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International News


UNEXPECTED CURE. In this photo released by Shimonoseki Marine Science Museum, a sunfish swims near cardboard cutouts of people’s faces with uniforms, in Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi prefecture, southern Japan. When the sunfish began looking unwell days after the aquarium closed for a six-month renovation, its keepers did not know what was wrong. Then at a staff meeting, one person suggested that the sunfish might have been affected by the sudden absence of an audience. (Kaikyokan via AP)

From The Asian Reporter, V35, #2 (February 3, 2025), pages 4 & 10.

Sunfish that got sick after aquarium closed has recovered — thanks to human cutouts

By Mari Yamaguchi

The Associated Press

AR cartoon by Jonathan Hill

TOKYO — A solitary sunfish at an aquarium in southwestern Japan lost its appetite, began banging into the side of the fish tank, and appeared unwell days after the facility closed for renovations. As a last-ditch measure to save the popular fish, its keepers hung their uniforms and set up human cutouts outside the tank.

The next morning, the sunfish ate for the first time in about a week and has been steadily recovering, said Moe Miyazawa, an aquarist at the Kaikyokan aquarium in Shimonoseki.

The large sunfish arrived at the aquarium in February 2024 from the southern coast of Kochi in the Pacific Ocean. The sunfish, a member of the blowfish family known for its unique shape and big eyes, became one of the most popular attractions at the facility.

When the sunfish began looking unwell days after the aquarium closed on December 1 for a six-month renovation, its keepers suspected digestive problems, gave it less food, and visited the fish tank to comfort the sunfish when there was construction noise, but to no avail.

Then at a staff meeting, one person suggested that the sunfish might have been affected by the sudden absence of an audience.

"We were skeptical but decided to do anything we could," Miyazawa said. They hung their uniforms and placed human-shaped cutouts with photos of smiling faces outside the tank to cheer on the fish, Miyazawa said.

"I knew (the sunfish) was looking at us when we were placing them, but I never thought it would start eating the next day," Miyazawa said, beaming. The staff now visit more often and wave at the sunfish.

The aquarium keepers say they hope many fans will return to see the sunfish when the aquarium reopens in the summer.

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