citypaper: archives

Underwater Dive
When the national Aquarium opened in the basesment of the commerce Department, it was state-of-the-art. Too bad it's not still 1932.

Cover Story

Note correction: It's the Herbert Hoover Building, not J. Edgar.

The realization that things are somewhat amiss at the National Aquarium--after, that is, you notice that the place is located in the basement of the Department of Commerce's J. Edgar Hoover Building, and that it's awfully dark and a little smaller than the size of an average Petco store--hits you right about the time you get to the shark tank.

In a space not much bigger than a typical office cubicle, two lemon sharks and two nurse sharks share quarters with a red drum fish, a remora, and a rescued juvenile sea turtle from Georgia named Harold. Harold, as it happens, is an interloper. The tank next door is actually his home, but it sits empty, hidden behind a white curtain, having sprung a leak.

Though they are the largest specimens in the aquarium, the sharks are juveniles. There just isn't enough room here in Room B-077 in the Hoover Building basement, at 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW, for full-grown animals, unless they're clown fish or tree frogs. At about 4 feet in length, the sharks are already getting too big for their digs. And, it turns out, they have a "condition."

"Our lemon sharks have what we believe is a neurological condition and will occasionally lie on their side," explains a laminated typed note taped to the glass. "The cause of the condition is undetermined at this time. Despite this condition, they are still eating well and remain otherwise healthy. In addition, they are outgrowing our exhibit so we are identifying a facility that can accommodate their size and possibly determine the cause of the neurological condition. Thank you for your understanding." ... Continued

Issue of Jan. 5 - 11, 2001

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