A new scientific report on UK public aquaria has been
published by the Captive Animals' Protection Society. The
136 page comprehensive report is the culmination of the largest
and most in-depth investigation ever made on any public aquaria
industry (involving visiting the majority of the public aquaria
currently in the UK), which was commissioned to an independent
animal welfare consultant in 2004. As a result of the study
CAPS is launching the campaign SUFFERING DEEP DOWN aimed to
highlight the plight of fish and aquatic invertebrates in
public aquaria.
CAPS had become increasingly alarmed at the continuous growth
of the UK aquaria industry - and the animal welfare consequences
on captive fish - and by the lack of published information
about the public aquarium trade, as well as what really goes
on behind the public facade of the aquarium tanks. As a result,
an in-depth investigation was commissioned which involved
the visiting and video recording of 31 randomly selected public
aquaria throughout the UK (55% of all aquaria), looking at
most aspects of their performance, from the welfare problems
of fish, the design of the exhibits, to even the risk aquarium
visitors may be exposed to.
Among many findings, the investigation found that the majority
of public aquaria in the UK display animals showing abnormal
behaviour, keep many animals with evidence of physical health
problems, keep mostly wild-caught individuals, and do not
prevent physical contact between visitors and animals (with
the subsequent health risk to both). A staggering 98% of the
animals kept in UK public aquaria do not belong to species
classed as threatened by the World Conservation Union, and
at the very least 45% of the public aquaria release fish to
the sea for reasons other than conservation, which could be
considered illegal.
Jordi Casamitjana, author of the scientific report, concluded:
"On almost every front public aquaria seem to fail. Many
animals suffer in public aquaria, and no conservation, education
or research work can compensate for this. However, in UK public
aquaria, there seem to be minimal conservation activities,
the education value is very poor and scientific research is
almost non existent, so even the aquaria's own claims that
could possibly justify the animals 'sacrifice' are totally
unfounded. Furthermore, in the context of the new UK zoo legislation,
it appears that many of UK public aquaria no longer meet the
new zoo licensing conservation criteria that would allow them
to stay open to the public."
Click here to view video clips online
Click here for the Suffering Deep
Down report (PDF)
Click here for the Aquatic Zoos
report (PDF)
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We are very concerned about what we have
found during this investigation. There are clear and serious
animal welfare problems that should, by themselves, result
in the closure of public aquaria, but there are also very
grave and wide conservation implications of the activities
that take place in such centres.

Most public aquaria exist only because
of the trade in animals removed from the wild, and in some
cases welfare problems in aquaria are so great that many animals
die soon after being put on display, to be soon replaced by
yet more wild-caught individuals.

The evidence unearthed during this study
has confirmed the ethical position long held by CAPS. By showing
the extent and gravity to which the public aquaria industry
is damaging the lives of many animals, calls for the abolition
of public aquaria can now be made not only on ethical grounds,
but also on practical ones. |