Kaimuki, Hawaii
Event Calendar ItemMauka to Makai: Environmental Expo 2015 (Earth Day) at Waikiki Aquarium
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Date: Saturday - 4/18/2015
Time: see notes
Location:
2777 Kalakaua Avenue
Honolulu, HI 96815
Phone: 808-923-9741
View Map
Cost: see notes
Clean Water Honolulu
APRIL IS EARTH MONTH!
Come Celebrate!
Saturday, April 18, 2015, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m Waikīkī Aquarium
The free expo will have water pollution prevention and ocean-related arts and crafts booths.
Watch the premiere of The Journey Home puppet show Take pictures with Apoha • Enjoy a Hawaiian stream mural Delight in keiki performances • Observe the release of Moi fish Take home a free native Hawaiian plant
Food available for purchase & be sure to bring your refillable bottles. Free parking and shuttles will be available at Waikīkī Elementary School
Take a Journey with Apoha!
Follow Apoha, the o'opu, as he struggles to return to his home stream.
Watch as he makes friends and teaches us all how to be clean water heroes along the way! Families can get their own copy of the newly released ‘The Journey Home, Part 2' booklet which is filled with fun activities.
SHOW TIMES:
A book display is scheduled to appear at all of Oahu's public libraries. Please visit our website's calendar to see when you can get a copy at your local library.
May 2-3, 2015
May 9, 2015 May 16, 2015 May 21, 2015 May 31, 2015
Hawaii Book & Music Festival, Frank Fasi Civic Center Grounds
Waianae Public Library, 2:30 p.m.
Hawaii State Public Library, 10:30 a.m.
Waipahu Public Library, 10:30 a.m. #JH2 Kaneohe Public Library, 2:00 p.m.
Join in & Get Involved
During Earth Month Adopt-A-Stream & Adopt-A-Block cleanups are scheduled across Oahu.
Volunteers 12+ years can join us to beautify our streets & streams.
Saturday, April 4, 2015 is our Earth Month Kick Off & 10th Annual Pearl Harbor Bike Path Clean Up
7:30 a.m. volunteer check-in at Neal Blaisdell Park or Waipahu Depot Road
Clean ups are scheduled every Saturday during April. Please visit our website's calendar to find out when you can help out in your neighborhood.
For more information visit:
Make a Pledge -- Be a Hero!
Too busy to get out and do something? No worries. All you need are a few spare minutes to visit our website (use the QR code below) and pledge to be:
- An Organic Gardener
- A Mud Preventer
- A Street Sweeper
- A Yard Hydrator
- A Green Engineer
- A Story Teller
Once applied, these simple pollution prevention actions are all it takes to be
An Everyday Clean Water Hero!
WWW.CLEANWATERHONOLULU.COM
Please be aware that the Hawaii March of Dimes will be starting at 7:30 am in Kapiolani Park. Traffic may be heavy, please plan ahead.
ABOUT WAIKIKI AQUARIUM
Founded in 1904 and administered by the University of Hawai'i at Manoa since 1919, the Waikiki Aquarium is located on the shoreline of Waikiki Beach next to a living reef and across from Kapiolani Park. The Aqu
The Aquarium welcomes more than 320,000 visitors annually, and is open daily from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. except Honolulu Marathon Sunday and Christmas Day. Admission is $9 for visitors; $6 for local residents, active duty military with ID, students with ID and seniors; $4 for youths ages 13-17 and persons with disabilities; $2 for juniors ages 5 to 12; and free for children 4 and under and Friends of Waikiki Aquarium (FOWA) members.
MISSION:
To inspire and promote understanding, appreciation
and conservation of Pacific marine life.
DESCRIPTION:
Founded in 1904, the Waikiki Aquarium is the third
oldest public aquarium in the United States. A part of the University of
Hawai`i at Manoa since 1919, it is located next to a living reef on the Waikiki
shoreline. Exhibits, programs, and research focus on the aquatic life of
Hawai`i and the tropical Pacific, with roughly 320,000 people visiting the
Aquarium each year. Over 3,500 organisms are on exhibit representing more than
500 species of aquatic animals and plants.
