Kelly Tarltons Underwater World Renovations and Rebranding 2012

they have four shark species in the tunnel tank: sand tiger/grey nurse (five imported from the USA in December 2010), a wobbegong (imported from Australia in the late 1980s), broad-nosed sevengill shark, and school shark. The latter two are native to NZ, the other two exotic. Sevengills are one of my favourite sharks.

There are also carpet sharks (native) in a separate tank.

They have had bronze whalers and other species in the past.
 
they have four shark species in the tunnel tank: sand tiger/grey nurse (five imported from the USA in December 2010), a wobbegong (imported from Australia in the late 1980s), broad-nosed sevengill shark, and school shark. The latter two are native to NZ, the other two exotic. Sevengills are one of my favourite sharks.

There are also carpet sharks (native) in a separate tank.

They have had bronze whalers and other species in the past.

Thanks. I'm glad Sea Life haven't ditched the interesting native sharks.
 
Renovation Impressions

So I visited yesterday, first day of school holidays so place was packed, but I had booked tickets (for the wrong day accidentally, but that didn't tun out to be a problem at all) and breezed straight in. The map has now been updated in the universal Sea Life style (you all know what I mean :D) but this is an improvement over the previous schematic.

The entry area, just past where tickets are bought, has been emptied of the cluttered Antarctica displays that were there, and provides a much better entrywaye, which starts with the replica of Scott's Hut (which has completely escaped renovation). Notable features here were a photo of a Leopard Seal from an early expedition and a King Penguin Skeleton.

From here, you pass the obligatory photo opportunity, and then enter the penguin area, via the "white out", a boardwalk through a revolving 'ice' tunnel, which the SnowCat ride used to pass through. Steps lead down to the underwater viewing of the penguins in their 350,000 litre pool. All the Gentoo Penguins were swimming when we were there, and looked great. The walls behind have lots of great displays, which show the various sizes of different penguins, among other things. Back up on the main level, the path lead around the enclosure, and large windows gave views of the King Penguins. Unfortunately, the windows were covered in condensation, and you had to wipe the glass to get a glimpse, which was far from ideal. Overall, however, the viewing of the penguins was greatly enhanced. I could see no evidence of an increase in enclosure size though.

Leaving the penguins, Scott Base is next, and replaces the orca and seal models. This was an interactive area, and was where most of the Antarctica displays had been moved too. Included here was a tank of water at -10C that you could plunge your hand into. There was also some electronic signage and games here, and there is now electronic signage throughout most of the aquarium, which clearly has its advantages and disadvantages.

Next up was the NIWA Southern Oceans Discovery, a new area which includes a number of interesting exhibits. The first was the Giant Squid, encased in a large tank, which could be viewed from the front and back, although it was very hard to see clearly and something needs to be done about that too. A small display case nearby showed a piece of Colossal Squid tentacle very clearly. Wall displays illustrated giant squid and right whales, while magnified glass tanks showed crabs and sea anemones. The last exhibit here was two tanks, holding Jellyfish.

This opened up into a large room, where the cafe and kids' playground were located, and featured views of the sea. Also here were the touchpools and Stingray Bay. These exhibits, like all others previously seen, were themed in a very mature and natural way which focused on the animals. Wooden benches to watch the rays from featured built-in electronic touch-screen signage providing info on the species present.

We then followed a ramp down past Stingray Bay, past a pile of shark models, and a small theatre with a shark doco playing, and entered the Shark Tank. A small tank on the left upon entry held only a pair of shark jaws. The travelator then carried us through the underwater tunnel, past a series of Pacifica statues and a sunken waka, and we saw a decent number of sharks (including the Wobbegong). More fish in here would improve it.

The travelator then carried us into the next area - "Shipwreck Discovery", which is the main oceanarium, and again is viewed through an underwater tunnel. The first part held a small Hawksbill Turtle (only 2-3 years old) and a variety of small fish. The main part is probably a little larger than the shark tank, and had plenty of different fish, including Snapper, and another young turtle, this one a Green Sea Turtle. The end part was darkened and held some more fish. This part of the aquarium was littered with wooden crates, barrels, anchors and cannons, which didn't really add to or detract from the tank at all. Because the travelator does a loop, we then had to ride through the shark tank again to get to the next area.

