The focus of the North Carolina Aquarium at
Fort Fisher, in
Kure Beach, is to educate visitors about the waters of the
Cape Fear region. The aquarium was recently named among the Best Aquariums in the United States by the Travel Channel and is one of the Top Ten Attractions in North Carolina. The Cape Fear Conservatory, the visitors' first stop in the aquarium, features freshwater life. In this large, tree-filled atrium, streams, ponds and swamps are home to
frogs,
snakes,
bass,
catfish, and
perch.
Box turtles hide among the Conservatory's groundcover. American
alligators native to
North Carolina occupy one of the larger exhibits in the Conservatory. An albino alligator exhibit opened in 2009. In 2006, the aquarium opened an exhibit featuring the venomous snakes of the region, including several species of
rattlesnake,
copperheads, and
cottonmouths. The Coastal Waters Gallery, which includes the
Coquina Outcrop Touch Pool, provides hands-on opportunities to learn about
sea urchins,
horseshoe crabs,
whelks, and other creatures of a rocky outcrop surf zone.
Masonboro Inlet Jetty features the fishes common around a wave-washed rock jetty, an indoor
salt marsh, a
sea horse habitat, and a
loggerhead sea turtle display. The Open Oceans Gallery includes Sharkstooth Ledge, which features fish common to offshore North Carolina, such as
pufferfish,
hogfish, and
filefish. The gallery also displays
octopus,
jellyfish, and
corals native to the state's waters. A new multimedia suite features an extinct whale-eating shark called
megalodon. This exhibit have been opened on July 1, 2011, and includes projections on a 23-ft curved screen, as well as interactive holograms and touch-screen interfaces. Holding , Cape Fear Shoals is the largest of the aquarium's
saltwater exhibits. The -deep replica of an offshore
reef affords two-story, multi-level views of large
sharks,
stingrays,
groupers, and
moray eels. Sculpture'' outside the main entrance of the North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher. The Exotic Aquatics Display features animals native to
Indo-Pacific and other ocean regions. These displays include spiny lobsters, the
red lionfish (
Pterois volitans), and a North Carolina native, the spotted
scorpionfish. They are both known for their inconspicuous, venomous spines. Lionfish are native to the
Indian and
Pacific Oceans, but in 2000 were confirmed as having established themselves in North Carolina. Australian spotted jellies, recently invasive in U.S. coastal waters, are among the gallery's newer exhibits. In June 2012, the aquarium opened the Bamboo Shark Touch Pool exhibit which allows visitors to touch live bamboo sharks.
Bamboo sharks are considered harmless to humans and the aquarium hopes to educate visitors about sharks through interaction. The Pacific Reef Display features living
corals,
giant clam,
anemones,
cardinalfish,
hawkfish,
clownfish,
wrasses,
surgeonfish, and nearly a dozen other fish species.
Expansion The facility closed in November 1999 for a major expansion and reopened in March 2002. The new construction increased the size of aquarium systems from to . The expansion included the creation of the Cape Fear Shoals tank, a exhibit recreating the hard bottomed coral reefs off the coast of North Carolina. == North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores==