Philadelphia Zoo Thylo's Philadelphia Zoo Review!

I enjoyed reading your review of the place Thylo! I might go to the zoo this fall so I was a little saddened to hear that an area of the small mammal house ( That I was looking forward to go to) is closed for remodeling. I was looking forward to seeing the slow loris and the echidnas as I have never seen them before.

The website still lists a few of the nocturnal animals on their website. Are they still at the zoo or is the website old?
None of the Small Mammal House is currently under renovation. As zoo_enthusiast says above, the nocturnal wing now is just for vampire bats. The diurnal hall has two-toed sloth, agouti, meerkat, aardvark (to see some good activity, visit at the beginning or end of the day), northern tree shrew, pygmy marmoset, fat-tailed gerbil, Eurasian harvest mouse, and perhaps another one or two species. Pygmy slow loris is at the zoo (and on the website, last I checked) but not on exhibit. The other main nocturnal exhibit is the pair of aye-aye exhibits (sometimes open, leaving just one exhibit) in PECO Primate Reserve, which now also hold Malagasy giant jumping rat. I have yet to see the rat in there but nearly always see the aye-ayes.
 
Good review. A couple notes:

- The gibbons and orangutans do also share the indoor space.

- While their could be more climbing opportunities in Big Cat Falls, there certainly are opportunities in each of the rotating exhibits.
 
Can anyone give me a 2017 list of all of the birds in the McNeil aviary? I know this might be a lot to ask but it would be really helpful.
 
So I revisited the zoo with @jayjds2 on November 11 and figured I'd comment on some bits of my previous review. Spoiler alert, I did not enjoy the zoo as much this time around.


As suggested on here, I skipped the Rare Animal Conservation Center at first and went straight to the Small Mammal House since the animals in the nocturnal section are suppose to be more active and easier to see at this time, while the lights are still on. One thing I noticed first is that it’s really easy to miss the house. I don’t know why but it’s really easy to just bypass the turn that leads to it. What also didn’t help for me is that the front of the building looked like the off-show buildings I’m used to seeing at Bronx (kind of just bland with windowless doors). When I first went inside, I wasn’t impressed. I’m not sure what I expected but I certainly didn’t expect just two rows of similarly sized and seemingly too small enclosures with nothing special about them. As I started to go through it, though, I began to really like the exhibit. The enclosures were well designed and had places for the animals to hind and plenty of climbing space for the more arboreal species. I also discovered I was mistaken about the sizes of the enclosures. While some species such as the Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec did have only one enclosure, most had two or even three enclosures to move freely between (I’ll attach photos to show what I mean by enclosures). This really gave the animals a lot more room than I expected. And this trend continued in the nocturnal section of the house. Especially here the arboreal species really had a lot of climbing opportunities. The best enclosure in the nocturnal wing is certainly the Short-Beaked Echidna/Sugar Glider enclosure. It was quite large with plenty of ground space for the echidnas but also lots of climbing space for the gliders. The worst enclosure here is probably the Common Vampire Bat one, as it’s a bit small for the 18 bats that inhabit it, though isn't too bad overall. The final section in the Small Mammal House is a large room containing two enclosures: one for Aardvarks/Meerkats and one for Hoffmann’s Two-Toed Sloth/Red-Rumped Agouti. I quite liked the sloth/agouti enclosure as it was large and had plenty of space for the sloth(s) to climb around while also giving the agoutis plenty of space to run and hide (and hide they did as I did not see them). The Aardvark/Meerkat one is alright. It seemed a bit crowded and I was a bit surprised to not find the Aardvarks in the nocturnal section. Out here the pair just slept in their den. The species I found in the first section were (in no particular order) Harris’s Antelope Squirrel, Degu, Pygmy Marmoset, Northern Tree Shrew, Short-Eared Elephant Shrew, Fat-Tailed Gerbil, and Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec. In the nocturnal section, I found Short-Beaked Echidna (T. a. aculeatus), Sugar Glider, Feathertail Glider, Striped Possum, Malagasy Giant Rat, Pygmy Slow Loris, Common Vampire Bat, and Asian Garden Dormouse. There were also Greater Egyptian Jerboas and Lesser Egyptian Jerboas but I saw neither. Also, out behind the house are Red Kangaroos, Red River Hogs, and an Okapi. I really do suggest to anyone who visits this zoo, visit the Small Mammal house right when it opens. The animals are much more active and easier to see. Plus, there were a few species whom I saw at this time, but never again on my two return visits to the house.

