I went to the aquarium today.
- The dolphins are expected to move in the next 3-5 years. They were originally supposed to move around 2020 but that was delayed due to covid. When the dolphins move, that whole building the dolphins currently live will be renovated.
- In the Upland Tropical Rain Forest, all the parrots go off exhibit around the afternoon time, but there is no set time as it all depends on staffing. They can be destructive so they cannot be on exhibit when the bird staff are not around. Also, the blue-crowned motmot is off exhibit recovering from an injury, but is expected to return in a month or two.
- In the rain forest, the best place to view the golden lion tamarins from a distance is the left corner of the top deck. You used to be able to see better from the lower deck but in front near the right corner of the lower deck is now covered by plants so it’s harder. However, they like to hide a lot, so most times you won’t see them. I was there twice, the first time I didn’t see them but the second time I was lucky and they were moving around and not hiding. Even when they were on exhibit, they were not seen a lot of times because they liked hiding in the trees and now they’re so old and even way more difficult to see, considering they like to rest and hide more and you could only see them from a far distance in their off-exhibit monkey suite in the far left corner of the rainforest.
- In the Maryland: Mountains of the Sea exhibit on the second floor, the clearnose skate in the Atlantic shelf tank is currently sick and off exhibit and the sign is gone. He is elderly and used to live in the Living Seashore when he was younger. However, he is expected to return soon and the sign will come back.
- In Blacktip Reef, we are down to six male Blacktip Reef sharks. All of them are around 15 years old and Blacktip Reef sharks usually only live in their early teens so they’re really old. The exhibit started with 10 males and 10 females, four males have died over the years as they got old and the females were sent elsewhere because they started fighting with the males.