A set of steps lead up to the "Fish Gallery", which had a number of freshwater and marine tanks for various interesting fish and invertebrates. This area is poorly laid out, and would benefit from a renovation, as it has not changed significantly. Coolest thing here was glass snail shells in the Hermit Crab tank, which were not in use, but had they been would have given an interesting glimpse of what a hermit crab actually looks like. The only negative thing here was the Lego models dumped in a tropical fish tank. Otherwise, a series of very nice exhibits, which need to be arranged in some suitable order.

A completely new room opens off the Fish Gallery, and houses the "Seahorse Kingdom" with heavy jungle ruin theming. Despite this, the four species are displayed extremely well, and the area works brilliantly. I was most impressed. Notable here were the first Spiny Sea Dragons ever born in an aquarium.

Heading back through the Fish Gallery, we walked through the (huge) gift shop, fought off the photo salespeople, and headed up and out of the aquarium. Interestingly, the exit ramp had featured displays on the history of Kelly Tarlton's, but these have all been removed now.

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Heading into the Sea Life version of Kelly Tarlton's, I was expecting a tacky and disappointing attraction, which dumbed down the animals and featured plenty of lame theming. I was extremely impressed, however, and overall found that the exhibits were better than on my last visit almost two years ago. The visitors areas were much less cluttered and featured much more educational signage. The new theming was generally muted and suitable, there was no brightly coloured fairy lights and fake palm trees here, nor cartoon characters living in the tanks (as is the case at Sydney Aquarium and other Sea Life aquariums).

The main issues now are the condensation on the penguin exhibit windows, which is really bad; the low visibility of the giant squid; and the cluttered Fish Gallery. I hope they build a larger building that replaces the current exit, and move the gift shop up here, and can then spread the Fish Gallery exhibits out in here.

Chlidonias visited a week or so earlier, and noted a number of other issues. Fortunately, the octopus tank has been restored to its former state, with sea weed and rocks replacing bows, arrows and boxing gloves. I am not a fish person at all (which is why I just say fish are in the tanks, and not what species), so I have no idea what condition the fish were in. Chlidonias saw several sick individuals, but I cannot say if this has changed since.
 
I'm wishing I'd been able to go a couple of weeks later than I did. It actually sounds worthwhile from your review!! I definitely would have stayed longer than I did if all the parts you saw were available when I was there.


zooboy28 said:
From here, you pass the obligatory photo opportunity, and then enter the penguin area, via the "white out", a boardwalk through a revolving 'ice' tunnel, which the SnowCat ride used to pass through. Steps lead down to the underwater viewing of the penguins in their 350,000 litre pool. All the Gentoo Penguins were swimming when we were there, and looked great. The walls behind have lots of great displays, which show the various sizes of different penguins, among other things. Back up on the main level, the path lead around the enclosure, and large windows gave views of the King Penguins. Unfortunately, the windows were covered in condensation, and you had to wipe the glass to get a glimpse, which was far from ideal. Overall, however, the viewing of the penguins was greatly enhanced. I could see no evidence of an increase in enclosure size though.

Leaving the penguins, Scott Base is next, and replaces the orca and seal models. This was an interactive area, and was where most of the Antarctica displays had been moved too. Included here was a tank of water at -10C that you could plunge your hand into. There was also some electronic signage and games here, and there is now electronic signage throughout most of the aquarium, which clearly has its advantages and disadvantages.

Next up was the NIWA Southern Oceans Discovery, a new area which includes a number of interesting exhibits. The first was the Giant Squid, encased in a large tank, which could be viewed from the front and back, although it was very hard to see clearly and something needs to be done about that too. A small display case nearby showed a piece of Colossal Squid tentacle very clearly. Wall displays illustrated giant squid and right whales, while magnified glass tanks showed crabs and sea anemones. The last exhibit here was two tanks, holding Jellyfish.
none of this was accessible during my visit :(

zooboy28 said:
This opened up into a large room, where the cafe and kids' playground were located, and featured views of the sea. Also here were the touchpools and Stingray Bay. These exhibits, like all others previously seen, were themed in a very mature and natural way which focused on the animals. Wooden benches to watch the rays from featured built-in electronic touch-screen signage providing info on the species present.
I did like the windows looking out onto the sea outside. I forgot to mention that. I don't know that this area has changed much from before anyway, apart for the addition of the touch-tanks and they were putting in some pillars or something like that? They certainly haven't turned it into a fantasy island of rays like at Sydney, which I appreciate.

