Tokyo Sea Life Park

Tokyo Sea Life Park (葛西臨海水族園) is a public aquarium located in Kasai Rinkai Park in Edogawa Ward, Tokyo. Its predecessor was the Ueno Aquarium, which was set up in Ueno Zoo. The building was designed by Yoshio Taniguchi. The aquarium is accredited as a Museum-equivalent facility by the Museum Act from Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.

The park can be accessed from Kasai-Rinkai Park Station on the Keiyō Line.

History
Tokyo Sea Life Park has its origins in "Uonozoki", the first public aquarium in Japan that was opened in 1882. It was a public aquarium that existed only during the exposition and was closed at the end of the exposition. After the exposition, the Uonozoki was demolished.

In 1929, the Ueno Aquarium was opened in the same place at Ueno Zoo. In 1952, the aquarium started breeding saltwater fish based on the experimental results of filtration equipment. The New Ueno Aquarium was subsequently opened in 1964. The New Ueno Aquarium started to use acrylic glass for large tanks in earnest. In 1964, acrylic panels with a height of 2 m, a width of 18 m, and a thickness of 7 cm were installed.

In commemoration of the 100th anniversary of Ueno Zoo, a plan was formulated to build the largest aquarium in Japan. The new aquarium officially opened in 1989 as Tokyo Sea Life Park. All specimens kept in the Ueno Aquarium, which subsequently closed, were inherited by Tokyo Sea Life Park.

Overview


Approximately 650 species are kept in 47 tanks, including tuna that inhabit a large donut-shaped tank.

When the park opened, it was the largest and most popular public aquarium in Japan. The annual number of visitors in the first year of the park reached 3.55 million, far exceeding the Japanese record at that time (2.4 million at Suma Aqualife Park in 1987). The record was not broken until Osaka Aquarium was inaugurated.

Tokyo Sea Life Park held the world's first successful exhibition of nurseryfish. In addition, many of the exhibited species are directly and locally collected by the Research Section of the Breeding and Exhibition Division. Rare species can be seen especially in polar aquariums.

Entering the park is free on the following days: May 4 (Greenery Day), October 1 (Tokyo Citizen's Day), and October 10 (Tokyo Sea Life Park's anniversary.)

Renewal
As the facility is aging after more than 30 years in existence, considerations are underway for a new facility. The park solicited opinions from the citizens of Tokyo at the end of 2018. In January 2019, the park formulated a basic plan for the new facility on the premises. In February 2020, a study group of experts approved the plan report. The scale of the new facility is expected to have a total floor area of about 22,500 square meters, with maintenance costs of 24 to 27 billion yen. A business plan was to be formulated by the end of 2020, with the new aquarium expected to open in 2026.

Exhibits






Although the park is large with many exhibits, display methods are simple and only have the names and pictures of species shown. Despite this, there are also picture guides and rooms with specialized staff. As a service improvement, digital photo frame panels with commentary were added next to tanks in May 2011.

The park was the first aquarium in Japan to successfully hold Pacific bluefin tuna and scalloped hammerhead specimens in long-term captivity.

The park has also established a method for growing seaweed that require good water quality, water flow, and sufficient light, such as giant kelp, in a closed indoor tank. Tokyo Sea Life Park maintains friendly ties with Monterey Bay Aquarium in regards to kelp exhibition.

In 1999, the park acquired two blue sharks which inhabited their tanks for 210 and 246 days. This was the longest captivity record until it was overtaken by the Sendai Umino-Mori Aquarium. In 2020, the park started captivity of two blue sharks and kept them for five months.


