Are These in Captivity?

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Are any of these in captivity?

- Mako Sharks?
- Swordfish/Marlin?
Mako Sharks have been attempted but none lasted long, the longest surviving one lived five days.
No Swordfish or Marlin as far as I know but the Fukushima Aquarium recently obtained a juvenile Sailfish (close enough, right?) and has has a few others in the past. Not sure how long it will last, billfish do notoriously poor in captivity. Apparently they are doing research into increasing the welfare of captive billfish, so pehaps someday the long-term keeping of sailfish will not just be a dream.
 
Mako Sharks have been attempted but none lasted long, the longest surviving one lived five days.
No Swordfish or Marlin as far as I know but the Fukushima Aquarium recently obtained a juvenile Sailfish (close enough, right?) and has has a few others in the past. Not sure how long it will last, billfish do notoriously poor in captivity. Apparently they are doing research into increasing the welfare of captive billfish, so pehaps someday the long-term keeping of sailfish will not just be a dream.

The issue with billfish is they swim extremely fast and are used to traveling long distances in open ocean. So if a fish sees something it wants to investigate on the other side of the glass in an aquarium, it will zoom 60mph towards it, snapping its bill in half against the side of the tank. It takes a very short time for them to die of stress in aquaria, sadly.
 
The issue with billfish is they swim extremely fast and are used to traveling long distances in open ocean. So if a fish sees something it wants to investigate on the other side of the glass in an aquarium, it will zoom 60mph towards it, snapping its bill in half against the side of the tank. It takes a very short time for them to die of stress in aquaria, sadly.
I think it's more that the bill is easily broken more than that of their space requirement, as many open sea species that are used to swimming large distances are kept in multiple places and seem to do fairly well (Tunas, Whale Sharks, Mantas, etc). But even then, I'm no expert on billfish so take my thoughts with a grain of salt.
 
I think it's more that the bill is easily broken more than that of their space requirement, as many open sea species that are used to swimming large distances are kept in multiple places and seem to do fairly well (Tunas, Whale Sharks, Mantas, etc). But even then, I'm no expert on billfish so take my thoughts with a grain of salt.

Well whale sharks and mantas are very languorous, slow swimmers. Billfish, makos, great whites, threshers, blues, etc. are fast swimmers. Tuna swim fast, too, but for some reason they seem to be the exception to the rule. Also, I believe only yellowfin, bigeye, and skipjack tuna are kept in aquaria; bluefin, the biggest, are not. Monterey Bay used to keep both yellowfin and bluefin, but several of their large bluefin killed themselves by crashing into the glass.
 
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Well whale sharks and mantas are very languorous, slow swimmers. Billfish, makos, great whites, threshers, blues, etc. are fast swimmers. Tuna swim fast, too, but for some reason they seem to be the exception to the rule. Also, I believe only yellowfin, bigeye, and skipjack tuna are kept in aquaria; bluefin, the biggest, are not. Monterey Bay used to keep both yellowfin and bluefin, but several of their large bluefin killed themselves by crashing into the glass.
Tokyo Sea Life Park and Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium have bluefin, TSLP has had them for several years, idk how long the ones at OCA have been there.
 
I've heard of another Laysan in Japan, but I have never heard any specifics.
I've only heard it alluded to a couple times, I don't know any specifics or whether it was even true to begin with.
I wouldn't be surprised at all if one or more albatrosses were in captivity in Japan, but what is your actual source? Just saying "I heard it" isn't very informative.
 
Ok, which Seaworld and where in that SeaWorld? last I checked Seaworld only had occasional small aviaries and weren't very much into special avians. Also could you share these photos.
They were in an aviary on the right hand side of the park. There was a restaurant to the left and large patch of grass to the right. They were at the far right after the grass. I will have to see if I can find the pics. It was sea world San Diego. It was a small aviary, same type they used to house the other species from weavers to great blue touracos
 
They were in an aviary on the right hand side of the park. There was a restaurant to the left and large patch of grass to the right. They were at the far right after the grass. I will have to see if I can find the pics. It was sea world San Diego. It was a small aviary, same type they used to house the other species from weavers to great blue touracos
Ah yes the one behind calypso bat smokehouse. That has also held crowned cranes and some form toucan but they no longer keep ibis on exhibit. For some reason sea world has been taking all of their birds and bringing them behind the scenes.
 
Hi all, first time on the thread.
Just wanted to inquire if any facilities in South/Central America bear Amazonian manatees (Trichechus inunguis) in their respective collections ?
 
I’m surprised they’ve been able to keep them alive.
TSLP had a major die-off of tuna a couple years ago, they were all doing fine but then started dropping like flies. No cause was found but disease/water contamination seems likely.
 
Posted Dec 2018, completeness I'm not sure. Note Omaha as Henry Doorly.

Common brown lemur, Eulemur fulvus (x)
NORTH AMERICA:
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Alameda Park (1,0)
Austin Zoo and Animal Sanctuary (2,1)
Capital of Texas (x,x)
Central Florida (0,2)
Henry Doorly (1,0)
Lemur Conservation Foundation (5,1)
Louisiana Purchase (1,0)
 
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