OdySea Aquarium is keeping you updated on what the animals are doing. They are sharing all kinds of educational content for kids (and adults!) who are at home learning, .
With ten live cams to choose from, you can experience the wonder of the ocean no matter where you are.
Affixed to a bridge near the outlet of Brooks River, this live underwater cam provides a wholly different perspective on the sockeye salmon swimming upstream to spawn.
The underwater penguin exhibit at the Aquarium of the Pacific features Magellanic penguins, some of which were rescued from Brazil where they were stranded outside their native habitat.
Containing 350,000 gallons of water and over 1,000 animals, the tropical reef habitat is the Aquarium of the Pacific’s largest exhibit.
This underwater camera dives into Homosassa Springs to open a window into the crystal-clear Florida water where Florida’s most beloved aquatic mammal, the West Indian manatee, swims with a jubilee of fish through crystal-clear water.
The Aquarium of the Pacific’s Shark Lagoon will get you up close and personal with some of the ocean’s most mysterious and misunderstood predators.
This underwater aquarium camera at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach, California is known as the Blue Cavern.
These sea nettles, a genus of jellyfish called Chrysaora, live at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach, California.
This camera displays a variety of coral predators.
This live underwater cam shows extraordinary below-the-surface views of the “rubbing” behavior unique to the orcas here in British Columbia’s Johnstone Strait at Blackfish Sound.
This camera sits underneath the dock of the Wrigley Marine Science Center and is located in the Blue Cavern Marine Protected Area at Catalina Island.