Join our zoo community

National Aquarium in Baltimore National Aquarium, Baltimore Updates and Events

Discussion in 'United States' started by NAIB Volunteer, 10 Feb 2011.

  1. jayjds2

    jayjds2 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    10 Nov 2015
    Posts:
    2,742
    Location:
    USA
    They have been on exhibit for the last several months, though I didn't manage to see them on my last visit. They are very hard to see; the best place is from the bridge before you enter the exhibit.
     
  2. jayjds2

    jayjds2 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    10 Nov 2015
    Posts:
    2,742
    Location:
    USA
    Kifaru Bwana likes this.
  3. Andrew_NZP

    Andrew_NZP Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    20 Mar 2016
    Posts:
    708
    Location:
    USA
  4. Andrew_NZP

    Andrew_NZP Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    20 Mar 2016
    Posts:
    708
    Location:
    USA
  5. SharkFinatic

    SharkFinatic Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    12 Oct 2018
    Posts:
    1,126
    Location:
    U.S.
  6. NAIB Volunteer

    NAIB Volunteer Well-Known Member 10+ year member

    Joined:
    25 Dec 2009
    Posts:
    589
    Location:
    Washington, DC
    They are permanently off exhibit as of last year due to their old age. Many of them are original to the exhibit opening in 2005. There are currently no plans to get new flying foxes in the collection and are considered a phase out species for the Aquarium.
     
  7. TinoPup

    TinoPup Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    17 Jul 2016
    Posts:
    6,553
    Location:
    .
    I'll have photos up tomorrow, but I went to the aquarium today (well, yesterday) and took photos of each tank and all signs. Here's a species list according to signs, with two others noted that I asked about. If you want a specific latin name please ask! Each tank is in alphabetical order, as well.

    Entrance – Maryland Watershed: Brook trout, Rosyside dace, Blacknose dace

    Blacktip Reef (many unlabelled): Blacktip reef shark, Green sea turtle, Zebra shark, diamondfish, emperor angelfish, orbicular batfish, highfin snapper, spotted unicornfish, orangeband surgeonfish, queensland grouper, palette surgeonfish, blotched fantail ray, Australian whipray, titan triggerfish

    Allegheny Stream: blacknose dace, common shiner, creek chub, greenside darter, northern hogsucker, rainbow darter, rosyface shiner, rosyside dace, American bullfrog, wood turtle

    Atlantic Shelf: black drum, black sea bass, clearnose skate, gag grouper, oyster toadfish, pinfish, snowy grouper, summer flounder

    Hermit Crabs: flat-clawed hermit crab, long-clawed hermit crab, striped hermit crab

    Living Seashore Touch Pool: Atlantic horseshoe crab, Atlantic stingray, channeled whelk, clearnose skate, knobbed whelk, little skate, moon snails

    Sea Bed (cylinder tank): Atlantic spadefish, lookdown, northern searobin, ocellated flounder, orange filefish, striped burrfish

    Jelly Touch Tank: moon jellies

    Evolving: black caivus cichlid, convict Julie, cuckoo catfish, hecqui shell dweller cichlid, lemon cichlid, tricolor cichlid

    Surviving: alligator gar, bowfin, eastern spiny softshelled turtle, longnose gar, pallid sturgeon, redear sunfish, shortnose gar, shovelnose sturgeon, spotted gar

    Moving: black ghost, blotched upsidedown catfish, congo tetra, freshwater butterflyfish, golden otocin, rainbow krib

    Moving: elegant coris, Hawaiian descyilus, whiteline hawkfish

    Shocking: electric eel, lemon tetra

    Feeding: blackeye goby, California sea cucumber, foliate thornmouth, giant green anemone, gigantic anemone, green sea urchin, grunt sculpin, kelp perch, pacific purple urchin, painted anemone, penpoint gunnel, red abalone, shiner perch, spotted red anemone, velvety red anemone

    Feeding: bat star, giant pacific octopus, ochre sea star

    Adapting (small tanks):
    Burrowing: longsnout spider crab
    Climbing: Atlantic mudskipper
    Slurping: dusky pipefish, lined seahorse
    Camouflaging: reef scorpionfish
    Picking: debelius cleaner shrimp, red reef hermit crab
    Protecting: banggai cardinalfish, black longspine sea urchin
    Punching: peacock mantis shrimp

