Jakarta Aquarium

Yes, what I meant is the fish tank.

The aquarium houses caesio cuning, yellowfin surgeonfish, trachinotus blochii, snapper (Mangrove red and emperor red), trevally (Giant, bigeye, and golden), grouper (Potato, brown-marbled, and giant), ray (spotted eagle, jenkin's, reticulate, cowtail, and round ribbontail), and shark (Blacktip reef and tawny nurse). This is the species that I've know so far, there could be more that I didn't put here.

There are also some whitetip reef sharks, zebra sharks, whitespotted wedgefish, common shovelnose ray, hawksbill turtles, green sea turtles, mixed parrotfish species, some spangled emperors and humphead wrasses

Oh wait, this is for Jakarta Aquarium not SeaWorld Ancol. Sorry.
 
Via their Instagram story, Jakarta Aquarium announced that the giant Pacific octopus (Enteroctopus dofleini) has returned to it's exhibit. When it first open during the New Normal, the octopus can't be seen in it's exhibit and replaced with fish like common lionfish (Pterois miles), estuarine stonefish (Synanceia horrida), and De Beaufort's flathead (Cymbacephalus beauforti), and then converted to a saltwater pufferfish aquarium. The octopus could probably be phased out for a while for a unknown reason, I and @Fargusno originally presumed that it's died somewhere during the quarantine.
 
Jakarta Aquarium put the seadragons (Weedy and leafy) on display again after being absent for a while. Their aquarium is temporarely used as a Australia themed aquarium with old wifes (Enoplosus armatus) after the quarantine.
Login • Instagram
 

Jakarta Aquarium has these deep-water species in display as of 2021, as seen on this video:
  • Weedy seadragon
  • Leafy seadragon
  • Longspine snipefish
  • Popeye catalufa
  • Eyelightfish
  • Pineconefish
  • Old wife
  • Ornate boxfish
  • Cherry anthias
  • Giant Pacific octopus
  • Giant isopod
  • Horsehair crab
  • North Pacific seastar
  • Blue bat star
Deep-water species that are no longer displayed there:
  • Chambered nautilus
  • Shield-backed kelp crab
  • Flower hat jelly
 
As an extra, Jakarta Aquarium has acquired and displayed these fauna as well, as seen from the videos uploaded by Indo Exotic Pets:

Terrestrial fauna:
  • Golfodulcean poison frog
  • Blue poison dart frog
  • Green and black poison dart frog
  • Dyeing poison dart frog
  • Weber's sailfin lizard
  • Sunbeam snake
  • Blue-and-yellow macaw
  • Gray's leaf insect
  • Orchid mantis
Freshwater fauna:
  • Saddled bichir
  • Senegal bichir
  • Black ghost knifefish
  • Three spot gourami
  • Tucunaré peacock bass
  • Amur sturgeon
Marine fauna:
  • De Beaufort's flathead
  • Clown triggerfish
  • Chinese trumpetfish
  • Blackfin barracuda
  • Indian mud moray
  • Fan-bellied filefish
  • Longheaded eagle ray
  • Ornate spiny lobster
  • Pacific cleaner shrimp
  • Squat shrimp
  • Dardanus megistos
  • Granulated sea star
I think there are also more than this, but mostly small reef fishes that aren't pretty unique at all. It's a big haul for Jakarta Aquarium's collection, after their rebranding to Jakarta Aquarium & Urban Safari last year. It seems that they want to focus on the safari part for the first floor and the aquarium part on the second floor. But I'm still confused on why they converted the coconut crab/mudskipper exhibit into an el-lamo exhibit for a lone macaw. I mean, they could display something else instead there like the red tegu they used to display or probably a small wetland exhibit for a dwarf crocodile or softshell turtle.
 
Hello everyone! Today I just visited Jakarta Aquarium, and I decided to make a little report.