zooboy28 said:
We then followed a ramp down past Stingray Bay, past a pile of shark models, and a small theatre with a shark doco playing, and entered the Shark Tank. A small tank on the left upon entry held only a pair of shark jaws. The travelator then carried us through the underwater tunnel, past a series of Pacifica statues and a sunken waka, and we saw a decent number of sharks (including the Wobbegong). More fish in here would improve it.

The travelator then carried us into the next area - "Shipwreck Discovery", which is the main oceanarium, and again is viewed through an underwater tunnel. The first part held a small Hawksbill Turtle (only 2-3 years old) and a variety of small fish. The main part is probably a little larger than the shark tank, and had plenty of different fish, including Snapper, and another young turtle, this one a Green Sea Turtle. The end part was darkened and held some more fish. This part of the aquarium was littered with wooden crates, barrels, anchors and cannons, which didn't really add to or detract from the tank at all. Because the travelator does a loop, we then had to ride through the shark tank again to get to the next area.
the shark tank is really small (in my opinion they'd do better to connect both tunnel tanks into one if that were possible). The ornamentations (waka, statues, cannons, etc etc) were not there when I visited.

zooboy28 said:
A set of steps lead up to the "Fish Gallery", which had a number of freshwater and marine tanks for various interesting fish and invertebrates. This area is poorly laid out, and would benefit from a renovation, as it has not changed significantly. Coolest thing here was glass snail shells in the Hermit Crab tank, which were not in use, but had they been would have given an interesting glimpse of what a hermit crab actually looks like. The only negative thing here was the Lego models dumped in a tropical fish tank. Otherwise, a series of very nice exhibits, which need to be arranged in some suitable order.
this was easily my favourite area. The fish were nice species, and only some of the tanks were off (e.g. the Lego one, the octopus one).

zooboy28 said:
A completely new room opens off the Fish Gallery, and houses the "Seahorse Kingdom" with heavy jungle ruin theming. Despite this, the four species are displayed extremely well, and the area works brilliantly. I was most impressed. Notable here were the first Spiny Sea Dragons ever born in an aquarium.
the tanks are indeed very very nice in here but I have to disagree that "the area works brilliantly". In my opinion it is just bizarre theming it as a Mayan temple. If they were displaying the piranhas in there, or reptiles, then maybe....but seahorses? It literally makes no sense!

zooboy28 said:
Interestingly, the exit ramp had featured displays on the history of Kelly Tarlton's, but these have all been removed now.
that is interesting. All those displays were still there when I visited!
 
I have uploaded some pictures from my visit into the gallery, showing several differences from Chlidonias' visit only a couple of weeks prior: the new Antarctic area, shark tank/oceanarium theming and minor renovations to the fish gallery exhibits.
 
Forgot to reply, so here goes:

I'm wishing I'd been able to go a couple of weeks later than I did. It actually sounds worthwhile from your review!! I definitely would have stayed longer than I did if all the parts you saw were available when I was there.

It is still extremly expensive, but some of the unique (in NZ) features, especially in the Antarctic area make it a worthwhile visit. I think a fish person could probably spend a decent amount of time in here, but if your not (like me) then an hour to one and a half hours is probably reasonable.

I did like the windows looking out onto the sea outside. I forgot to mention that. I don't know that this area has changed much from before anyway, apart for the addition of the touch-tanks and they were putting in some pillars or something like that? They certainly haven't turned it into a fantasy island of rays like at Sydney, which I appreciate.

Those windows are pretty cool. The rest of that area has changed quite a bit; the cafe has moved to the area where you previously queued for the SnowCat ride, and the touch tanks have replaced it, while the kids play area is a totally new area too. The ray tank appears not to have changed much at all, although the interactive signs are all new.

the shark tank is really small (in my opinion they'd do better to connect both tunnel tanks into one if that were possible). The ornamentations (waka, statues, cannons, etc etc) were not there when I visited.