    Hiding
    : barred moray, dragon moray, gulf toadfish, reef stonefish

    Lurking: Atlantic creolefish, blackcap basslet, blue chromis, brown chromis, cherubfish, clown wrasse, fairy basslet, foureye butterflyfish, honeycomb cowfish, neon goby, purple reeffish, red grouper, sharpnose puffer, spotfin butterflyfish, spotfin hogfish, striped burrfish, yellowtail damselfish

    Displaying: fire anemonefish, flaming angelfish, forceps fish, harlequin tuskfish, longnose butterflyfish, powderblue surgeonfish, purple tang, raccoon butterflyfish, threadfin butterflyfish, yellowface angelfish

    Migrating: American eel, striped bass

    Copying: azure damoiselle, banggai cardinalfish, blackeye rabbitfish, branched sandpaper coral, brittlestar, caulastraea coral, colored tuxedo urchin, desjardini sailfin tang, discosoma corallimorpharian, galaxy coral, green brain coral, green chromis, longspined black sea urchin, luminescent colonial anemone, neon damselfish, nimble spray crab, pajama cardinalfish, peppermint basslet, raccoon butterflyfish, redbanded coral shrimp, saddle butterflyfish, sailfin tang, scarlet cleaner shrimp, scroll coral, spinecheek anemonefish, tennant’s surgeonfish, tomato clownfish, yellow tang, yellowtail clownfish

    Sensing: blackbar soldierfish, dusky squirrelfish, flamefish, reef squirrelfish, stripe-legged slipper lobster, twospot cardinalfish

    Sensing: pineconefish

    Sensing: blind cavefish

    Sea Cliffs: Atlantic puffin, black guillemot, razorbill

    Kelp Forest: bat star, black rockfish, blacksmith, blue rockfish, California moray eel, china rockfish, copper rockfish, flag rockfish, garibaldi, horn shark, kelp greenling, leather star, ochre sea star, painted greenling, pile perch, quillback rockfish, rainbow surfperch, rock wrasse, senorita, short spined sea star, swell shark, treefish, vermillion rockfish

    Pacific Coral Reef: banggai cardinalfish, blue-green chromis, blue-lined surgeonfish, blue linkia sea star, brown cup coral, bubble coral, bush coral, cauliflower coral, copperband butterflyfish, coral beauty, corky sea finger, clown anemonefish, flame hawkfish, flower leather coral, leather coral, long-tentacled anemone, lyretail anthias, naso surgeonfish, palette surgeonfish, pink anemonefish, powder-blue surgeonfish, spotted hawkfish, squarespot anthias, white cheeked surgeonfish, yellow-eyed surgeonfish, yellow polyps, yellow tang

    Amazon River Forest, in order of signage: Guyana side-necked turtle, giant south American river turtle, banded leporinus, silver arawana, pirapitinga, silver prochilodus, common severum cichlid, zebra shovelnose catfish, red-headed amazon side-neck turtle, big-headed turtle, yellow-spotted amazon river turtle, big-headed amazon river turtle, ripsaw catfish, sailfin pleco, leopard cactus pleco, common pleco, white-blotched river stingray, smoothback river stringray, red hook myleus, silver dollar, Raphael catfish, sunshine pleco //possible split in tanks?// big-headed amazon river turtle, redtail catfish, giant talking catfish, leopard cactus pleco, lyretail pleco, smooth-fronted caiman, giant south American river turtle, yellow-spotted amazon river turtle, white-blotched river stingray, pirapitinga, ripsaw catfish, uaru, rummy-nose tetra, royal panaque, spotfin tetra, Columbian tetra, freshwater angelfish

    Wet Season
    : cardinal tetra, Harrison’s pencilfish, heckle discus, king tiger suckermouth catfish, ram cichlid, rummy-nose tetra, schwartz’s cory catfish, silver hatchetfish, whiptail catfish, yellow-seam baryancistrus

    Dry Season: Brazil nut poison dart frog, emerald tree boa, giant leaf frog, sabana Surinam toad, splashback poison dart frog, tarantula

