Aquarium of Western Australia

AQWA The Aquarium of Western Australia

AQWA logo

Front Entrance to AQWA
Date opened

1988 (as Underwater World, Perth)

2001 (as AQWA)[1]
Location Hillarys, Western Australia
Coordinates 31°49′37″S 115°44′17″E / 31.827°S 115.738°E / -31.827; 115.738Coordinates: 31°49′37″S 115°44′17″E / 31.827°S 115.738°E / -31.827; 115.738
Number of species 400
Volume of largest tank 3,000,000 litres (793,000 US gal)
Website www.aqwa.com.au

AQWA The Aquarium of Western Australia is a privately owned aquarium in Hillarys, Western Australia. AQWA was Australia's largest aquarium when it opened and still possesses Australia's largest single aquarium and walk-through underwater tunnel.[2]

History

The aquarium opened on 13 April 1988 as Underwater World, Perth. It was acquired by the current owners, Coral World International and Morris Kahn, in 1991, and changed its name to AQWA The Aquarium of Western Australia on 1 January 2001.[1]

AQWA (then Underwater World, Perth) opened with only two aquariums, the feature walk-through aquarium, now known as the Shipwreck Coast, and the Touch Pool. It now includes more than 40 exhibits and is the 10th largest aquarium in the world [3]

From 1992 to 1999 the aquarium hosted a family of dolphins enclosed in a sea pen, which later died due to poisoning.[4][5]

Stingray in the main tank

Exhibits

The aquarium specializes in marine animals that inhabit the 12,000-kilometre (7,500 mi) long coastline of Western Australia.[2] In total AQWA holds over 4 million litres of water and is home to approximately 400 species of marine life, including more than 4,000 fish.[6]

AQWA is themed as an underwater journey along W.A.'s coastline and is broken up into 5 distinct areas.[7] Each area represents the unique marine life and environments of different regions along W.A.'s coast.

These include: The Great Southern, the Shipwreck Coast, the Perth Coast, the Far North and Marmion Marine Park.

The main Shipwreck Coast aquarium is 40 metres (130 ft) long and 20 metres (66 ft) wide and holds 3,000,000 litres (793,000 US gal) of seawater. It incorporates a 98-metre (322 ft) underwater acrylic tunnel, the largest in Australia.[8] This exhibit contains 3-4 metres grey nurse sharks, 4 metres smooth stingrays, large loggerhead turtles and over 70 other species of rays, octopuses, sharks and fish.

The facility is host to two premiere feature exhibits:

1) The Coral Reef: AQWA's Coral Reef is one of the largest living coral reef exhibits in the world, featuring stunning living corals and reef fish from Rottnest Island.

2) The DangerZone: featuring a line-up of W.A.'s dangerous marine life including stonefish, sea snake, blue ringed octopus, lion fish, box fish and cone shells.

Other featured animals include leafy seadragons, moon jellyfish, clown fish, juvenile saltwater crocodiles, starfish, octopuses, cuttlefish, rock lobsters, scorpionfish, eagle stingrays, sandbar whaler sharks, black tip sharks, Port Jackson sharks, rescued turtles and many more.

Grey Nurse Shark at the aquarium

AQWA adventures

For a fee, snorkelers and qualified SCUBA divers get even closer to the fish, sharks, rays and turtles by joining the aquarium's dive master in the Dive or Snorkel with Sharks program. It is held daily in the main Shipwreck Coast aquarium.[9]

Seasonally, AQWA also runs the Reefwalker program, where capable swimmers over the age of 12 are able to enter the coral reef and discover scuba diving. No qualifications are required. Using a custom-made hookah scuba unit, participants are led by an experienced AQWA dive instructor, as they walk underwater through the living reef which features hundreds of corals and fish. It runs Friday–Sunday between October and April.[9]

References

  1. 1 2 "About AQWA". aqwa.com.au. AQWA. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  2. 1 2 "AQWA - The Aquarium of Western Australia". westernaustralia.com. Tourism Western Australia. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  3. "10 Largest Aquariums in the World". www.touropia.com. Touropis. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  4. "Dolphin may have died from broken heart". abc.net.au. ABC News. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  5. "Dolphins in Western Australia". madphin.com. MadPhin. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  6. "About AQWA". www.aqwa.com.au. AQWA. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  7. "AQWA Journey". www.aqwa.com.au. AQWA. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  8. "Frommer's Review". www.frommers.com. Frommer's. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  9. 1 2 "AQWA Adventures". aqwa.com.au. AQWA. Retrieved 9 July 2012.

External links

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