EXHIBITS:
Waikiki Aquarium exhibits focus on the diversity of
aquatic, shoreline and coral reef habitats and living communities of Hawai`i and
the tropical Pacific. Among the highlights:
- Corals Are Alive! interactive exhibits
showcasing corals, their biology and conservation - SeaVisions Theatre shows videos that
illustrate shoreline conservation and how you can be a responsible reef
visitor - South Pacific Marine Communities features
South Pacific habitats and species, including colorful reef corals and fishes,
giant clams, groupers and snappers and intriguing partnerships such as
anemonefishes and their host sea anemones - Hawaiian Marine Communities recreates
Hawaiian habitats from wave-swept surge zone to deep reef slopes, and from young
to ancient reefs; celebrates distinctive reef life, including the longnose
butterflyfish - Ocean Drifters Gallery features a
1,000-gallon moon jelly tank and a seasonally changing jelly wall that may
contain white-spotted jellies, blue blubbers, sea nettles, box jellies and
ctenophores - Hunters on the Reef 35,000-gallon exhibit
is home to Hawaiian sharks and jacks; shark interpretive panels introduce shark
biology, research, conservation and safety. New Spyball camera provides up close
shark encounters in real time on a television screen - Edge of the Reef naturalistic shoreline
exhibit offering opportunities for supervised observation and hands-on
interactions with selected marine life - The Coral Farm exhibit and working research
facility for propagation of reef corals - Giant Clams exhibit and working research
facility for propagation of clams - Hawaiian Monk Seal Habitat features the
endangered Hawaiian Monk Seal found only in the Hawaiian Islands - Aquaculture features moi, a popular food
fish, whose numbers have declined in the wild - Coastal Gardens with native Hawaiian plants
adapted for life close to the sea
Hawaiian monk seals; ‘öhai (endemic
Hawaiian coastal plant)
UNIQUE SPECIES:
Pacific giant clams; Hawaiian stream gobies; rare
deep-reef butterflyfish; bearded armorheads; masked angelfish; and diverse
native coastal plants
CONSERVATION & RESEARCH:
The Waikiki Aquarium is a working research facility,
conducting numerous conservation and research programs, including:
- Husbandry, nutrition and behavior of aquatic and marine
aquarium specimens - Husbandry and propagation of chambered
nautilus - Spawning behavior, larval rearing, and propagation
potential of selected reef fishes - Identification & treatment of diseases, parasite
infections and other ailments of aquarium marine life - Coral husbandry, propagation and conservation
- Hawaiian monk seal metabolic and bacteriological
research - Giant clam husbandry and propagation
- Sea jelly husbandry and propagation
- Deep reef coral research
- Coral Ark: archiving and husbandry of rare Hawaiian
corals
The Waikiki Aquarium offers numerous education programs,
including:
- Interpretive services: staff or volunteers enrich
the visitor experience with explanations of the exhibits, demonstrations, and
hands-on experiences - Self-tour opportunities for individuals and
groups: interpretive graphics & exhibits, handouts are
available. - School Program: presentations and docent-assisted
tours for school groups, grades K - 6 - Outreach and special request presentations for
schools and community groups - Community Enrichment Program: year-round natural
history fieldtrips, classes, and workshops for children, families, and
adults - Information services: staff answer questions from
visitors & community on marine and aquarium-science related
topics
The Waikiki Aquarium affords a number of opportunities
to get involved through:
- Membership: Join the Friends of the
Waikïkï Aquarium (FOWA) to enjoy the annual benefits of free
admission, 20% discount at the Natural Selections gift shop, quarterly mailings
of our beautiful and informative magazine Kilo i’a, free salt water
pick-up, and facility rental privileges at “Family” and
“Family Plus” levels. To select the membership level right for you,
please see the Visitor Services staff or contact Events and Membership Manager
Raina Fujitani at (808) 440-9008 for more information. - Volunteerism: When you donate your time and
curiosity to the Waikiki Aquarium, you are rewarded with diverse and challenging
opportunities to help make a difference!- Education
– Docents provide on-site presentations and tours to elementary school
groups and provide outreach programs for school and community groups.
Interpreters at the Edge of the Reef exhibit assist visitors and provide
up-close observations of Hawaiian marine life. - Live
Exhibits – Assist with husbandry, tank maintenance and
feeding. - Natural
Selection Shop – Assist with stocking inventory and sales. - Membership/Public
Relations/Special Events - Assist with bulk mail outs & communications
with Aquarium members, public relations surveys, record-keeping and special
events.
- Education
The Waikiki Aquarium has received several awards for its
research and conservation efforts, including:
- 2008 Keep It Hawai`i Award
- 2003 Munson Aquatic Conservation Exhibit (M.A.C.E.) Award
from the American Zoo & Aquarium Association (AZA) for South Pacific Marine
Communities exhibit - 2003 Edward H. Bean Award from AZA for Long Term Tropical
Pacific Coral Propagation Program
Rossiter
EMPLOYEES: 35 full-time, 36 part-time, 33
affiliate staff
HOURS: 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily (except
Honolulu Marathon Sunday and Christmas Day)
ADMISSION: $9 for visitors; $6 for local
residents, active duty military with ID, students with ID and senior citizens;
$4 for youths ages 13-17 and persons with disabilities; $2 for juniors ages 5 -
12; and free for children 4 and under and Friends of Waikiki Aquarium
members
Questions? Ready for an appointment?
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- RELATED LINKS
- Waikiki Aquarium
Founded in 1904, the Waikiki Aquarium is the second oldest public aquarium in the United States. A part of the University of Hawai`i at Manoa since 1919, it is located next to a living reef on the Waikiki shoreline.
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