    Upland Tropical Rain Forest:
    Free-flight/loose: bay-headed tanager, blue-crowned motmot, blue-headed parrot, boat-billed heron, golden-bellied grosbeak, golden lion tamarin, green-and-gold tanager, Linne’s two-toed sloth, red-capped cardinal, scarlet ibis, screaming piha, silver-beaked tanager, smooth-sided toad, sunbittern, sun conure, poison dart frog, turquoise tanager, white-tailed trogon, yellow-crowned amazon parrot
    Tank: bucktooth tetra, marbled headstander, red-bellied piranha
    Tortoises: central American wood turtle, yellow-footed tortoise
    Tarantula: unnamed species
    Waterfall pool: spot-bellied side-necked turtle

    Frogs
    1: Panamanian golden frog
    2: dyeing poison dart frog, emerald tree boa, yellow-banded poison dart frog
    3: green and black poison dart frog
    4: dyeing poison dart frog, milky tree frog
    5: bicolored poison dart frog, harlequin poison frog, terrible poison dart frog, yellow-striped poison dart frog
    6: green and black poison dart frog, lovely poison dart frog, strawberry poison dart frog
    7: Anthony’s poison dart frog, imitating poison dart frog, yellow-banded poison dart frog, prehensile-tailed lizard (unsigned, asked employee)

    Atlantic Coral Reef: atlantic creolefish, atlantic spadefish, atlantic tarpon, bar jack, barred hamlet, black durgeon, blacknose shark (unsigned, named Sophie, asked employee), blue angelfish, blue hamlet, bluehead wrasse, blue tang surgeon, bonnethead shark, brown chromis, cownose ray, creole wrasse, doctorfish, dusky squirrelfish, foureyed butterflyfish, french angelfish, french grunt, graysby grouper, green moray, grey angelfish, highhat, hogfish, jackknife fish, lookdown, mahogany snapper, ocean surgeon, porkfish, queen angelfish, queen triggerfish, rock hind grouper, sand tilefish, sargassum triggerfish, saucereye porgy, scamp grouper, sergeant major, smallmouth grunt, southern stingray, spanish hogfish, spotfin butterflyfish, spotfin porcupinefish, spotted drum, stoplight parrotfish, white spotted filefish
    Missed something that starts with “Lon… squ”, latin name starts with “Holoc”

    Shark Alley: crevalle jack, largetooth sawfish, nurse shark, sandbar shark, sand tiger shark

    Blacktip Reef underwater viewing: Australian whipray, blacktip reef shark, blotched fantail ray, blue-green chromis, diamondfish, gilded triggerfish, green sea turtle, humphead wrasse, orbicular batfish, oriental sweetlips, palette surgeonfish, squarespot anthias, tasseled wobbegong, zebra shark

    Australia:
    1: desert Reptiles: central bearded dragon, frilled lizard, knob-tailed gecko, northern blue-tongued skink, northern death adder, shingleback skink, spiny-tailed monitor
    2: shield shrimp
    3: black-headed python
    Birds in area after doors: Australian king parrot, blue-faced parrot finch, budgerigar, cockatiel, common bronzewing, crested pigeon, double-barred finch, eastern rosella, emerald dove, galah cockatoo, Gouldian finch, grey-headed flying fox, laughing kookaburra, long-tailed finch, masked finch, northern rosella, rainbow lorikeet, red-winged parrot, star finch, sulfur-crested cockatoo, zebra finch
    //I might have separated one or two of these that should be combined?//
    4: barramundi, black catfish, broad-shelled snake-necked turtle, eastern water dragon, freshwater whipray, gulf Saratoga, lesser salmon catfish, Mary River turtle, northern Australian snapping turtle, northern snake-necked turtle, pig-nosed turtle, shovel-nosed catfish
    5: banded rainbowfish, black-banded rainbowfish, empire gudgeon, macleay’s glassfish, northwest red-faced turtle, northern yellow-faced turtle, purple-spotted gudgeon
    6: butier’s grunter, giant glassfish, giant gudgeon, gulf Saratoga, jardine river turtle, jenkins’ grunter, northern red-faced turtle, saw-shelled turtle, seven-spot archerfish, sleepy cod, sooty grunter, spangled perch, yellow-tailed trumpeter
    7: chequered rainbowfish, fly-specked hardyhead, freshwater crocodile, jardine river turtle, northern Australian snapping turtle, threadfin rainbowfish
    8: eastern carpet python, tailed sole, toothless catfish, water python, western rainbowfish, yabby
    9: Missed the signs! Water monitor, I think Mertens?, etc
    10: Australian lungfish, eastern snake-necked turtle, hyrtl’s tandan, krefft’s turtle, mouth almighty, pig-nosed turtle, rendahl’s catfish, seven-spot archerfish, tailed sole, toothless catfish

