National Aquarium of New Zealand National Aquarium, Napier

NZ Jeremy

Well-Known Member
Booked my flights today and shall be going on Thursday...

I plan on taking (and posting) lots of photos, doing a (quick) review and probably creating a Wikipedia page...

Is there anything in particular anyone would like me to photograph or ask..?
 
Review

Hello all, I've been meaning to post my photos and do a review since I got back, oh about February 2nd..!

Anyway here is a Map of the Aquarium I'll refer to it as I go along so keep it as a window down the bottom of your screen...

Fish Map

First a bit of history, the aquarium was built on its current location in 1976 and won many accolades on completion, by 2000 it was looking a bit tired and an 8 million dollar expansion (and full revamp of the old building) was completed in 2002… Upon entry, whether in an old or new area of the aquarium it feels like it opened yesterday…

This is the 1976 (built) part of the complex:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

And here is the extension:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

After entering you go up the stairs and turn right, you now enter the fresh water exhibit hall…

Exhibit 5 (on the map) is the chiclids or African tank, here is a photo:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Next is exhibit 6 or the South American fresh water tank:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

and finally in this room exhibit 7, the Asian fresh water tank:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Here a view of the three side by side:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

After the fresh water hall you pass through a small room with a recreation of a backyard Koi exhibit on one side with a turtle vivarium on the other... As you exit this room you have a Piranha tank on your left, a blue tongued skink exhibit and a Eastern water dragon exhibit on your right…

Piranha tank (a bit small and unexciting I thought):

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Water dragons (left) skinks (right), exhibit 10 and 11:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

After this is a truly impressive exhibit, basically a glass fronted giant terrarium with the water line running the front of the exhibit containg a salt water croc, exhibit 12 on your map:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

I went on a one on one behind the scenes tour (you and a staff member for an hour for only $28, awesome!) and took a few snaps, this is the filtration system from this croc exhibit, it contains a sand filter, bio filters and heating coils:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Next up was the tropical reef tank, exhibit 14… It was very disappointing, my tour guide Scotty said that this was the only part of the aquarium the operators weren’t happy with… The tank's problems are due to the fact they designed it to use natural light and the sky light was well over 2m away from the surface of the water:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

The next animal display was the Tuatara terrarium and it was a beauty, the best I’ve ever seen and contained the largest Tuatara I’ve ever seen, exhibit 16 on the map:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

That ends the upper level of the ‘old’ Aquarium, the lower level had a great kiwi display (no photos allowed sorry), a NZ fresh water river tank (inside the kiwi display gallery), an eel tank, a large heated tank for the long term hawk billed turtle (which has been at the aquarium 20 years or so) and these sea dragons tanks (one of these used to hold Octopi but the tapping on them by people caused them to die). Exhibit 26 and 27:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

At this point my guide took me out the back and showed me the holding, quarantine and breeding tanks at the aquarium… These tanks had the fish not on display and some pretty rare fish in NZ… My guide said in some of the tanks the fish were the last in NZ and Department of Conservation wouldn’t be allowing more so they were conducting breeding efforts, I can’t remember species except they did have some spider crabs they were keeping in very cold water…

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Finally the highlight of the aquarium (as it is at many) was the 1,500,000 litre oceanarium with a 50m acrylic tunnel, it was very well done and looked great, filled with healthy, active fish… I have been to aquariums in Auckland, Sydney, Mooloolaba, Melbourne and Sydney and this tank at least equalled any I have seen at those institutions… It is exhibit 29 and 30 on the map:

This is the main viewing window into the tank:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

The water had this amazing colour all the time on the two separate days I went…

A view from inside the tunnel and a snap of a shark which was in the main tank:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

This is above the water, from left to right, taken while being shown the filtration systems the aquarium uses:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

This last image is a look at the impressive filters used in the oceanarium at Napier Aquarium and the image blurb has a description of how they operate:

Napier Aquarium - Photo Gallery

So, how does this aquarium rate..?

I give it a rating of 9 out of a possible 10 fonzies… It is impressive; every exhibit has been well thought out for the big 3 of the zoological world, entertainment, education, conservation and it was so well designed… From going behind the scenes and talking to the staff it seemed like upkeep was easy and the exhibits were just so aesthetically pleasing, the animals all looked healthy and happy (they were of course mainly fish, reptiles and birds) and there was plenty of amenities and space… It took about 2 hours to go around but on my second trip while waiting for my flight home I was happily there 4 hours… The fact an aquarium of this quality exists in a town of under 100,000 people is quite surprising… If you can’t tell I’m a fan and would recommend making it a part of any NZ zoo trip…

As a side note the aquarium was designed by Marinescape of NZ who also designed Kelly Tarltons, Manly Aquarium and I believe Sentosa, Mooloolaba and Perth Aquariums, here’s their link and one to an Aquarium engineering company in New Zealand:

http://www.marinescape.co.nz/wb_pg/cont_fla.html

MJ Murphy Ltd > Home
 
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Thanks for the review Jeremy, had a look at your photos, it looks like a great place
 
It is very well done, far superior to Kelly Tarlton's...
 
