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State Aquarium staffers bond with animals at dinner time


CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP) – Squirt does not like red bell peppers.


None of the staffers at the Texas State Aquarium know why Squirt, an active green sea turtle sports an aversion to colorful vegetables, but happily munches on green ones.


“We know what they like and don’t like. They’re picky. They’re just like humans,” said Brittney Laurel, aquarist II. “Squirt – we make sure to give her all greens.”


Laurel, and a number of other dedicated aquarists and trainers at the aquarium, makes it her job to know what the animals like to eat and what they enjoy doing, and she does that by examining their actions every day.


“You get to learn all of their personalities, and they really do all have different personalities,” she told the Corpus Christi Caller-Times (http://bit.ly/1FT9UVN). “There’s one turtle that likes back scratches. They can actually feel it. So you scratch her shell, and she wiggles like a dog would if you were to scratch them.”


That turtle’s name is Einstein and she is a Hawksbill sea turtle. She will eat any food dropped in the tank.




Another turtle, Dani, loves strawberries, and will eat them in less than five minutes.


Tiki, a Loggerhead sea turtle, is mostly a carnivore and won’t show up for feeding time at the tank unless shrimp or fish are thrown in.


“We do get to have a really good connection with all of them,” Lauren said. “We know immediately if something’s wrong because they’re not acting normal.”


In April, the aquarium and its staff dealt with the loss of 389 fish from the accidental introduction of a lethal chemical that was mislabeled as a treatment for parasites.


The fish kill included Hans, a sand tiger shark that was a longtime favorite of staff and aquarium members.


Since then, about 95 percent of those fish have been replaced, mostly through donations from aquariums and zoos across the nation.


There’s also big expansion plans in the works that will about double the aquarium’s size with the addition of the Caribbean Journey exhibit.


Construction is underway on the $50 million addition, which is expected to open in 2017. The new wing will include 65,000 square feet, a four-story addition, and a science, technology, engineering and math education center.


More room means more animals.


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State Aquarium staffers bond with animals at dinner time

Ground broken for Texas State Aquarium expansion

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP) – Ground has been broken for the Texas State Aquarium’s largest expansion in the organization’s nearly 25-year history.


Ceremonies were held Wednesday in Corpus Christi for the $50 million project including a four-story wing called Caribbean Journey.


Aquarium officials in June announced plans for the 65,000-square-foot wing that will join the original Gulf of Mexico exhibit building. The Caribbean Journey will complete the final two phases of the aquarium’s master plan. Construction should be completed by early 2017.


Aquarium president Tom Schmid says the new wing means visitors will get to see more fish, sharks and other sea creatures. The complex will also include an education center.


Officials say more than 11 million visitors have been through the Texas State Aquarium since it opened in 1990.


Online:


http://texasstateaquarium.org/


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Ground broken for Texas State Aquarium expansion

Science Center receives $500000 state grant

The state has awarded the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium a $500,000 cultural facilities grant.


The West Palm Beach organization will use the grant to upgrade its west wing, the oldest part of the structure. The center plans to raise $1.5 million through the second phase of a capital campaign to make $2 million in improvements.


They include $1.5 million for the Hall of Discovery, which houses Challenge the Brain and Sprouting Science, a new early childhood learning station; $150,000 to re-roof the original 1964 building; $150,000 to upgrade the planetarium; $75,000 for an outdoor science trail and exhibits; $75,000 to make its current theater 3D capable, and improve sound and seating; and $50,000 for science lab upgrades.


“The state’s cultural facilities grant will allow us to introduce even more audiences to hands-on science in a truly spectacular setting,” Palm Beacher Lew Crampton, the center’s chief executive officer, said in a release announcing the grant. “We know that our area’s most lucrative future jobs are focused on science, technology, engineering and math, and we are betting that early exposure to science will get a kid excited about it as a career.”


A $4.9 million expansion unveiled last summer boosted the center’s size from 20,000 square feet to 32,000 square feet. Two of the highlights include an 8,000-gallon aquarium for freshwater and saltwater fish, and an interactive River of Grass exhibit.



Science Center receives $500000 state grant