    Dolphin Discovery: Atlantic bottlenose dolphin

    Jelly Invasion, each in separate tanks: Atlantic bay nettle, blue blubber jelly, flower hat jelly, Japanese sea nettle, moon jelly, pacific sea nettle, purple-striped jelly, spotted lagoon jelly, upside-down jelly
     
    Brum, Zoological Point, Hammy and 2 others like this.
  8. jayjds2

    jayjds2 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    10 Nov 2015
    Posts:
    2,742
    Location:
    USA
    As well as green honeycreeper.
    Imitating poison frog is also exhibited here.
    Specifically, the marbled prehensile-tailed lizard, Polychrus marmoratus. Without such distinction it is easily confused with other species.
    The death adder and knob-tailed gecko are separate from both the main enclosure (which also houses Hosmer’s skink) and each other.
    No longer kept.
    Permanently off-exhibit, as noted in the post directly above yours...
    Mertens’ water monitor, eastern snake-necked turtle, and eastern water dragon.
     
  9. TinoPup

    TinoPup Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    17 Jul 2016
    Posts:
    6,553
    Location:
    .
    As I said multiple times, my post was according to signage. It's kind of disheartening to put in all of that time and effort, only to just be corrected.
     
  10. drill

    drill Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    26 Feb 2017
    Posts:
    1,566
    Location:
    Norfolk, Va
    No Common barking geckos?
     
  11. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

    Joined:
    13 Jun 2007
    Posts:
    23,397
    Location:
    New Zealand
    I don't think the corrections were intended to be read in a bad way, but rather just for additional information (due, presumably, to incomplete signage at the facility?) :)
     
  12. jayjds2

    jayjds2 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    10 Nov 2015
    Posts:
    2,742
    Location:
    USA
    No, and I don’t recall ever seeing this species at NAIB.
     
  13. drill

    drill Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    26 Feb 2017
    Posts:
    1,566
    Location:
    Norfolk, Va
  14. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

    Joined:
    13 Jun 2007
    Posts:
    23,397
    Location:
    New Zealand
    Nephrurus levis is the Common Knob-tailed Gecko - I have never heard of the species being called "Common Barking Gecko" and that name "belongs" to an entirely different (African) species..
     
    Kifaru Bwana and jayjds2 like this.
  15. jayjds2

    jayjds2 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    10 Nov 2015
    Posts:
    2,742
    Location:
    USA
    Ah, that would be the “knob-tailed gecko” listed above - the aquarium does indeed keep N. levis, but like Chli, I’ve never heard that name for this species.
     
  16. TinoPup

    TinoPup Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    17 Jul 2016
    Posts:
    6,553
    Location:
    .
    It didn't come across that way to me. It only takes a second to add some sort of acknowledgement at the start of a reply, or even "like" my initial post.
     
  17. SharkFinatic

    SharkFinatic Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    12 Oct 2018
    Posts:
    1,126
    Location:
    U.S.
  18. NAIB Volunteer

    NAIB Volunteer Well-Known Member 10+ year member

    Joined:
    25 Dec 2009
    Posts:
    589
    Location:
    Washington, DC
    With Maya's death, the Aquarium is left with only six dolphins - two males and four females - the lowest since they've housed dolphins in Pier 4 starting in 1990. Plans are still being made to transfer the remaining pod to the National Dolphin Sanctuary once completed in 2021 or so.
     
    TinoPup likes this.
  19. TinoPup

    TinoPup Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    17 Jul 2016
    Posts:
    6,553
    Location:
    .
    Do they have a location yet?
     
  20. NAIB Volunteer

    NAIB Volunteer Well-Known Member 10+ year member

    Joined:
    25 Dec 2009
    Posts:
    589
    Location:
    Washington, DC
    No, not yet. Plans are still being made securing a location.
     
    TinoPup likes this.