Aquarium Center Kragujevac | |
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44°01′04″N 20°54′24″E / 44.01778°N 20.90667°E | |
Date opened | 1999 |
Location | Kragujevac, Serbia |
Floor space | 400 m2 (4,300 sq ft) |
No. of species | 600 |
Total volume of tanks | 3 million litres |
Annual visitors | 30,000 |
Owner | Faculty of Science – University of Kragujevac |
Website | www |
Aquarium Center Kragujevac (Aquarium — Centre for Conservation of Biodiversity and Fishing in inland waters; Serbian: Centar za ribarstvo i konzervaciju biodiverziteta kopnenih voda — Akvarijum) is the first[1] and only public freshwater aquarium in Serbia.[2] At the same time it is the largest aquarium[3] and the only aqua zoo in Serbia. It was founded in 1999. Aquarium is organizational unit of the Institute for Biology and Ecology,[a] at Faculty of Science in Kragujevac,[4] and is located in the premises of this scientific institution. It covers 400 square meters, and its capacity is 60,000 l.[5] It is part of the tourist offer of the city of Kragujevac.[6]
Aquarium — Centre for Conservation of Biodiversity and Fishing in inland waters is an organizational unit of the Institute for Biology and Ecology, at Faculty of Science. It has the status of a scientific research, innovative, development and service center in the field of applied hydroecology. The center has long-term cooperation with the economy and provides the following services:
Biological monitoring of water:
Ecological restoration of aquatic ecosystems:
Sustainable fishing:
Educational tourism and ecotourism:
The basic exhibit occupies the largest area of the aquarium and consists of geographical units that are organized to include the fauna of Serbia, Europe and distant continents. There are also special units that illustrate different types of pollution of aquatic ecosystems.[8]
In the exhibition area of the Aquarium, there is a rich collection of freshwater organisms from Serbia and the Balkan Peninsula (trout, barbell, esox, perch, catfish...), Europe, Asia, Africa, America and Australia, including fish from tropical waters (scalare, piranha, discus...), amphibians (frogs and salamanders), reptiles (turtles and snakes), and invertebrates (leeches, crawfishes…). Since 2016, the Aquarium's collection includes representatives of marine organisms.[9]
The most interesting species that can be seen in Aquarium are carnivorous piranhas and a very rear and endangered African Lungfish, which represents a transitional shape between fish and amphibians.[3]
Aquarium also includes: