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Second Whale Shark Dies in ATL aquarium (1 Viewer)

The_Colonel

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ATLANTA — Another whale shark died early Wednesday at the Georgia Aquarium, the second this year at the only facility outside Asia to display the huge, rare fish.

Norton's death came just a few weeks after two new whale sharks arrived at the aquarium from Taiwan. At that time, Taiwan fishery officials had said they were satisfied the aquarium provided the quality care the young whale sharks would need.

Aquarium officials said in a written statement Wednesday that Norton had stopped eating in recent months and showed erratic swimming behavior.

They said the staff had noticed a decline in Norton's swimming behavior on Tuesday and blood work confirmed a decline in his health. Early Wednesday, the whale shark stopped swimming and settled to the bottom of his tank, aquarium officials said.

Divers brought him to a stretcher, and "after every option had been exhausted to improve Norton's health, the team made the decision to humanely euthanize him," the aquarium said.

In January, Ralph, another whale shark that was among the aquarium's first stars after it opened in 2005, also died there.

Ralph had stomach problems that led to an inflammation of a membrane in his abdomen, according to aquarium officials. The aquarium has theorized that a chemical it no longer uses in the tank to treat parasites might have contributed to his loss of appetite and health problems.

The two new whale sharks, Yushan and Taroko, join Alice and Trixie in the aquarium's 6-million-gallon tank. The sharks can grow up to 40 feet long.
 
what a waste :(. they should have made the tank much larger and provided natural parasite control. well at least something like that or not have taken the worlds largest fish and keep it in an aquarium..
 
I don't think this was do to neglect, sounds like the first one was a mistake and the second was just what happenes to all our animals, they die.

I think that this program is great, we need to learn as much as we can about these animals. And there is also the argument that how many of these animals die in the wild do to infection or sickness? that does happen, the only diffrence is that people were there to whitness this so it put a more "aaww thats sad" face to it.

Think about it this way. if a deer got hurt in your front yard by, say falling into a new pond you just dug? well people will be all over you because its "your fault" cuz you dug the hole, the deer now has broken legs and needs to be put down. How many time does that happen in the wild? i'm guessing alot. The only diffrence is you saw one, and the other became an unlucky breakfast for some wolves.
 

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