Member benefits for one named member, allowing admission for that named member only, per Aquarium visit. Reciprocal zoo / aquarium benefits Price: $100 Member benefits for up to two named members, ...
This species of jellyfish isn't efficient at migrating on their own. They rely heavily on water currents and wind to get from one location to another. In the coastal waters of the north Atlantic, ...
According to the fossil record, deep sea isopods were thought to have existed before Pangea disbanded. This means they're over 160 million years old! Deep sea isopods eat animals, both dead and alive, ...
Cardinal soldierfish are shy, only venturing out from their hiding spots at night. In the western Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico, cardinal soldierfish inhabit reef colonies, rocky ...
In the northern Pacific Ocean, GPOs live in water as deep as 4,900 feet (1,500 meters). Occasionally, they can be found in shallow tide pools. Giant Pacific octopuses, or GPOs, as they are known at ...
Caribbean reef octopuses eat clams, snails, crabs, lobsters and occasionally members of the same species. Caribbean reef octopuses have white bodies with an orange and brown vein-like pattern from ...
Commonly found on rocks from shallow water to 160 feet (48.8 meters) deep, fish-eating anemones exist in the cooler waters of the eastern Pacific Ocean. Fish-eating anemones have an orange-red base ...
Gilded triggerfish gather in small groups to eat zooplankton, shrimp, crab and other invertebrates. Gilded triggerfish differ in appearance based on their sex. Males have a bright blue spot on their ...
On average, horn sharks grow to 4 feet (120 centimeters) long. In the eastern Pacific Ocean, horn sharks can be found along continental shelves, rocky reefs, caves and crevices. Horn sharks are brown ...
Using its polyp tentacles, golden colonial anemone catch and eat smaller marine organisms that drift by. They also have a special algae—called zooxanthellae– in their tissues that photosynthesize the ...
Using the stinging cells in its tentacles, symmetric brain coral will catch smaller marine invertebrates that drift by. Coral also have a special algae—called zooxanthellae– in their tissues that ...
Using its polyp tentacles, finger coral catch and eat smaller marine organisms that drift by. They also have a special algae—called zooxanthellae– in their tissues that photosynthesize the sun's rays ...