A third beluga whale belonging to the world's largest aquarium has died, the Georgia Aquarium announced late Monday.
There's the cobra, the cat and the downward-facing dog.
The goal of yoga is to achieve inner peace. The class is a dream with beluga whales as instructors. CNN's Felipe Barral reports.
Georgia Aquarium announces the addition of a manta ray, the largest of all rays, to the Ocean Voyager gallery.
In the world's largest aquarium, where most inhabitants settle for swimming, Nandi soars gracefully through her new home on majestic 9-foot wings.
Weighing 150 pounds and strong enough to require five men to
wrestle her out of her saltwater tank, Dylan the sea turtle is ready
to be set free after nine years in captivity and a final checkup by
her veterinarian
Ray Davis, senior vice president of zoological operations at the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta, talks about a ray accident.
Officials at the Georgia Aquarium said Tuesday that it could take weeks to figure out why Ralph the whale shark suddenly died last week.
Scientists worked Friday to determine what killed Ralph, one of the four giant whale sharks at the Georgia Aquarium.
Physical exams are a lot more complicated when the patient weighs about a ton. And lives in salt water.
Ralph and Norton, meet Alice and Trixie.
Veterinarians and staff at the Georgia Aquarium are working to treat Gasper, a 17-year-old male beluga whale suffering from a potentially fatal bone disease.
Each day, thousands of visitors press up against the acrylic glass at the Georgia Aquarium to watch a playful beluga whale named Gasper.
Each day, thousands of visitors press up against the acrylic glass at the Georgia Aquarium to watch a playful beluga whale named Gasper. Gasper takes center-stage at the viewing window, blowing bubbles and making faces at wide-eyed children who coo and laugh at him and his tank mates -- Nico, Natasha, Maris and Marina.
The Georgia Aquarium opened in November to great fanfare and high expectations -- with organizers predicting it would draw more than 2 million visitors the first year and pump millions of dollars into the Atlanta economy.
The Georgia Aquarium points to the Atlanta skyline like the prow of a giant ship -- an ark filled with more than 100,000 exotic creatures.
Behind a massive acrylic window, golden trevally move in sync, a sawfish pokes through the sand and a whale shark glides slowly and steadily overhead -- an aquatic ballet set to music.