So this house has declined a lot since 2014. As most of you know, the nocturnal hall was closed down some time ago and I found that all of the species kept in it bar the vampire bats have gone. The entrance into the section was walled off and replaced by a single bat enclosure- which is much better than the old one to be fair. I also found that all the enclosures on the right-side of the house were all empty and covered over and only Degu, Pygmy Marmoset, Northern Tree-Shrew, and African Pygmy Hedgehog inhabit the rows of enclosures. The Aardvark/Meerkat and sloth/agouti remain unchanged, though there's only one elderly Aardvark left and the Meerkats have an outdoor enclosure now as well. The Okapi has left the collection and the hogs moved to African Plains. Their enclosures were combined and are now home to the kangaroos and some Emus, while the old kangaroo enclosure sits empty.

Next we backtracked back to the Rare Animal Conservation Center. Now unlike the Small Mammal House, but similar to much of the rest of the zoo, the enclosures in here were very unnaturalistic, though that didn’t make them necessarily bad. Several of them had floors covered with what reminded me of the pet rabbit bedding and there were a lot of ropes and shelves in these enclosures (since most of the inhabitants were primates). I’d say all the species had adequate space and made appropriate use of it. My main complaint would be the lack of outdoor space. I mean, yes, the spider monkeys have outdoor enclosures, and many of the species get to use the Zoo 360 trail systems, but other than that all the animals are just stuck inside 24/7. Of those, I spotted the lemurs and titis out and about. Another problem I had with this exhibit has to do with the two species I was most excited to see in it: the Red-Capped Mangabey and the Red-Shanked Douc. The problem I have with them is that they’re primates, and thus are very social animals, yet the zoo only has one of each and keeps them alone. When Smithsonian got down to their last Sulawesi Crested Macaque and Grey-Cheeked Mangabey, they put the two together so they wouldn’t have to be alone. I feel a similar solution should be arrived to here. Now I don’t expect they will be holding either species for too much longer unfortunately, but even a little time is better than no time. The species held in this exhibit are Eclectus Parrot, Pied Tamarin, Red-Shanked Douc, Bolivian Grey Titi, Black-and-Rufous Elephant Shrew, Red-Capped Mangabey, Black-and-White Colobus, Blue-Eyed Black Lemur, Geoffroy’s Marmoset, Golden Lion Tamarin, Mongoose Lemur, White-Faced Saki, Naked Mole Rat, Rodrigues Flying Fox, Brazilian Porcupine, and Malagasy Giant Rat. Inside there’s also a Common Dwarf Mongoose enclosure but I did not see those. Outside the building, there are Emus, Colombian Spider Monkeys, and Brown Spider Monkeys. I was pretty surprised to see how big the Black-and-Rufous Elephant Shrews are. I mean, I figured they were big but not much larger than a Short-Eared Elephant Shrew. In reality, they are quite large. Of course, I was mostly excited to see the Red-Shanked Douc, as it’s the species that brought my attention towards the zoo and also it’s so rare. But it was kind of sad to see him, an aging, obese-looking monkey, clamber around his decently sized enclosure all alone, knowing this was likely the only time I’d ever see the species due to him being the last in North America and being extremely endangered. At least when I saw the Sumatran Rhinoceros at Cincinnati, there were two of them and there are a few others in captivity out there and people are working to save them, but how many people are trying to save this unique and very special monkey? I noticed that he spent a lot of his time in a corner or against the back wall just sitting with his head down and back towards the visitors. Now I'm not one to place Human sentient emotions and behaviors onto animals, but he did appear a bit sad, probably just because he's a social primate and is all alone now. Got the same sort of vibe from the mangabey.

This house has gone relatively unchanged since my visit, though giant rats were moved to the PECO Primate Reserve, the colobus is gone, the parrot as well as its enclosure are gone, and the mongoose enclosure has been renovated for a pair of Pancake Tortoises. The Emu enclosure is now also home to Domestic Turkeys. The mangabey and douc langur are still alive and both were actually more active this visit than my previous one.

