Culture ‘Lonely’ Sunfish Comforted by Cardboard Cutouts of People After Aquarium Closes Due to Renovations - The aquarium noted, “We didn't know the cause [of the fish feeling unwell] ... but one of the staff members said, ‘Maybe he's lonely without the visitors?’ "

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An aquarium in Japan is getting creative when it comes to cheering up its fish!

The Kaikyokan Aquarium in Shimonoseki, Japan, which is closed as it undergoes renovations, revealed in a post on X that its staff had to think out of the box to help one of its sunfish struggling with the change.

“[The sunfish] was feeling a little unwell right after the closure,” the aquarium further noted in a translated post on X.

The sunfish stopped eating its jellyfish meals and began to rub its body against the tank, according to a report by Japanese newspaper Mainichi Shimbun, per CNN. At first, staff suspected that the sunfish had developed digestive issues or was infected by parasites, but then they began to consider other reasons.

The aquarium noted on X, “We didn't know the cause and tried various things to deal with it, but one of the staff members said, ‘Maybe he's lonely without the visitors?' ”

This prompted the staff to print some cardboard cutouts of visitors to stick onto the aquarium glass to make it look like people were watching the fish. They also used staff uniforms, which they taped beneath the faces. The facility shared a photo of the scene on X, along with the fish, who appeared to be comforted by the fake visitors’ presence.

“And then ... the next day, [the sunfish] felt better!” the aquarium said in a translated post. “Recently, it has been [swimming] in front of the tank and waving its [fins], so it seems to be in good health again!”

“Honestly, [we] can't believe it,” the aquarium continued. “But the one currently on display is very curious and would come over [to the glass] when there were visitors, so it may have been in poor health when [the visitors] suddenly disappeared.”

The aquarium noted on its website that the renovations began on Dec. 1, 2024, and that the sunfish tank, as well as the other fish tanks, were scheduled to reopen in six months around summer 2025.

According to National Geographic, sunfish "are harmless to people" and "can be very curious." It noted that in the wild, the creatures "will often approach divers" and that the sunfish population is considered "vulnerable" as they can get caught in "drift gill nets."

The Kaikyokan Aquarium isn’t the first aquarium in Japan to use alternative methods to keep the fish happy. Tokyo’s Sumida Aquarium came up with a similar solution to keep its 300 spotted garden eels active during the Covid lockdown in 2020 when they asked for volunteers to FaceTime the creatures and encourage them to come out of their hiding places in the tank, per CNN.

https://people.com/lonely-sunfish-c...touts-of-people-after-aquarium-closes-8777716 (Archive)
 
And yet retards will insist that fish don’t have feelings
I'm friends with a fish someone has. He seems quite happy when I'm around.

Remember hearing during the covid lockdowns, zoo animals actually missed the guests. Not all, of course. Social species definitely did, though. Pandas definitely enjoyed the privacy. Chimps missed having people to entertain.
 
I know there are some awful exceptions, but it occurs to me that people who work with animals, or have beloved pets, seem to be better humans. There’s something about being around animals and caring for them that helps us too. The sunfish feels better, and I bet the aquarium staff got a little happiness boost as well.
 
I think this is some sort of attempt at attention for the aquarium. I doubt fish have the intelligence to become lonely. It sure as hell wouldn't miss people.
"lonely" might be the wrong adjective, more like distressed that their "normal" day has been interrupted.

Kinda like how people from the city can't get to sleep at night their first night in the country because it's too quiet outside.
 
Poor baby. Glad to hear he's feeling better.

Molas are really clever fish. In the wild, they've figured out how to use seabirds as "cleaning stations" - they'll float on the surface of the water, usually near floating beds of drift kelp, and then the birds will come down and pick any ectoparasites (barnacles, copepods, etc.) they have off their skin. Probably my favorite fun mola fact is how they've adapted to ward off orcas from preying on them: they'll spin around, rotate in any direction, jump out of the water, and basically just juke the hell out the orca (the smartest and deadliest animal in the ocean, mind you) until it decides that eating it isn't worth the trouble. And if there's a boat nearby, they've even learned to shelter themselves below the hull to prevent the orca from getting hold of them.

They're so freaking smart. I love them so much.

sunfish evasion maneuvers.png
 

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This prompted the staff to print some cardboard cutouts of visitors to stick onto the aquarium glass to make it look like people were watching the fish. They also used staff uniforms, which they taped beneath the faces. The facility shared a photo of the scene on X, along with the fish, who appeared to be comforted by the fake visitors’ presence.
Yeah, OR...you could put some other fish in the tank with it.
 
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I know there are some awful exceptions, but it occurs to me that people who work with animals, or have beloved pets, seem to be better humans. There’s something about being around animals and caring for them that helps us too. The sunfish feels better, and I bet the aquarium staff got a little happiness boost as well.

Pets are just trial periods for kids. The humans get practice and rewarded for their parental instincts, which give them qualities for child rearing. It is simply a go to training for basic societal skills, grounding for instincts that have no outlet unless you live in a giant family farm where there is always little Amish to take care of.
 
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