The aquarium chain has shut its Texas location after whistleblower reports revealed animal abuse including sharks likely starving to death and marine animals dying in plastic bags during transport.
Also see: SeaQuest Otters Tortured Inside A New Jersey Mall
SeaQuest has closed one of its locations following multiple claims
of animal cruelty.
The chain of mall aquariums has five locations across the US.
But a sixth location in Fort Worth, Texas, has now shut its doors
this week after mounting pressure from campaign group People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) released a shocking
whistleblower report compiling animal abuse at the facility.
PETA obtained whistleblower testimony from three former SeaQuest
Fort Worth employees who alleged that mistreatment at the facility
had led to the suffering and deaths of dozens of animals.
Neglected animals mentioned in the report include two nurse sharks,
known as Icarus and Achilles, who likely starved to death as a
result of extreme stress from being confined in a small, cramped
tank with 10 other animals.
A dead shark in a tank at SeaQuest Fort Worth. Credit: PETA
Employees said they raised concerns with SeaQuest after the sharks
were noted to have stopped eating normally, but the facility is
alleged to have dismissed the remarks and refused to address the
issue.
Another incident included in the report detailed how dozens of
marine animals reportedly died in plastic bags while being
transported from another SeaQuest location to SeaQuest Fort Worth.
“The fish were shipped in black trash bags or other coolers”, a
whistleblower said. “There was no effort made to ensure the fish
were shipped within the right parameters for the species.”
The animals who died are thought to have suffocated to death in the
plastic bags during the transport process.
As the whistleblower testimony explains, “three (3) grey smooth
hound sharks shipped in black trash bags died. The bags were so
small their bodies were curved. Very little water was put in each
bag. They all suffocated to death.”
Other avoidable deaths in the report include gourami who died after
staff were instructed by SeaQuest to put them in a tank that was too
cold for their natural temperature requirements, and koi who
“endured likely excruciating deaths” after being left in a tank with
toxic levels of ammonia.
According to PETA, which filed a complaint to local authorities over
the whistleblower report, the Fort Worth Police Department has now
opened a criminal cruelty-to-animals investigation into the SeaQuest
Fort Worth facility.
The facility had already received citations under the federal Animal
Welfare Act, including for failing to properly handle a sloth and
cat, both of whom bit visitors during interactions, and for a duck
enclosure that was covered in feces and old food waste.
“Champagne corks are popping at PETA now that this blight on
beautiful Fort Worth has finally stopped exploiting animals and
endangering the public,” says PETA Director Molly Johnson. “The
SeaQuest chain is a scourge, and PETA will continue to call out its
dreadful and deadly petting zoos until every location follows suit
and closes.”