I don't know much about the space needed for fish, but I didn't think the shark tank appeared too small. It did appear empty though. I think it would be pretty much impossible to expand the tank, it would be a massive mission. We'll just ask them to build a new shark tank area entirely :D

this was easily my favourite area. The fish were nice species, and only some of the tanks were off (e.g. the Lego one, the octopus one).

I found it too higgeldy-piggeldy, although the individual exhibits were pretty good. The lego was dumb - that should definiteyl be removed.

the tanks are indeed very very nice in here but I have to disagree that "the area works brilliantly". In my opinion it is just bizarre theming it as a Mayan temple. If they were displaying the piranhas in there, or reptiles, then maybe....but seahorses? It literally makes no sense!

Its a sunken jungle temple inhabited by seahorses - it makes perfect sense!!! Honestly, I found the theming relatively restrained here, it highlighted the displays well and didn't extend into the tanks themselves. I had no problem with it at all.


that is interesting. All those displays were still there when I visited!

Definitely sad that they have gone, they were very interesting.

I would like to see Kelly Tarlton's be expanded, and ideally be turned into a journey from Antarctica north: heading from the penguins and Scott's Hut, through the Southern Ocean display, to NZ pelagic through to coastal species (rays, sharks, oceanarium), some freshwater species (eels) and the some tropical species (which could include species from northern territories - e.g. Kermadecs). They can ditch the piranhas and exotic tropical reef fish, and focus on NZ species. This would also require spreading the native fish gallery species throughout the aquarium, rather than clumping them in one room, and removing Seahorse Kingdom. Creating a coherent journey would be really awesome.
 
I have to go back up to Auckland at some point (I have a free whale watch because there were no cetaceans at all seen on the one I did when I was there last month), so I think I shall return to Kelly Tarltons and see what I think of it then.
 
News from their facebook page:Seven Gentoo Penguins have hatched!

Photos here: https://www.facebook.com/#!/KellyTarltons

Story here: Tiny baby penguins at Kelly Tarlton's - Story - Environment/Sci - 3 News

Cute baby penguins are now old enough to be viewed at Kelly Tarlton’s Sea Life Aquarium in Auckland.

Seven Gentoo penguins were born last month at the aquarium’s new enclosure, as well as three King penguins earlier last year.

The young Gentoo penguins are only 10 to 15cm tall and are already venturing out where visitors can see them.

The Gentoo chicks take 35 days to develop inside the egg after laying, then take 48 hours to hatch from the shell.

Gentoo penguins grow about 75 to 90cm tall and live 17 to 22 years, or longer in captivity.

Kelly Tarlton’s sales and marketing manager Maggie King says the staff at the aquarium are always pleased to see new babies.

“We’re all thrilled, we’re always thrilled.”

Ms King says the centre has an average of 10 penguins born each year and has New Zealand’s largest penguin colony.

“We have a very successful breeding programme and a high survival rate.”

All of the parents of the new babies were born and bred at Kelly Tarltons as part of the breeding programme.

In total there are 40 adult Gentoo penguins, 30 adult King penguins, and 10 chicks at the centre who live in a new penguin enclosure which opened in September last year.

Aviculturist at Kelly Tarlton’s Laura Seaman says the enclosure is larger and more like the penguins’ natural habitat.

“Although the penguins don’t experience the same fight for life as their sub-Antarctic counterparts, we believe it’s extremely important to replicate their natural environment and we’ve done just that with our new state-of-the-art enclosure.”

In the wild Gentoo penguins are found in an area ranging from the sub-Antarctic Islands down to the Antarctic Peninsula. The World Conservation Union lists the birds as “near threatened.
 
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Find Nemo at Kelly Tarlton?s
22 April 2013

More than 250 clownfish have gone on display at Kelly Tarlton’s Sea Life Aquarium in Auckland just in time for the school holidays.

The fish, made famous by the popular children’s movie Finding Nemo, are part of a new zone dedicated to marine conservation.

The new Conservation Zone educates visitors about habitat threats facing clownfish from coral bleaching and rising water temperatures. Clownfish are bred in order for scientists to learn more about how changes to the ocean are effecting the survival of juvenile fish on the Great Barrier Reef.
 
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