X - AQUARIUM TROPICAL DE LA PORTE DORÈE
Near the Paris Zoo there is a relatively small aquarium focused in tropical species.
After visit all kinds of collections, I've learnt to detect when a "mad genius" is managing a zoo (the selection of the collection, the design of the exhibitions...) and a visit to this aquarium show you that there is a wonderful mad genius in charge of this place. The collection and the aquariums are not the simply tanks for piranhas, Indo-Pacific sea species... (that of course they are present), they show lots of aquariums showing endangered species of different areas, and the exhibition that you can see better is the area focused in Madagascar species.
If you visit a normal zoo and this zoo has a selection of Madagascar species, the 90% of the parks are going to show the typical lemurs, maybe one or two species of birds and the typical phelsumas, panther chameleons... but, what about the other species? Madagascar is a great hotspot with lots of endemic species of invertebrates and fishes, how many big zoos show these ones? And not talk about aquariums collections, I don't remember so much aquariums showing species from Madagascar and lots of them are as much endangered like critically endangered lemurs. In this aquarium you are not only going to see a nice selection of endangered fishes species from Madagascar like Bedotias or Ptychochromis cichlids, you are going to see a WONDERFUL big exhibition showing how the aquarium staff made an expedition to Madagascar to find females of the critically endangered cichlid Joba Mena (or Ptychochromis insolitus) (that was because the last captive female died in 2013) and import them to create a captive breeding program. The exhibition shows in pannels and recreations how the expedition was made, showing real sizes cabines of small planes, the jeeps of Madagascar... very interesting, specially for the public. In an age that sometimes the public see zoos and aquariums just like "entertainment centers" (at least in Spain), exhibitions like that can be very important to show the work that there is backstage.
The rest of the collection shows a central enclosure for albino alligators and different sea and freshwater tanks from all over the world, and lots of different species, including really endangered taxa. I love visit aquariums because I always add at least one or two new species, but I really enjoyed a visit to this aquarium. I'm a fan of Gerald Durrell and his vision of zoos focused in the most endangered, least study species and this aquarium follows 100% this vision.
Like the Menagerie, I've really interesting in revisit this small aquarium. When I visited, a new section focused in French Guiana was in development and in the past, in the IG stories of Thomas Ziegler I saw how zookeepers of this aquarium travelled to Kolner Zoo to learn how to make training of the highly endangered philippine crocodile, so maybe we could see this species in the future.
100% recommended, it's beside the Paris Zoo and is perfectly complementary to a visit to the zoo, this aquarium is not big and you can see with no hurries in 1 or 1 and a half hour.
Near the Paris Zoo there is a relatively small aquarium focused in tropical species.
After visit all kinds of collections, I've learnt to detect when a "mad genius" is managing a zoo (the selection of the collection, the design of the exhibitions...) and a visit to this aquarium show you that there is a wonderful mad genius in charge of this place. The collection and the aquariums are not the simply tanks for piranhas, Indo-Pacific sea species... (that of course they are present), they show lots of aquariums showing endangered species of different areas, and the exhibition that you can see better is the area focused in Madagascar species.
If you visit a normal zoo and this zoo has a selection of Madagascar species, the 90% of the parks are going to show the typical lemurs, maybe one or two species of birds and the typical phelsumas, panther chameleons... but, what about the other species? Madagascar is a great hotspot with lots of endemic species of invertebrates and fishes, how many big zoos show these ones? And not talk about aquariums collections, I don't remember so much aquariums showing species from Madagascar and lots of them are as much endangered like critically endangered lemurs. In this aquarium you are not only going to see a nice selection of endangered fishes species from Madagascar like Bedotias or Ptychochromis cichlids, you are going to see a WONDERFUL big exhibition showing how the aquarium staff made an expedition to Madagascar to find females of the critically endangered cichlid Joba Mena (or Ptychochromis insolitus) (that was because the last captive female died in 2013) and import them to create a captive breeding program. The exhibition shows in pannels and recreations how the expedition was made, showing real sizes cabines of small planes, the jeeps of Madagascar... very interesting, specially for the public. In an age that sometimes the public see zoos and aquariums just like "entertainment centers" (at least in Spain), exhibitions like that can be very important to show the work that there is backstage.
The rest of the collection shows a central enclosure for albino alligators and different sea and freshwater tanks from all over the world, and lots of different species, including really endangered taxa. I love visit aquariums because I always add at least one or two new species, but I really enjoyed a visit to this aquarium. I'm a fan of Gerald Durrell and his vision of zoos focused in the most endangered, least study species and this aquarium follows 100% this vision.
Like the Menagerie, I've really interesting in revisit this small aquarium. When I visited, a new section focused in French Guiana was in development and in the past, in the IG stories of Thomas Ziegler I saw how zookeepers of this aquarium travelled to Kolner Zoo to learn how to make training of the highly endangered philippine crocodile, so maybe we could see this species in the future.
100% recommended, it's beside the Paris Zoo and is perfectly complementary to a visit to the zoo, this aquarium is not big and you can see with no hurries in 1 or 1 and a half hour.