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| Melbourne Aquarium | |
View of the Aquarium from the Yarra river
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| Date opened | 2000 |
| Location | Central Business District, Melbourne, Australia |
| Coordinates | |
| Number of animals | 10000+ |
| Number of species | 550+ |
| Major exhibits | Creepy Cave, Coral Atoll, Sink or Swim, Octopus display, Oceanarium |
| Website | |
Melbourne Aquarium is a Southern Ocean and Antarctic aquarium in central Melbourne, Australia. It is located on the banks of the Yarra River beside the Flinders Street Viaduct and the King Street Bridge.
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History
Built between between February 1998 and December 1999,[1] the building was designed by Peddle Thorp architects to resemble as ship moored to the river and opened in January 2000. The depth of the building however was designed not to be imposing at street level, being set some 20 metres below the surface.[2] At its centre is a 'oceanarium in the round' where the spectators become the spectacle to the marine life swimming around them.
After opening the building had a legionnaires disease outbreak, which resulted in 2 deaths and another 60 people being affected after visiting the aquarium between April 11 and 27 2000. A damages action was brought in May 2000, ending in February 2004.[3]
The Melbourne Aquarium is currently undergoing a significant expansion that will extend it all the way from the Yarra River to Flinders Street, with a new entrance will be built on the corner of Flinders and King Streets. The new expansion will feature will exhibit Antarctic king penguins and gentoo Penguins, as well as many other Antarctic fish, a first for Australia. The exhibits will feature real ice and snow to simulate Antarctic conditions, and will take visitors on an expedition to Antarctica. The penguins are being sourced from Kelly Tarlton's Underwater World in New Zealand. The expansion is expected to be completed in the later half of 2008.
As part of the expansion the popular simulator ride has been closed.
Features
The Aquarium has a one way self guided tour, spread over four levels:
Level One
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- Creepy cave, including the giant Murray cod
- Billabong
- Rock Pools
- Mangrove
- Upper Deck Cafe
Ground Floor
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- Sink or Swim, featuring giant crabs and sea dragons
- Coral Atoll
- Sea jellies
- Creepy cave, with Japanese spider crabs
- Moorings Cafe
- Aquarium Shop
Level B1
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- Octopus display
- Kids Play area
Level B2
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- BHP Billiton Shark Conservation Project & Animal Nursery
- Oceanarium
- Fishbowl
- Ocean Theatre
While visiting these features visitors come across horseshoe crabs, scorpions and tarantulas in the 'two creepy caves' and a diverse collection of Australian sea jellies.
While the theme is that of "Southern Oceans" there are a few exceptions including, a floor to ceiling coral atoll, the mangrove exhibit, the billabong exhibit and the rockpool exhibit.
The aquarium is known for its main exhibit, which features huge grey nurse and broadnose sevengill sharks, held in a large fishbowl containing many diverse species of marine life.
Temporary exhibitions also frequently come to the aquarium.
Research and conservation
- Grey Nurse Sharks
- The Melbourne Aquarium is involved in a grey nurse shark breeding program aimed at conserving this endangered species, which is already extinct in Victoria. The Aquarium currently has three grey nurse sharks and are looking at intra vitro fertilization (IVF) as a method of breeding. On Sunday 11th November Melbourne Aquarium celebrated Georgie the grey nurse shark's 10th birthday with a celebratory party.
- Sea Turtles
- The aquarium is also involved in the rehabilitation of turtles washed down to the cold Victorian waters where they cannot survive. The sea turtles are housed at the aquarium to gain strength whereby they are taken to Queensland to be released.
- Sea Snakes
- Melbourne Aquarium is home to the worlds first pregnant sea snake, it was on display in the coral atoll with two other snakes but has since been moved to a holding tank in the back-of-house area of the aquarium. It is under constant 24-hour video surveillance in the hope the first captive sea snake birth can be caught on film.
Current and past attractions
The current exhibition at the aquarium is of various kinds of creepy creatures, including angler fish, the Japanese spider crab, jellyfish, blood sucking leeches, horseshoe crabs, poisonous scorpions and tarantulas.
Melbourne Aquarium formerly had a giant squid exhibit (frozen, not alive). This has been moved to the UnderWaterWorld, Queensland. A quote from their website: "The 7 metre squid is frozen in time in the world’s largest man-made block of ice and is on display as part of the Monsters of the Deep exhibit. The exhibit also features live cuttlefish, bioluminescent fish and octopus hidden in dark, eerie caves and rare footage of a live Humboldt Squid, filmed off the coast of Mexico."citation needed
Ownership
The aquarium is owned and operated by MFS Living & Leisure Group (a stapled security listed on both the Australian Securities Exchange and New Zealand Stock Exchange).
MFS Living & Leisure Group's main shareholders are ANZ Nominees Limited, National Nominees Limited, HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Limited, Grollo International Pty Ltd and MFS Financial Services Limited.
References
- ^ "Melbourne Aquarium". Frommer's. events.frommers.com. Retrieved on 2008-07-20.
- ^ "Melbourne Aquarium". The Great Outdoors. au.travel.yahoo.com. Retrieved on 2008-07-20.
- ^ Peter Gregory (February 3, 2004). "Victims of legionnaires' disease win battle". The Age. www.theage.com.au. Retrieved on 2008-07-20.
External links
- Melbourne Aquarium website
- Melbourne Aquarium is at Coordinates:
- Peddle Thorp Melbourne
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Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 2 September 2008, at 07:12.
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