The Diller Building houses our Aquarium and Terrapin Station, which also features a horseshoe crab exhibit. The aquarium features over a dozen exhibits with live marsh animals as well as a special “teacher’s tank” with live horseshoe crabs, sea stars and lots more.

The Diller Building also houses hands-on, interactive exhibits designed to immerse visitors in the wetlands, educating the observer about the important role wetlands play in life on the planet.

Terrapin StationAquarium

Terrapin Station

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Terrapin Station is the first exhibit in the world dedicated to the life history of the diamondback terrapin. Visitors can learn more about this landmark conservation project through a variety of informational displays. We take you through the life and troubles of the native turtles from birth and learn what the Institute is doing to help them.

The diamondback terrapin is a keystone species whose very presence contributes to a diversity of life and whose extinction would consequently lead to the extinction of other forms of life. Since The Wetlands Institute values the importance of diamondback terrapins to wetland habitats, terrapin research and educational programming has been the focus of our conservation efforts for two decades. In fact, our diamondback terrapin project has received national attention from ABC and NBC News, New York Times and the National Geographic Society.

Aquarium

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Our Aquarium features over a dozen exhibits with live marsh animals as well as a special “teacher’s tank” with live horseshoe crabs, sea stars, and lots more. It also houses hands-on, interactive exhibits designed to immerse visitors in the wetlands, educating the observer about the important role wetlands play in life on the planet.