@NZ Jeremy: Lengthy, informative review...as always!! Keep up the great work!!

The website states that it takes about 1-2 hours to see all of the aquarium, and you took 2 and then 4 hours to view it all. Judging from the photos and the review it appears to be a fairly small establishment, but nevertheless a very well designed one. The tuatara and saltwater crocodile exhibits certainly allow for some close-up viewing, and the oceanarium must have significantly boosted attendance.

Do you know how many visitors they receive each year? Also, how much of a spike was there in attendance after the 2002 expansion?
 
@snowleopard: The first year it was open (1976) the old aquarium attracted 230,000 visitors... The town had 50,000 residents at the time... The first 5 years the aquarium was open 750,000 visitors went through the turnstiles...

Attendance must have dropped some, unfortunately I don't know the attendance figures before 2002 but since they have averaged 120,000... The population of Napier is still only about 57,000 although the regions population and tourism visitors and the country's population and tourism has grown considerably...
 
I haven't been to Napier yet but it is generally regarded by all as being the best aquarium in NZ.

Is the African cichlid tank really that small or is it just the way it appears. It looks like a seriously overstocked tank!

Are the sea dragons spiny sea dragons?

Regards the cylindrical octopus tanks, the problems we had when we used them was not people tapping on the sides but rather the small volume of water allowing the temperature to fluctuate too much and overheat the poor cephalopod inhabitants.

At this point my guide took me out the back and showed me the holding, quarantine and breeding tanks at the aquarium… These tanks had the fish not on display and some pretty rare fish in NZ… My guide said in some of the tanks the fish were the last in NZ and Department of Conservation wouldn’t be allowing more so they were conducting breeding efforts, I can’t remember species except they did have some spider crabs they were keeping in very cold water…

pity you can't remember the species of fish here, because the sentence makes no sense to me. DoC is responsible for freshwater native species (which NZ aquariums have no trouble getting). Fish & Game are responsible for introduced freshwater fish (salmonids, coarse fish etc) which again the permits to acquire are relatively simple for public aquariums. MoF is responsible for native marine species, again simple to get. The only fish I could imagine would be more trouble would be exotic imports, which is MaF's department (but there is a difference between imports for commercial purposes and imports for zoos and aquariums). Perhaps the guide you had was confusing his acronyms?
 
pity you can't remember the species of fish here, because the sentence makes no sense to me. DoC is responsible for freshwater native species (which NZ aquariums have no trouble getting). Fish & Game are responsible for introduced freshwater fish (salmonids, coarse fish etc) which again the permits to acquire are relatively simple for public aquariums. MoF is responsible for native marine species, again simple to get. The only fish I could imagine would be more trouble would be exotic imports, which is MaF's department (but there is a difference between imports for commercial purposes and imports for zoos and aquariums). Perhaps the guide you had was confusing his acronyms?

You're completely right I had MaF and DoC confused in my brain... To be clearer I got the impression he was meaning that they had some species that were previously available and importable to the general population but had been taken off the importable list and as stocks depleted over time, with no more fresh blood coming in, the aquarium had acquired a large proportion of the remaining in efforts to breed and boost numbers so these species would still be available to general aquaists... Not sure of the truth in this statement... I am under the impression NZ has a large quantity of exotic fish for sale...
 
ah, that makes more sense. MaF recently changed the laws regarding importing fish for the hobby. Previously the permitable list was arranged by genera, so for example all Barbus or all Botia could be imported (and in any case the emphasis was more on not-allowed species such as electric eels and piranhas). Now there is a list of specific species. Anything not on the list cannot be imported (although species can be applied for to be added to the list). Pretty much all the common aquarium fish are on the list so its no big deal except for collectors of specific groups (eg plecs or corys) who cannot get all the types they want. There are lots of species being kept here that aren't on the new list, so unless the stocks of those are kept up then they'll die out in NZ. The import laws don't apply in the same way to public aquariums because they can apply for permits that private importers cannot. However they're not going to bother with "average" aquarium fish because there's no point spending money on bringing in species that the general public can't distinguish from other general fish (meaning, they may apply to import, say, Pangasius cats because they look impressive, but they're not going to waste money on some new type of plec or cichlid).
 
