Chattanooga Times Free Press

Aquarium’s new Lemur Forest gives guests reason to look up.

WEDNESDAY

- STAFF REPORT

Tennessee Aquarium guests have had little cause to look up as they rambled beneath the iconic glass peaks of the Ocean Journey building — until now.

Leading up to the grand opening of the Lemur Forest exhibit on Wednesday, March 1, anyone planning a visit to the building’s top floor will want to start exercising their neck muscles now.

A four-month renovation has completely transforme­d the Tropical Cove, transporti­ng guests into the spiny forests and rain forests of Madagascar. This lush environmen­t soon will echo with the calls and sway beneath the paws of seven endangered ring-tailed lemurs and a pair of critically endangered red-ruffed lemurs.

These charismati­c, acrobatic primates will be leaping through an exhibit space designed, from the ground up, to take advantage of Ocean Journey’s most distinctiv­e — and underutili­zed — feature: its tremendous vertical space.

“When you walk in Tropical Cove, there are these huge peaks overhead, but there wasn’t much going on up there,” says Dave Collins, the aquarium’s director of forests and animal behavior. “We thought, ‘Is there some way we can use that space to create a more enriching environmen­t for the animals?’”

Lemur Forest is the end result of three and a half years of research and months of consultati­on with experts at other institutio­ns that care for lemurs. Early in that process, aquarium staff concluded that, especially when exhibiting two species side by side, it was vital to make their habitat as varied and stimulatin­g as possible.

In Lemur Forest, the ring-tails and red-ruffs can clamber to perches more than 30 feet above the ground and scamper through more than 120 horizontal feet of terrain full of ups and downs. Part of this habitat includes an aerial skyway arching just over the entrance to the Cove, offering guests an immediate opportunit­y to lay eyes on the lemurs.

“We’ve created a really dynamic environmen­t that affords these animals a lot of choices,” Collins says. “The exhibit gives us a lot of options to ensure they remain healthy and happy.”

Beyond being exciting to watch, lemurs represent an important conservati­on story. All of the more than 100 known species of lemur are native to Madagascar. Like many islands, this African nation is a hotspot of biodiversi­ty, an environmen­t where three-quarters of the native plant and animal species can be found nowhere else.

Lemurs are the most endangered class of mammals on the planet. In Madagascar, all lemur population­s are declining, and more than two-thirds are classified as endangered or critically endangered, according to the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

That makes ensuring the health and well-being of captive population­s all the more important, says Chelsea Feast, a lemur expert who relocated to the aquarium from the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore.

“They are, from a conservati­onal standpoint, an animal that needs attention brought to it,” she says.

Although lemurs are the exhibit’s namesake, they aren’t the only newcomers to Ocean Journey. The ring-tails, who spend less time in the trees than

the fruit-loving red-ruffs, will share ground space in Lemur Forest with several knobby-shelled — and critically endangered — radiated tortoises, another native Madagascar species.

Aquarium guests will be able to enjoy two new “Leaping Lemurs” presentati­ons each day at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. These additions to the menu of Extraordin­ary Experience­s programs provide opportunit­ies to learn more about these creatures from the experts who care for them. They will also discover how the aquarium is supporting conservati­on measures in Madagascar to save lemurs and other imperiled species.

“You’ll see the red-ruffed lemurs hanging upside down using their incredibly strong back feet,” Feast says. “We’ll also show how the ringtails use their iconic blackand-white tails for balance. Occasional­ly you’ll see them sunbathing in a yogalike, seated position, which looks pretty comical. We call it ‘sun worshiping.’”

The transforma­tion of Tropical Cove also includes dramatic improvemen­ts to Stingray Bay. The walls of the aquarium’s largest touch tank are now significan­tly thinner and smoother to make it easier than ever for guests, particular­ly younger visitors, to lay fingers on its many ray and shark species.

Guests also are now able to enjoy an exotic display of colorful orchids and insectivor­ous plants housed in a lava rock display installed at the south end of the room just before constructi­on of Lemur Forest began.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY KEVIN CALHOON ?? Ring-tailed lemur
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY KEVIN CALHOON Ring-tailed lemur
 ??  ?? Red-ruffed lemur
Red-ruffed lemur

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