 * Oceanic Exhibits
 * Second floor
 * A group of sharks, rays, and sardines such as scalloped hammerhead and blacktip reef shark are exhibited. In the past, the pelagic thresher and bonnethead were also exhibited.
 * First floor
 * "Voyagers of the Sea" is a doughnut-shaped 2200 m3 tank. It was the largest indoor tank in Japan in 1989. The tank connects to the second floor, but it is a different tank from the one where sharks are exhibited. Pacific bluefin tuna, mackerel tuna, striped bonito, houndfish, Rhina ancylostoma, and scalloped hammerhead are exhibited. The tank is also home to other species such as blue shark, ocean sunfish, Indo-Pacific sailfish, longtail tuna, tiger shark, and shortfin mako shark. Seats are installed in the Aqua Theater next to it, so visitors can enjoy it calmly.
 * "Seas of the World" - The exhibits are divided into the Pacific Ocean, Indian Ocean, Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, Deep sea, Arctic Ocean/Antarctic Ocean. In the past, goblin sharks and Brama japonica have been exhibited in the deep sea tank.
 * "Nagisa Species" - Mullet, red seabream, common octopus, amefurashi, etc. A touching pool with Starfish and Sea urchin is also in this section. In addition, if various conditions are met, sharks such as bullhead sharks can also be touched.
 * "Four Species" of "Penguin Ecology" - In this section, Humboldt penguins, king penguins, rockhopper penguins, and fairy penguins are kept outdoors. However, king penguins and rockhopper penguins are vulnerable to the summer heat and are kept indoors with a cooling facility in the summer. This is not open to the public.
 * "Seaweed Forest" - Exhibition centered on giant kelp
 * "The Sea of Tokyo" - Organisms from the Ogasawara Islands, Seven Islands of Izu, and Tokyo Bay are displayed separately. Pagrus major, Spiny red gurnard, etc. are kept in this section.
 * "Ecology of sea birds" - Murre, tufted puffin, etc.


 * Freshwater Exhibits
 * This section exhibits freshwater Japanese species such as Oikawa, Iwana, Yamame, and killifish.

Research and conservation
At Tokyo Sea Life Park, staff work on the conservation and breeding of both Japanese and foreign rare species.


 * Foreign species: Humboldt penguins, fairy penguins, etc.
 * Domestic species: Japanese fire belly newt, Shuttles hoppfish, Tokyo-area amphibians (Tokyo salamander, Japanese wrinkled frog, Japanese brown frog, etc.), Japanese Oryzias, Acheilognathus typus, Chaetodon daedalma, etc.

In 2007, the park also succeeded in the breeding of leafy seadragons. The Japanese fire belly newt is also kept at Ueno Zoo, Tama Zoological Park, and Inokashira Park Zoo, with the four institutions working together in conservation efforts. In addition, the results of zoological research in a wide range of fields are utilized for exhibitions. Tokyo Sea Life Park conducts surveys and research on the breeding of aquatic organisms by accumulating data on food, habitat, breeding environments and so forth, as well as inspection and dissection of dead individuals. The park is focusing on the breed of bluefin tuna, and spawning was confirmed for the first time in the world in a closed terrestrial tank.

Tokyo Sea Life Park continuously monitors of the natural environment in Tokyo. It conducts joint research of water quality maintenance technologies such as denitrification with companies, and research in improving breeding environment technologies.

Ocellated Icefish
On February 12, 2013, the ocellated icefish (Chionodraco rastrospinosus) spawned in captivity for the first time on record. About 500 eggs, each with a diameter of about 4.5 mm, were laid. Although the hatching time was unknown, the park speculated it would take six months like other Antarctic fish species. The first egg subsequently hatched in May of the same year. This is the world's first example of breeding an ocellated icefish.

Penguin escape
On March 3, 2012, a Humboldt penguin kept at the park was found to have escaped into Tokyo Bay. On May 24 of the same year, it was found at the foot of Gyotoku Bridge (event). The penguin was safely returned to the park and went back on exhibit to the public on June 7.

Mass tuna death incident
In December 1, 2014, 63 bluefin tuna, 67 mackerel tuna, and 35 striped bonito were kept in a large tank for migratory fish. From the beginning of the same month, these individuals died one after another. The mackerel tuna were wiped out on January 18, 2015, and the striped bonito on January 26. By January 26, only 3 bluefin tuna were left in the tank. While the cause has not been determined, pathological tests revealed a virus in the spleen cells of bluefin tuna and mackerel tuna.

One more bluefin tuna died on February 25, and another on March 24, leaving only one remaining. In April 2016, the park announced the final results of its investigation, which indicated that the mass mortality was not caused by a single factor, but by the combined effects of multiple direct and indirect factors.

After consultation with various experts, measures were taken to address several factors that were thought to have contributed to the problem. More tuna were also brought into the park. The current situation has returned to a state similar to that prior to 2014, but without the mass mortality trends seen in previous years.