The next stop was the Reptile and Amphibian House- and I was very pleasantly surprised by this exhibit. I had expected a small house with only a couple of species in okay enclosures. What I got was a very large house filled with dozens of herps I had never seen before in mostly pretty excellent enclosures. Probably my least favorite enclosures in the building were the American Alligator, Nile Crocodile, and Alligator Snapping Turtle ones. Pool-wise they were all very nice with decently sized pools and pretty good depth, but all had very little land. The snapping turtle enclosure practically had no land! I dare say it’s one of the best reptile houses I’ve ever been in, and even rivals with Bronx’s World of Reptiles. One thing I was confused about was the indoor situation with the giant tortoises. The zoo has quite a few giant tortoises (two of which are Galápagos Giant Tortoises, the rest are Aldabra Giant Tortoises) in a very large and nice outdoor enclosure. But inside is a tiny little concrete space that looks like it could barely hold one of the tortoises, let alone a few. Another thing I noticed with the tortoises, there was quite a bit of shell variation within the Aldabra Giant Tortoise population. Being as a few tortoises in Europe have recently been turning up as other ssp of Aldabrachelys gigantea, I’m wondering if a few of the tortoises here are also different ssp. Now apart from any potential alternate ssp of giant tortoise, the main highlights from the house for me were Anderson’s Salamander, Iberian Ribbed Newt, Bog Turtle, Solomon Island Tree Boa, Malagasy Tree Boa, Central American River Turtle, Hourglass Treefrog, Flat-Backed Spider Tortoise, and Sidewinder Rattlesnake.

Not much has changed here and the house is still very nice, though I now consider LA's reptile house to be much better. It's worth mentioning that the Nile Crocodiles turned out to be Desert Crocodiles, and the Bog Turtle and Central American River Turtle are both unfortunately gone (or at least not on-exhibit). I also got to see the giant tortoises inside, and as I suspected it's a very cramped set-up.

Next up was Bird Valley, which is pretty much just a row of water bird enclosures that goes downhill with pretty shallow green pools, separated by low concrete walls. The first enclosure is home to a large flock of Humboldt Penguins and is probably the best penguin enclosure I’ve ever seen. The reason for this is that it’s just so big! Bird Valley has nine sections to it if memory serves and the penguins are given access to three of them, including two that are about twice as big as all the others. This gives them a very large land area and a very nice expanse of water. My only complaint is that the pool should have been deeper for them. After the penguins, the next section was an empty Coscoroba Swan enclosure, followed by an empty Cape Barren Goose enclosure, then followed by an empty Black-Necked Swan enclosure, which in itself was followed by an empty Black Swan enclosure. Now these three were followed by an unmarked enclosure which then had the Black-Necked and Black Swans inside. Now the final enclosure in the row is oddly home to a pair of Turkey Vultures. Despite being home to a pair of raptors, the enclosure is nearly identical to the three swan ones with a decently sized land area that’s mostly bare (though this one had a tree for shade), a small hut for them to hide and rest in, and a shallow pool area around the same size as the land area filled with green water. Slightly down the path from the row of enclosures, there’s also a very nice enclosure for American Flamingos. The enclosure is split into two large parts: the first being a large, bare grass area and the other being a large pool. The two are connected by a small little path and bridge that the birds have to cross.

Within the past year, this exhibit underwent a series of bizarre changes. For one, the penguin flock was moved to a much smaller section and and their old enclosure is now home to a single swan... An Emu now lives here also. Aside from this most of the other species I noted are gone and much of this exhibit sits empty.

After Bird Valley, we arrived at Bear Country; a large circle of enclosures for Sri Lankan Sloth Bear, Tibetan Black Bear, Polar Bear, and Andean Bear. The Sloth Bear and Andean Bear enclosures are more or less the same with both being of a fairly large size but then being mostly bare with only a few small climbing structures for the bears. Both enclosures are hilly as well, giving the animals the opportunity to escape the public eye if they want to, as the Sloth Bear did for us. The black bear enclosure was pretty good. Had the largest change in elevation and was pretty large. Didn’t seem like there was much enrichment for the bear, though. Also, the glare on the glass was pretty horrible. I quite liked the Polar Bear enclosure. I found it to maybe be a bit on the small side for two bears but they had a nice deep pool and this is the only Polar Bear enclosure I’ve ever seen where the ground was made of grass and not mock rock or concrete. And for that, I rate this as the best Polar Bear enclosure I’ve seen.