I went there at 10 AM by car, and it wasn't as packed as usual. There were visitors though, but most of them are kindergarteners and babies. When I entered the aquarium, I was welcomed by three exhibits: one housing some longhorn cowfish, blue-green chromis and red-cheeked anthias, one housing assorted clownfish, blue tangs and bird wrasses and one housing some volitan lionfish and a lone crocodilefish.

Then, I went to the Islands of Indonesia section. The left side housed otters as usual, and I was treated with an otter show, where they do tricks such as picking up plastic bottles and raising a flag. And on the right side is an exhibit housing a lone female serval named Senna, along with assorted cheapo freshwater fishes such as tilapias, oscars, mayan cichlids, common carps, hard-lipped barbs, torpedo barbs and a pair of duckbill catfish in the underwater area. I saw Senna eating on a large tilapia corpse, and it was freshly killed. The zookeeper said that sometimes Senna catches any fishes that swims into the shallower part, although she never swims. The fishes are added as a decor and as an enrichment.

Then, my journey continued to the Rainforest of Indonesia section. There's a zookeeper offering photos with a reticulated python, which was pretty tame and friendly, a glass case exhibit housing 2.3 cotton-top tamarins, a bird house with a spotted wood owl inside (and an empty one that supposed to house a barn owl), a coconut crab exhibit (where the phyton used to be), two terraria (one with axolotls and one with poison dart frogs) and a small corner with two paludaria and two terraria. The first paludarium contains a pair of Northern snake-necked turtles, along with some clown barbs and three spot gouramis, and the second paludarium is empty (what the heck). I asked the zookeeper that it used to house the bichirs and black ghost knifefish, but they're going to be replaced with Mormyrus longirostris soon. The two terraria houses a pair of horned frogs and a red-knee tarantula. Not far from the corner is a circular terrarium housing a pair of juvenile Weber's sailfin lizard. The chameleons has been phased out and moved to Taman Safari. There's also a circular exhibit that used to house the coconut crabs, now housing a lone blue-and-yellow macaw named Jacob. Sometimes Jacob shocks me with his loud screeches and caws. Unfortunately, the mudskippers and ghost crabs were also phased out. The zookeeper said that Jacob will get a new exhibit soon, and his former exhibit will be used for a reptile (hopefully a caiman because Jakarta Aquarium needs a crocodilian).

On to the Nursery of the Sea area, I went to the two log exhibits first. One still housing the blue-tongued skinks and Forsten's tortoises and one apparently housing a large red tegu. These two can be touched, but they cannot be taken out of their exhibit. The archerfish are still there, but the bamboo sharks, halfbeaks and reef lobsters are gone. Instead, they're replaced by sea cucumbers and small mangrove horseshoe crabs. I was lucky that it was feeding time, so I recorded them spraying on some nightcrawlers. Onwards to the mammal displays, I went to the binturong exhibit first. Ajun is currently being quarantined, but her mate Jovin and her child Jimmy are there. Jimmy was born last year, and it just celebrated its 1st birthday few weeks ago. I had the chance to feed and headpat Jimmy, and for someone who hasn't visited a zoo or an aquarium for a year it felt like a little shocking experience. I also got to feed the meerkats on the adjacent exhibit too. There are also dusky pademelons, but they cannot be fed unfortunately. After that, I continued to the ray exhibit. All of the ray species from the previous years are there, including the zebra shark and the remoras, but the bowmouth guitarfish and spotted sicklefish are off-display. On the shallow part, there are some dwarf whiprays and blue-spotted ribbontail rays. There's also a collection of small reptiles and insects in terraria, which included Sumatran stick insect, Eurycnema versirubra, Gray's leaf insect, orchid mantis, emerald tree skink and sunbeam snake. The Caucasus beetle and Alcides stag beetle are off-display, and the terrarium that used to house them has been dismantled.

