As someone who has worked for two zoos and understand the inner workings of a quality environment for animals, this isn’t it. I could talk forever about the tanks that were too small or the last of large families of seahorses. But the thing that got me the most was the touch tank in the front of the aquarium that had little to no supervision, no area to get the lotions and oils off your hands before you dove in to touch critters, and no rules on how to touch the animals (no pulling, no grasping onto the arms of sea stars, scooping under them only, don’t take them out of the water). This aquarium is not AZA accredited, which leads me to think that the point is to make money, not educate. I couldn’t find if this aquarium is nonprofit but I honestly don’t think it is.
If you care about the animals you see, go somewhere, anywhere else. Pay the money to go see fish in the wild under supervision of professional divers, that know the importance of these ecosystems.