This exhibit has gone more or less unchanged since my last visit, though the occupants have changed slightly. The black bear died shortly before my visit, meaning all the bear species can be out at once as before one always had to be off-exhibit with their only being three enclosures (I forgot to mention that in my previous review). The zoo is down to one Polar Bear, who is apparently the oldest one in America. The zoo also now has a mixed pair of Sri Lankan and Indian Sloth Bear.

Next we arrived at African Plains, which, in my opinion, is probably the worst and most outdated part of the entire zoo and I was quite unimpressed. The exhibit consists of four enclosures, all but one being horribly outdated. The first enclosure here is for a Southern White Rhinoceros and a pair of Burchell’s Zebras. While it’s pretty bare and the mock rockwork and such looks horrible, this enclosure is actually quite large for the three animals and is alright all in all. Next to them are the “Rothticulated Giraffes” which were placed in a similar enclosure as the rhino/zebras except smaller. The zoo has three giraffes (I took them to be a mother, father, and calf?) but if you ask me that enclosure is only fit for one. Across from the giraffes is the only enclosure in African Plains which I liked: the Mhorr Gazelle/Addax/Saddle-Billed Stork enclosure. This one is quite large, grassy, and it slopes a bit. It also has an area where the animals can get out of view from the public (though that is visible if you know where to look;)). Unfortunately for me, though, the gazelles and Addax were off-show during my visit.... This was, however, compensated a bit by the fact that, while trying to peak at the back of the enclosure to see if they were hiding, I found the off-show Secretary Bird (their enclosure can be seen from main path if you head up towards the McNeil Avian Center on the path on the right side of the gazelle/Addax/stork enclosure). The final enclosure here is probably one of the worst at the zoo: the Common Hippopotamus enclosure. The zoo’s enclosure is one of the old fashioned, run of the mill hippo enclosures with a small, concrete land space and an okay-sized pool that’s a bit shallow. I preferred the hippo enclosure at Adventure Aquarium a lot more despite being indoors tbh.

This exhibit continues to disappoint and the previously very good gazelle enclosure has now been destroyed to an extent with the Red River Hogs now living here. The zoo is also down to a single gazelle (which makes her the last Mhorr Gazelle in an AZA zoo), though she was once again off-exhibit. This makes the third time I've failed at seeing the species :p The Addax and Secretary Bird are gone now, as well.

After that, we were on to Carnivore Kingdom. I was a little disappointed by this exhibit. Though it wasn’t a bad one, I just expected more. The first enclosure is for a pair of White-Nosed Coatis (N. n. molaris). I was a little disappointed by this enclosure. It was largely void of climbing structures apart from one little thing and then it was just a fenced in grassy area with a small den. The coatis were quite active, though, which was fun to see. Across from the coatis were the Western Red Pandas. They had a decently sized enclosure with some nice climbing structures in it. Up next were the Southern Ground Hornbills. The zoo has a pair in a rather forgettable enclosure that’s on the small side. After that were some more Common Dwarf Mongoose, though I didn’t see the species here either. Next to them is one of my favorite species: the Black-Footed Cats. While I didn’t see the mom, I got to see the three little kittens, and they were very active and fun to watch. I noticed the enclosure’s climbing structures are pretty high up and am a bit confused on how the cats are suppose to reach them. The next enclosure is for a Canada Lynx. The enclosure is nicely sized for a single lynx and has a small cave area as well as a bit of climbing structures. It’s an alright enclosure, but could be made better by maybe allowing the lynx access to more of the rockwork. Up next were the highlight of the exhibit: the Giant Otters! I didn’t like their enclosure much. The pool was pretty good as it was wide and deep but the land area was quite small and made of mock rock. There also didn’t seem to be much in the way of enrichment available. The animals themselves were an absolute joy to watch, though. They were playing with each other and running/swimming all over their enclosure, which is just a wonderful sight. Photographing them was impossible, though! The final enclosure was empty but is suppose to hold California Brown Pelicans (P. o. californicus). It’s a nice enclosure with a nicely sized pool and a good, grassy land area. There’s also a small shack in the back that said “Live Bait” or something on it.

