Tropical Cove
The entry to this gallery is decorated with statues of coral and reef fish "swimming" around it. Once in, projections of a reef are seen on the walls, and a bright light is ahead. Guests enter a room where they see a fairly large tank in the wall with white sand, rocks, and live coral. In this tank-
Porkfish
Queen angelfish
Clown triggerfish
Ornate cowfish
Goldsaddle goatfish
Yellow boxfish
Striped burrfish
Splendid garden eel
Spotted garden eel
Bubble coral
Brain coral
Leather coral
Trumpet coral
Emperor shrimp
Blue spotted jawfish
Humpback grouper
Yellow clown goby
Bluestreak cleaner wrasse
Not too far from this tank, a similar-sized tank with live coral, rocks, and sand for warty frogfish and stonefish.
Further down the gallery, another tank appears, on the right wall. A rocky den, fake coral with hiding holes, and large plant pots hiding holes, sand, broken bivalve shells, and live plants are in this exhibit with-
Green moray eel
Snowflake moray eel
Dragon moray eel
Honeycomb moray eel
Clearfin lionfish
Banded coral shrimp
Ahead, a touch tank called Coral Bay houses-
Fiddler ray
Yellow stingray
Bicolor angelfish
Lemonpeel angelfish
Blue chromis
Coral catshark
Chocolate chip sea star
Blue sea star
Banggai cardinalfish
Royal sea star
Biscuit sea star
Longspine urchin
Porcelain crab
Scarlet reef hermit crab
Tiger sea cucumber
Guests continue further into the gallery and pass through another decorated hall. A replica reef with replica reef animals and plants decorates both sides of the hallway's walls, immersing guests deeper into the experience. Soon, guests enter a dark room with a few tanks. In the first tank ahead, which is the largest, a smack of Pacific sea nettle. To the left, a round tank with a light at the bottom that slowly changes color. In there, moon jellies.
On the opposite end of this room, near the exit, two larger tanks. One is nearly full, but leaves a little room for guests to see the surface, allowing a perfect view for the Portuguese man-o-war. In the tank next to it, a box jelly. Near a corner of the room, a tall cylindrical tank with a smack of crystal jellies. The final tank is across the sea nettles and houses a small group of cannonball jellies.
The grandest exhibit in this gallery is next, and rather than a standard tank, this exhibit is a short tunnel, much shorter than the last. Not only is the ceiling and walls acrylic, but the floor is, too. This is the large reef exhibit, housing several species, all of which are-
Emperor angelfish
Indian triggerfish
Blue-spotted stingray
Yellow tang
Blue hippo tang
Powder blue tang
Sailfin tang
Convict tang
Bicolor parrotfish
Yellow watchman goby
Foxface rabbitfish
Blonde naso tang
Achilles tang
Clown tang
Orange-shoulder tang
Purple tang
Bluespine unicornfish
Moorish idol
Copperband butterflyfish
Kole tang
Flame angelfish
Whitetip reef shark
Squarespot anthias
Mandarinfish
Royal gramma
Tomato grouper
Yellowbanded sweetlips
Pink skunk clownfish
Epaulette shark
Harlequin filefish
Yellow longnose butterflyfish
Yellowtail snapper
Blacktip reef shark
Caribbean spiny lobster
Sailfin snapper
This exhibit is larger than it appears, allowing this many species to live in it. Now for the coral, sponge, and anemone species making the reef in this habitat-
Toadstool mushroom coral
Kenya tree coral
Glove polyp
Brain coral
Orange tree gorgonian
Young blushing finger leather coral
Blue ridge coral
Orange fan sponge
Giant carpet sea anemone
Past this exhibit, a few bubble tanks are lined up next to each other, going down the hall. They all have sand, broken seashells, and strands of sea grass. In the first tank, ocellaris clownfish, Wyoming white clownfish, maroon clownfish, and magnificent sea anemone.
In the next bubble tank, lined seahorse and common seahorse.
Bubble tank 3 houses a few common cuttlefish.
Bubble tank 4 has bannerfish and a Hawaiian day octopus.
Bubble tank 5 is a home for a few leafy seadragons.
The last bubble tank is decorated with white gravel, broken bivalve shells, and a large artificial coral hide. Swimming here, a peacock mantis shrimp.
Down the gallery, the last few exhibits are coming. In the wall to the left, a large enclosure with live plants, coconut husk and wood chips for substrate, large log hides, tree limbs for climbing, small logs and rocks stacked to make more hiding areas, and a forest backdrop, all making a home for a Fiji banded iguana.
Not too far from the lizard and on the opposite side as the last exhibit, a large tank for bigfin reef squid.
On to the next and last gallery.