After finishing the safari part of the aquarium, I continued to the aquarium part. The first area is the Swirls and Jewels area. The swirl tank is still in good shape, and still houses the usual fishes (Indo-Pacific tarpons and Indian threadfish). The circular tanks that used to house rare reef creatures now houses live corals and small reef fishes and creatures such as Thor amboinensis, porcelain crabs, Helfrichi's firefish, Turbo marmoratus, Banggai cardinalfish, messmate pipefish, sand-sifting starfish and Diadema setosum. The two tube tanks houses assorted damselfish, Combtooth blenny, Parupeneus barberinus, anemone hermit crab, speckled sandperch, spotted hawkfish, blue and white ribbon eels. The two nearby vertical tanks houses small moray eels (snowflake, zebra and barred moray) and sygnathids (tigertail seahorse and alligator pipefish).

The outer reefs exhibit also houses great barracudas, giant and laced morays now, in addition of large reef fishes from surgeonfish, wrasses, angelfish, butterflyfish, triggerfish and some other fishes such as crowned squirrelfish and longfin bannerfish. The circular tank houses assorted filefish, Diana's hogfish, fairy wrasses and striped eel catfish now, and the garden eels and razorfish that previously occupied the exhibit moved to the former cardinalfish exhibit. The wall tank has been converted from a small reef fish exhibit into an exhibit housing three species of spiny lobsters (pronghorn, scalloped and longlegged). The nearby exhibit still houses the sea dragons, but only the weedy sea dragon was seen, while the adjacent exhibit still houses the giant Pacific octopus like back in 2019.

On to the touch pool area, the touch pool is considerably barren compared to back in the previous years. Now only houses large brown-banded bamboo sharks, a lone blue-spotted ribbontail rays and two species of starfish (chocolate chip and cushion). The abyss exhibit also houses horsehair crabs now in addition of the giant isopods, since both are crustaceans. The shark egg exhibit also houses the cardinalfish from the exhibit that now houses the ribbon eels. There's also an exhibit housing various Pacific fishes such as old wife, ornate and Shaw's cowfish, cherry anthias and a lone popeye catalufa.

The freshwater area hasn't changed much compared to my last visit back in 2019, only the small freshwater fishes exhibit is now occupied by payaras and goliath tigerfish. The piranhas are replaced by smaller piranhas, and a pair of Amur sturgeons and azul peacock bass are added in the tinfoil barb tank, and it's still overstocked as usual. I asked the zookeeper to send all of the tinfoil barbs to Taman Safari, and he will try to do it so the exhibit wont be overstocked again. One of the sturgeons appears to be healthy and the other one is in bad shape. Meanwhile, the waterfall basin tank gets new additions such as spotted gars, redtail catfish, giant mottled eel, alligator gars, pacus (black and albino), pintado catfish, tiger shovelnose catfish and a yellow-tailed Asian arowana. The biotope exhibit has been converted from a Javan biotope to an Amazonian biotope housing three discus and two Altum angelfish. I think the sailfin lizards would look nice here.

Now, to the jellyfish area. The jellyfish exhibits appears to be a little empty today. The moon jelly exhibit is filled with smaller specimen, the flower hat jelly is replaced by upside-down jellies and the sea nettle exhibit has only three individuals. The nautilus exhibit is now home to a school of splitfin flashlightfish and popeye catalufas, and the former Pacific fish exhibit now houses snipefishes from the isopod exhibit and some juvenile pineconefish. The Southern Sea exhibit still remains the same, sans the groupers (giant, Malabar, orange-spotted and blue and yellow). The green sea turtle from the Nursery of the Sea area moves here, and I hope the hawksbill turles also move here in the future. The sharks and rays are still there, minus the bowmouth guitarfish.

So far, Jakarta Aquarium has both improved and sucked at the same time. They added new animals and improved their mammalian and reptilian collection, but they also put some animals off-display without notice.
 
An new exhibit has been built, located before the boat photo booth in the top floor. The exhibit have sand substrate and a dead tree. The would-be occupant is currently unknown.
 
As Jakarta Aquarium finally open to the public once again after being closed due to the PPKM, the aquarium have acquired some new species as well some changes in several exhibits.