This exhibit has changed very little, though there are now two combined Red Panda enclosures and the zoo keeps both subspecies (not mixed) and the Black-Footed Cats have been replaced by Fossa. The pelican was still a no-show, and the zoo is down to a single elderly mongoose.

After walking a little ways down the path from Carnivore Kingdom, we ended up at the enclosures for the South African Cheetahs and Maned Wolves. Both enclosures are quite large and grassy and are built on hills so not much to talk about or complain about here. The wolf enclosure also had two or three small dens for them to hide and sleep in. The zoo seems to have three Cheetahs, all of which were hanging on top of the hill in the back of the enclosure. I saw two wolves, both of which were hiding inside different dens. A little further down the path is a nice little aviary filled with African Sacred Ibis and Northern Bald Ibis. The aviary was a little low height-wise, but the birds had room to fly a bit and there were small trees for them to perch on. Across from that was a very nice enclosure for Eastern Black-and-White Colobus (C. g. kikuyuensis) and a pair of Cape Porcupines. The enclosure was quite large and had some nice, large climbing structures. The climbing structures reminded me a bit of the old wooden playground towers, which is essentially what it was except a few bits added for the monkeys. The monkeys were very playful and active, probably due to the fact that it looked like there were a few babies in there. A little bit down the path from there is a nice Northern Bald Eagle (H. l. washingtoniensis) enclosure. It’s quite large and, impo, makes quite a nice home for a pair of birds that can’t really fly.

The eagle enclosure present during my visit now sits empty and a newer, much larger eagle enclosure was built by the Cheetahs as was a Barn Owl aviary. The ibises are gone and replaced by the Turkey Vultures and Red-Breasted Geese.

After that, we made our way to the McNeil Avian Center. Now this building was another one that surprised me, but it turned out to be in quite a positive way. When I picture a bird house, I general expect quite a large building with a lot of enclosures and a lot of birds. The McNeil Avian Center is not that. Despite looking huge from the outside, the on-show space indoors is quite small. The entire public space if made up of five rooms (including the entrance room). This was a bit disappointed and made me expect for a bit of a subpar exhibit. I was wrong. The first room (entrance) is home to a nicely sized enclosure for a Bornean Rhinoceros Hornbill (B. r. borneoensis) and a Javan Rhinoceros Hornbill (B. r. silvestris). The enclosure is large and the height is good, giving the two birds space to move around. The second room is home to a South American enclosure. The species I saw in here were Sunbittern, Southern Lapwing, Chiriqui Quail-Dove, Black-Bellied Whistling Duck (these guys taught me why they’re called whistling ducks!), Blue-Grey Tanager, and Blue Ground Dove. The enclosure was also apparently home to Little Tinamou and White-Lined Tanager but I missed those. The third room is a large, mixed walk-through aviary. There was little signage here but there was a keeper stationed here at all times to help identify birds for people. Here I found Yellow-Knobbed Curassow, Basilan Bleeding-Heart Pigeon (G. c. bartletti), Inca Tern, Ringed Teal, African Pygmy Goose, Crested Oropendola, Metallic Starling, Violaceous Turaco, Crested Wood Partridge, Crimson-Rumped Toucanet, and Ivory-Billed Aracari (P. a. flavirostris). The fourth room I found had an interesting concept that didn’t really work out too well. It had three enclosures in it and was suppose to focus on island bird species that were endangered. In reality, it ended up just being a trio of bird enclosures with random birds native to specific regions, some of which were native to islands and were endangered. The first enclosure was home to a few bird species from Asia such as Collared Finchbill (S. s. semitorques) and Palawan Peacock-Pheasant. The second enclosure was home to just a bunch of random birds from around the world such as Common Bulbul from Africa and Black-Necked Stilt from the Americas. The only actual island bird in this enclosure was a single, elderly female Common ʻAmakihi from Hawaii. Now the final enclosure was the only one that actually lived up to the theme of the room. The animals in this enclosure were Guam Kingfisher (T. c. cinnamominus) and Guam Rail. The fifth and final room of the building is for African species. The enclosure is designed to look like a dry, bare savanna with a few, dead-looking trees. While the signage listed multiple species, the only two I saw were Hamerkop and Buff-Crested Bustard. Outside of the building, there is also an enclosure for an Andean Condor. This enclosure was larger than most of the condor enclosures I’ve seen before but wasn’t all that big. It also was pretty dense in foliage, which I feel would deny the condor a lot of space.

