At Monterey Bay Aquarium, the sea animals are doing great but business is tanking 
By Hailey Branson-Potts US Source: Los Angeles Times 9/15/2020

A solitary African penguin waddled through an empty foyer at the famed Monterey Bay Aquarium, peeking curiously under an unoccupied bench.

As a glittery school of silver sardines glided through the 1-million-gallon Open Sea exhibit, soft atmospheric music played to an empty viewing room. No families were there to watch the sharks get fed. The jellyfish shimmered alone in the dark.

Crowds would normally be filling the aquarium corridors in these waning days of summer. But the aquarium on Cannery Row has been closed to the public for five months now because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Inside, it is quiet.

 

As he examined a sedated sea otter pup rescued from the kelp beds off Santa Cruz, Dr. Michael Murray, the aquarium’s director of veterinary services, wondered aloud if the animals notice how much things have changed.

“Part of me says, ‘Oh, they don’t really care,’” he said. “The other part says, ‘These are not dumb animals. They’re very aware of their surroundings. They can see people through the acrylic. They can react to people. So why wouldn’t they notice?’”

Life above the water has been fraught.

The aquarium missed its entire summer tourism season, and its finances are in such dire straits that more than a third of its staff has been laid off or furloughed.

“The visitors are gone. The revenue is gone,” said Julie Packard, the aquarium’s executive director. “Meantime, the animals and exhibits are doing great.”

Outside, three wildfires in Monterey County caused at least one staff member to lose a home and others to evacuate. Animals sensitive to smoke and ash falling from the orange-tinged sky had to be pulled indoors.

The sea otters are susceptible to the coronavirus, forcing staffers to wear masks and gloves around them — and to try to maintain a good distance from the social mammals, who now perk up when they see the few humans there are walking past their exhibit.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2026Mi’kmaq Farms to quadruple fish production with expansion in 2023bangordailynews2022-12-14US
2027Maine won’t see any large-scale fish farms open for yearsbangordailynews2023-01-02US
2028Puffer fish poison is 1200 times more deadly than cyanideagupdate2023-01-02US
2029Dokken: Minot angler catches pending North Dakota state record burbotechopress2023-01-12US
203018-year-old angler on track to catch all 54 fish native to Minnesotaechopress2023-01-15US
2031Duluth author compiles new bible for fly anglersechopress2023-01-20US
2032Good days or bad, Curt Quesnell tells it like it is on Lake of the Woodsechopress2023-01-20CA
2033Quebec lake named top ice fishing destination in CanadaCTV News2023-01-17CA
2034Sooke one of the best places to fish in Canada: surveysaanichnews2023-01-19CA
2035Study aims to unmask fishing vessels, and owners, obscured by loopholesmongabay2023-01-20CA
2036Hawaii fisherman missing, went overboard after hooking tuna and telling friend: 'The fish is huge'Fox News2023-01-17US
2037Plan outlines First Nations-led salmon farming transition in BCThe Fish Site2023-01-19CA
2038Volare to open Finland's first insect-for-aquafeed fly farmThe Fish Site2023-01-20FI
2039Feds Try to Improve Fishing Data With New Monitoring RulesAssociated Press2023-01-20US
2040Зимняя глубинная рыбалка без насадкиОхотники.ру2023-01-16RU
2041Fisherman 'shocked' that big fish was actually rotting human corpse of missing studentdailystar2023-01-03UK
2042California’s endangered salmon population plummets amid new threatlatimes2023-01-03US
2043Man catches one of world's rarest fish that looks like pre-historic dinosaur on first fishing tripladbible2023-01-03US
2044Mysterious fish deaths leave residents dealing with unpleasant smellsFlorida News2023-01-04US
2045Florida Angler Catches Two Record Fish in One Dayfieldandstream2023-01-04US
2046Traditional ice-fishing spectacle reels in touristsXinhua2023-01-05CN
2047560-pound swordfish caught by North Carolina father and sonFox News2023-01-17US
2048Loss of Tiny Organisms Hurts Ocean, Fishing, Scientists SayAssociated Press2023-01-19US
2049Corps Must Discuss Spillway Use With Fisheries AgencyAssociated Press2023-01-19US
2050Ученые НИИ рыбного хозяйства займутся изучением глубоководных объектов Дальнего Востока и АрктикиРыболовство2023-01-19RU

215 216 217 81 of [218 - pages.]