Whale Shark Dies at Georgia Aquarium
According to Aquarium officials, Ralph, one of the four whale sharks rescued by the Georgia Aquarium in Taiwan, died at 9:30 p.m. Thursday. The Georgia Aquarium's executive director, Jeff Swanagan, said that staff members there noticed that Ralph was not swimming on Thursday afternoon.
"At 1:30, Ralph was observed not swimming," Swanagan said. "Our husbandry staff and veterinary staff gave him medical attention, and they did that for eight straight hours."
“The entire staff is saddened by what has happened today."
Recently, Ralph had suffered a loss of appetite and swimming patterns, officials said. The Georgia Aquarium has medical facilities geared toward helping aquatic life while keeping them within their environment, Swanagan said, and began treating Ralph in the water.
"Our facility is uniquely designed to enable us to give the kind of veterinary care for an animal that is trouble," he said. "We can actually keep the animal in the water and work with them at the surface, but in that process, Ralph did not respond to the treatment, and we did lose him."
The two male whale sharks, Ralph and Norton were brought to the Georgia Aquarium from Taiwan in 2005, where they would have been harvested as a food source. Two female whale sharks, Trixie and Alice, came to the Aquarium last June.
Earlier this month, Gaspar, a beluga whale who had been in poor condition since his rescue from an amusement park in Mexico City in October 2005, was euthanized earlier this month.
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