The Naples Aquarium is a
unique example of a nineteenth century research station that has continued to
operate in its original premises right up to the present day.
It may not be able to match the visual splendour of its large European and
American counterparts, but its sombre, almost austere atmosphere embodies
the age in which it was founded and contemporary taste in both architecture and
criteria for exhibiting marine life, making it a monument of extraordinary
historical importance.
It was opened to the public on January 12th, 1874, when elsewhere in
Europe comparable institutions were only just beginning to be conceived.
During the second half of the nineteenth century the increasing collaboration
between naturalists and physical chemists led to the discovery of a way of
keeping marine species alive in captivity.
At the same time other, nonscientific factors contributed to the growth of
interest in aquariums, such as the abolition of the exorbitant tax on glass and
the expansion of the railway network.
As early as 1867 the German naturalist and champion of Darwin Anton
Dohrn had dreamed of opening an institute on the seafront for the study of
marine biology. He was more interested in the biological features of marine life
than in anatomical or morphological characteristics, and his field trips round
the shores of the Mediterranean convinced him of the necessity of being able to
keep captured specimens alive.
On a visit to Messina in 1868 he took with him a new piece of
equipment in the shape of a portable aquarium, and once this had proved its
worth he decided to install a number of such tanks in a building beside the sea
and make them available to marine biologist. Dohrn was convinced that this would greatly benefit research, and planned
to finance the scientific side of the zoological station by opening the aquarium
to the public and charging for admission. Naples, until recently the capital of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies,
was a sufficiently important centre of tourism and commerce to ensure keen
interest and support for such a novelty.
An English engineer, Alfred Lloyd, was commissioned to design the new institute.
In his London premises in Portland Road he had invented a system for
recycling water which made it possible to keep specimens in a tank over a long
period of time without having to change the water.
Taking advantage of the site of the new Naples aquarium, Lloyd designed a
system for pumping water into the cisterns directly from the sea, without any
need of filtering. Such a method of circulation was an immediate success and was
imitated in many other aquariums, including the one in Monte Carlo.
The Naples aquarium still uses this "semi-closed" system, in which the
water is pumped from two large underground cisterns into the tanks and then
flows back down, during which time about one third of the volume of water is
renewed.
The water is drawn from the Bay of Naples at a point 300 metres offshore
and 11 metres deep, and is left to decant in a large tank before going into the
cisterns.
The twenty three tanks on display, ranging in capacity from 250 litres to 69000
litres, use volcanic rocks to create a natural setting and are chiefly
illuminated by daylight from the skylights in the roof.
All the specimens come from the Bay of Naples, which in spite of
pollution is still one of the richest breeding grounds of marine life.
The tanks of the Gorgonie, a veritable underwater flower garden, and the
Astroides, where the various polyps thrive on a daily diet specially
prepared in a liquidiser, are both particularly beautiful.
Roman amphorae where moray eels and crabs lurk in the gloom and Neapolitan water
jars wreathed in Spirographis add to the unique atmosphere of this
aquarium.
Examples of all indigenous species can generally be seen, within the limits of
the display capacity.
The common fauna has no particular difficulty in getting acclimatised in a
confined space, while to more delicate specimens which generally do not survive
in captivity are looked after with particular care.
Over the last few years the aquarium of the Naples Zoological Station has
enhanced its status as a unique historical monument and collection of marine
life by providing a full range of educational, ecological and research
activities which ensure its place among the world's most up-to-date aquariums.
By:"Guida Breve per
l'Acquario di Napoli" - dott.sa Flegra
Bentivegna A particular thank to the very kind Flora Palumbo
Visiting time
March - October
Tuesdays to Saturdays
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sundays and holidays 10 a.m. to 7.30 p.m.
closed on Mondays
November- February
Tuesdays to Saturdays
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sundays and holidays 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m.
closed on Mondays