks held above S: POTD’s main section and just is a bit off on the totals? I really can’t be sure, but I trust this particular reporting I’ve had.
I would just say personally I think these numbers sound much more accurate than what I was told. I almost did a double take when I was told eighteen sharks, and eleven sounds much more accurate to me. How many Sand tigers did they formerly hold? Perhaps it was eighteen including them?

There are backstage pools and they vary social groups sometimes, as well as there are beluga encounters that occur sometimes.
I follow. Three beluga was enough for the size of the enclosure and viewing window in my book, but it made me wonder if there was a consistent rotation or if it was just 'luck of the draw'- sounds the latter.
 
I would just say personally I think these numbers sound much more accurate than what I was told. I almost did a double take when I was told eighteen sharks, and eleven sounds much more accurate to me. How many Sand tigers did they formerly hold? Perhaps it was eighteen including them?
Yeah, that’s definitely plausible, and it’s all good! I figured there may have just been something wrong with the estimate. Looking back at my photos I only ever saw a handful of the sand tigers at most, but if you count them and the silky that used to be there, plus the zebra sharks above the main tank, that’d have been 18 or thereabouts. Could be that’s how it happened.
 
I did visit Georgia recently (and was forced to leave early due to a panic attack), you will all be pleased to know that the female tiger shark is growing much larger. She's easily doubled in size since she was first introduced into the exhibit.
 
Other Early 2025 News Not Mentioned:

On February 13th, the aquarium announced they hired a new CEO, Travis Burke, who was previously their Executive Vice President.

Georgia Aquarium
Georgia Aquarium Announces Travis Burke as President and CEO - Georgia Aquarium

On February 25th, the aquarium announced they acquired 2 Mbu pufferfish, which are on display in River Scouts.

151K views · 4.9K reactions | Double the fun with TWO new members in our giant puffer family! Come say hello to the largest (but still tiny) species of freshwater puffer fish on your next visit to our River Scout gallery! | Georgia Aquarium

On March 20th, the aquarium announced that (2m.1f) African penguins hatched and were later named Ikhulu (Zulu for 100), Kivuli (Swahili for shadow), and Ishirini, which are on exhibit.

128K views · 4.6K reactions | Best way to cure spring fever...is with spring chicks! Welcoming the three new cute members of our African penguin colony. | Georgia Aquarium

On April 30th, the aquarium announced they bred and moved 200+ squarespot anthias from their off-site facility to the Indo-Pacific Barrier Reef tank.

32K views · 611 reactions | Follow along for a fish transport into our coral reef wall! | Georgia Aquarium

On May 31st, it was mentioned that the aquarium transferred a zebra shark (egg) to Seattle Aquarium in Washington, which hatched out a (0.1f)*.

* Information sourced from @Northwest_FIsh_Keeping in the Seattle Aquarium News thread (Page 4 Post #61).
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On November 6th, it was announced that the aquarium transferred a (1m.0) bowmouth guitarfish to Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium in Washington.

Critically Endangered Bowmouth Guitarfish Arrives - Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium

On November 24th, the aquarium announced that 2 common murres hatched in August and September, respectively, which are now on exhibit. This is the first time in the aquarium's history to successfully breed the species.

15K views · 809 reactions | Peep the news! The first ever murre chicks have hatched in our Cold Water Quest colony! | Georgia Aquarium
 
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