Napier Aquiriam

I also agree that it is an excellent aquiriam , despite the size constraints .
It would be my pick as the best currently in NZ , and is an excellent credit to the city of Napier that has approx 60 000 population .
Its also easier on the pocket than Kelly Tarltons in Auckland

A few years ago I took some Asian visitors through the Napier Aquiriam ( officially known as the National Aquiriam ) They were not big animal fans , but we still spent about 3 hours in the place .
For those familiar with US aquiria , I would put it on par with Bostons
 
this thread (http://www.zoochat.com/17/last-dolphin-marineland-dies-25024/) covers the on-again-off-again closure of Marineland. The little blue penguins are going to the Aquarium (apparently) but the pinnipeds are not because there obviously isn't anywhere to keep them there. The Marineland animals' future is in limbo at the moment. The only facility in NZ that could take any of the pinnipeds is Auckland Zoo, so its either there or overseas (for the Californian sealions at least). Last I heard there was some legal action being undertaken to try and keep the Marineland going.
 
the National Aquarium received two young American alligators on loan from Butterfly Creek in December 2011
Hawkes Bay News & Events at the National Aquarium
The National Aquarium of New Zealand in Napier has just received an early Christmas present as they welcome two new alligators to their family.

The juvenile female alligators have been lent to the aquarium for a two year period by Butterfly Creek in Auckland.

The toothy pair called 'Fiona' and 'Cheryl' which are almost six years old and one metre long, originate from an alligator farm in Australia, but have grown up at Butterfly Creek.

The alligators were collected by aquarium staff earlier in the week and made the trip to Napier by road.

National Aquarium of New Zealand manager Rob Yarrall says the pair travelled very well. When we arrived in Auckland the alligators were ‘hanging out’ in their normal enclosure. We took with us two specialist made containers for them to travel in to ensure they were well protected and comfortable during their journey.

"Apart from a couple of stops along the way to check on our new friends, the pair travelled without a hitch. They seem pleased to be in their new home and are settling in well," says Mr Yarrall.

Fiona and Cheryl will share residences on the first floor of the aquarium with Terrapins in a Florida Everglades themed enclosure which the aquarium team have built to mirror their natural American habitat.

The Alligators are now on display at the National Aquarium so come in and check these cool little girls out!

I was actually looking to see if the penguin exhibit is done yet (for the little blues from Marineland) but it looks like its still under construction as far as I can tell.
 
Chlidonias said:
I was actually looking to see if the penguin exhibit is done yet (for the little blues from Marineland) but it looks like its still under construction as far as I can tell.
Apparently the penguin enclosure will be ready by October this year:
New home ready for penguins soon | Hawkes Bay News | Local News in Hawkes Bay
3 March 2012

The Marineland blue penguins are just months away from moving to a new purpose-built home.

Construction has started on their new home at Napier's National Aquarium of New Zealand, complete with swimming pool, sandy beaches, driftwood and nesting burrows.

Aquarium manager Rob Yarrall said builders from Simkin Construction had started work on the outdoor home and the penguins would take up residence in October.

"It's going to house up to 20 penguins, although there won't be that many to begin with," Mr Yarrall said.

"It will replicate their natural habitat and beach environment as much as possible."

Built at the southern end of the aquarium, the penguin home will include nesting boxes and burrows, dunes and sand mounds.

"We have been working closely with the Zoo and Aquarium Association and the Department of Conservation to ensure the penguins' home meets stringent standards and ticks all the boxes of the permitting process," Mr Yarrall said.

"While the penguins were found locally, the population and range of little penguin had been declining in areas not protected from predators. "The new penguin home goes hand-in-hand with the other native species we have at the Aquarium including the kiwi, the tuatara, reptiles and fish," Mr Yarrall said.

"They will also be part of the aquarium's strong education programme."

Despite the construction work going on, he assured people it was business as usual at the aquarium.

Visitors will still have access through the front entrance as perimeter fencing has been erected alongside the aquarium to contain the building works.
 
the new penguin exhibit will be opening on November the third (in three days) and will house little blues and white-flippereds (the latter otherwise only displayed at the International Antarctic Centre in Christchurch).
http://www.hawkesbaytoday.co.nz/news/little-blues-love-their-new-home/1587318/
18 October 2012

The penguins are "home."

Eleven of the little blue and white flippered tenants moved into their adventurous new domain at the National Aquarium of New Zealand about a fortnight ago and were acclimatising "nicely" to their surroundings, manager Rob Yarrell said.

We asked how it had shaped up, and how it looked, hoping to snap off a quick shot to tantalise readers with and to set the scene for the official house-warming function on November 1. But, with an apology, Mr Yarrell said that for now the doors to the enclosure had to remain shut.

Firstly, to allow the little occupants time and space to get used to their new digs, and secondly, so as not to take away the "wow" factor people would experience when getting to finally see it. "It is top secret," he said with a smile. "But let me say it is a fantastic place for them and they love it."

The enclosure, which is expansive and as close to the penguins' natural stamping grounds as possible, features a sandy ocean foreshore which leads to rocks further up. There is an underwater viewing area so they can be seen darting through the blue waters, and the enclosure is laid out so that visitors can come to within a metre of the penguins, which Mr Yarrell said were comfortable with human company.

The enclosure has been designed to accommodate up to 20 little blues and will open its doors to the public on Saturday, November 3.
 
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