Holy water: Jerusalem aquarium set to open

July 06, 2017 - 11:00

Jerusalem is a good distance from the sea, but residents and visitors will soon be able to view specimens of Israel’s marine life in a mass aquarium to open in the Holy City.

Visitors tour the newly opened Sea Israel Gottesman Aquarium in Jerusalem on Wednesday. The aquarium, in land-locked Jerusalem, is the only stand-alone one of its kind in the Middle East and houses marine animals from the habitats of Israel’s seas. — AFP/VNA Photo
Viet Nam News

JERUSALEM — Jerusalem is a good distance from the sea, but residents and visitors will soon be able to view specimens of Israel’s marine life in a mass aquarium to open in the Holy City.

The new compound, part of the city’s Biblical Zoo, contains 30 tanks comprising a 7,000sq.m aquarium with fish and sea creatures living in half a million gallons of seawater.

The aquarium’s inception was nearly 10 years ago, a combination of the zoo receiving additional grounds and a national plan to increase awareness of marine life.

With all the growing awareness to biodiversity, "we are ignoring the sea as a habitat", Shai Doron, CEO of the zoo, said on Wednesday.

Israel is located between the Mediterranean Sea to the west and the Red Sea to the south, and also has two other bodies of water nearby in the Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea.

Varieties of fish, sea turtles, manta rays and seahorses are among the creatures found in the aquarium’s vast tanks, with sharks expected to join soon.

The indoor complex, decorated in hues of blue and wavy lines, is expected to be a boon to the zoo and local tourism.

The zoo is already Israel’s most visited paid tourism site, with over 750,000 people entering its gates each year.

Doron said the aquarium was the first of its kind in the Middle East and would open in a number of weeks.

Decorating the walls by the tanks are displays on themes such as jellyfish, corals, the dangers of plastic bags, and Jewish laws regarding eating seafood.

The complex will also serve as a conservation and breeding centre. — AFP

 

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