The pond at the serval exhibit houses more colorful fish like white tilapias and red devils, which also used as live foods for Senna the serval. Jacob the blue-and-yellow macaw is now displayed near the otter exhibit, not sure what is in the former beach exhibit now. The whitespotted bamboo sharks lived with the dwarf whipray and bluespotted ribbontail ray in the shallow aquarium. A group of striped eel catfish occupied the former damselfish aquarium

One of the two new species is a pair of Prevost's squirrel, replacing the cotton-top tamarins. It came from Taman Safari Bogor, as many other land species at the aquarium do. This pair could also be the same squirrels I see at Taman Safari during my visit on December last year (Primate Center - Exhibit for Prevost's squirel - ZooChat). Seems like they granted my wish of them being replaced by a small primate, which is currently unknown (Could be the cotton-top tamarins from the aquarium).

The second new species is definitely one of the best new arrivals in 2021 so far after Maya the snow leopard, which is a pair of spotted wobbegong, living in the former giant Pacific octopus aquarium. This is the first time a wobbegong is displayed in a Indonesian aquaria. The pair origin is unknown, they could be a wild caught (All two news segments talking about the pair specificly said that the wobbegongs are native to the waters of Bali and Lombok, they could possibly misinterprated where the pair came from) or from a Japanese or Australian aquaria. Sad to see the octopus go thought.
Screenshot_2021-10-10-19-54-49-86.png
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_2021-10-10-19-54-49-86.png
    Screenshot_2021-10-10-19-54-49-86.png
    481.9 KB · Views: 74
Last edited:
As Jakarta Aquarium finally open to the public once again after being closed due to the PPKM, the aquarium have acquired some new species as well some changes in several exhibits.

The pond at the serval exhibit houses more colorful fish like white tilapias and red devils, which also used as live foods for Senna the serval. Jacob the blue-and-yellow macaw is now displayed near the otter exhibit, not sure what is in the former beach exhibit now. The whitespotted bamboo sharks lived with the dwarf whipray and bluespotted ribbontail ray in the shallow aquarium. A group of striped eel catfish occupied the former damselfish aquarium

One of the two new species is a pair of Prevost's squirrel, replacing the cotton-top tamarins. It came from Taman Safari Bogor, as many other land species at the aquarium do. This pair could also be the same squirrels I see at Taman Safari during my visit on December last year (Primate Center - Exhibit for Prevost's squirel - ZooChat). Seems like they granted my wish of them being replaced by a small primate, which is currently unknown (Could be the cotton-top tamarins from the aquarium).

The second new species is definitely one of the best new arrivals in 2021 so far after Maya the snow leopard, which is a pair of spotted wobbegong, living in the former giant Pacific octopus aquarium. This is the first time a wobbegong is displayed in a Indonesian aquaria. The pair origin is unknown, they could be a wild caught (All two news segments talking about the pair specificly said that the wobbegongs are native to the waters of Bali and Lombok, they could possibly misinterprated where the pair came from) or from a Japanese or Australian aquaria. Sad to see the octopus go thought.
View attachment 512072

I have a feeling that the wobbegongs displayed here may be Indonesian wobbegongs
Indonesian Wobbegong – EPI
 
Jakarta Aquarium apparently planned to acquire a black-and-white ruffed lemur from Taman Safari Bogor. Out of all mammals in the aquarium, this one is very out of place, they have dusky pademelons and meerkats but this one seems really weird for me.
Rayakan Hari Jadi ke-4, Jakarta Aquarium & Safari Hadirkan 5 Hal Baru!

Yet Jakarta Aquarium has yet to acquire an Arapaima, but they couldn't
The former beach exhibit could've been converted into a tank for mid-sized arapaimas, and for the gars and arowanas from the cascade tank
 
, and the second paludarium is empty (what the heck). I asked the zookeeper that it used to house the bichirs and black ghost knifefish, but they're going to be replaced with Mormyrus longirostris soon.
The mormyrids were apparently housed with the blind cave fish. Unusual mix, but still two nice species.
 
Back
Top