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
2201Conservationists celebrate closure of two fish farms in B.C. and Washington statevancouversun2022-11-17CA
2202Why the US, China and Russia are squabbling over an ugly, ghost-like fish that no-one wants to eatstuff2022-11-14NZ
2203WA will not renew leases for Puget Sound fish farms, 5 years after spillSeattle Times2022-11-14US
2204Scientists say farmed fish can't replace fish caught in the wildijpr2022-11-30US
220515-foot ‘doomsday fish’ washes up on beachnypost2022-11-30CL
2206Alabama Youngster Catches—and Releases—a 70-Pound Catfishsportfishingmag2022-11-30US
2207Why these fish moms cannibalize their babiesnational geographic2022-11-30TD
2208Want to be a better fisherman? Get a fish tankyoursun2022-11-30CA
2209Canadian Council of Fisheries and Aquaculture Ministers reaffirm support for strong fisheriesbenzinga2022-11-30CA
2210BluGen to open 1,000 tonne olive flounder RAS in South KoreaThe Fish Site2022-11-30KR
2211Улов российских рыбаков за 11 месяцев 2022 года составил более 4,5 млн тоннРыболовство2022-11-30RU
2212Amid Mexico’s Day of the Dead, a fish declared extinct comes back to lifemongabay2022-11-08MX
2213California should change fishing rules after hundreds of sturgeon diesacbee2022-11-11US
2214Scientists figure out why fish look downwards when swimming in riversnews9live2022-11-06IN
2215Victory Farms donates tilapia fingerlings to small-scale producersThe Fish Site2022-11-25KE
2216New IoT sensor sheds light on shellfish growers’ farm conditionsThe Fish Site2022-11-28PT
2217FDA puts AquaBounty’s genetically engineered salmon back under the spotlightThe Fish Site2022-11-28US
2218Trial leverages AI and imaging technology to identify the best delousing cleaner fishThe Fish Site2022-11-28UK
2219Washington Bans Fish-Farming Net PensAssociated Press2022-11-18US
2220Lawsuit Looms Over Tiny Rare Fish in Drought-Stricken WestAssociated Press2022-11-23US
2221Пока не затвердела водаОхотники.ру2022-11-15RU
2222С фидером в период первых заморозковОхотники.ру2022-11-21RU
2223Fishermen take case against paying for monitors to Supreme Courtpressherald2022-11-10US
2224Sewage on the riverbed blamed for 'anglers catching more tampons than fish' in Shrewsburyshropshirestar2022-11-11UK
2225Mom shares photos of creature that 'startled' her and daughter on fishing tripyahoo2022-11-10US

215 216 217 88 of [218 - pages.]