This house was still very enjoyable and a lot more birds seemed to be present, though many of the rare ones from my last visit (ie amakihi, fincebill, bulbul, tinamou, tanager) were gone. The amakihi actually died a month after my original visit. The South American aviary seemed to be a bit more mixed with random species, and the trio of enclosures that previously focused on island birds just had a random mix of different animals, though the Guam enclosure remained the same. The African enclosure had a lot more birds present.

Up next was the PECO Primate Reserve; home to Western Lowland Gorillas, Sumatran Orangutans, Lar Gibbons, Black-and-White Ruffed Lemurs, Ring-Tailed Lemurs, Spectacled Langurs, Aye-Ayes, and Common Squirrel Monkeys (S. s. sciureus). From what I’ve heard, it seems this exhibit is pretty heavily criticized, though I don’t feel it should be. Now the argument about what’s the best kind of enclosure for a primate- naturalistic or cage-like- has been going on forever. Personally, while it’s always great for an enclosure to be somewhat naturalistic at least, I’ve found cage-like enclosures (such as the ones at the zoo) are somewhat better for primates they are able to climb up the sides of the enclosures and often give them more opportunities to exhibit natural behaviors such as brachiation. Of course, this only works if the enclosure is of a decent size. Now this is where I can see some criticism for the exhibit. While I found most of the enclosures to be of a fine size, the gorilla and orangutan indoor enclosures seemed a bit small despite the fact that they span both the floors of the building. Also, the outdoor gorilla enclosure was just a flat, grassy field. Personally, I think the simple solution to making this a great exhibit, would be to phase-out the gorillas, and give the orangutans the full expanse of the two enclosures. As for the current orangutan/gibbon enclosure, I quite liked it. I wasn’t the largest and certainly isn’t the best, but it contained three live trees that were connected by ropes, which is something I hadn’t seen before from orangutan enclosures. Though I do find a problem here as well. While outside it seems the orangutans and gibbons are mixed together, it doesn’t seem like they’re mixed in the indoor enclosure (that’s what I took from the zoo’s website anyhow). I think the simple solution here would be to maybe phase-out the ruffed lemurs and give the gibbons that when they’re indoors. This would also work into the conservation message on the upper floor, which is the effect of Palm Oil farming in Indonesia. It’d work out as both Sumatran Orangutans and Lar Gibbons are obviously found on Sumatra and, if the changes I proposed were to come true, the only enclosures which would have views on the upper flow would be the orangutan and gibbon ones. Other than those few things, I quite liked the building for what it was. I certainly didn't find it horrible, despite the non-natural look of the enclosures.

The Spectacled Langurs have gone and the Aye-Aye enclosure is now also home to the zoo's remaining Malagasy Giant Rats. There's also a very nice Coquerel's Sifaka enclosure in a separate section of the house from the rest of the animals which I believe I missed last time.

Now the final exhibit I visited at the zoo was First Niagara Big Cat Falls, home to Transvaal Lions, Amur Tigers, Amur Leopards, *Mexican/Goldman’s Jaguar (P. o. hernandesii/goldmani), Snow Leopards, and North American Mountain Lions despite only having five enclosures, two of which are permanently home to the Lions and Tigers and the other three being rotational enclosures. I was very unimpressed by this exhibit and I feel it is largely overrated. The Lion and Tiger enclosures are very nice. Large, a bit sloped, and perfectly designed for big cats such as these. The others three I found to be quite small and very ill-equipped to hold any of the remaining for species. Apart from their sizes, they’re all quite flat, which doesn’t make much sense when all four of the rotating species are well adapted for a more mountainous lifestyle. While the Jaguars and Cougars I can see being fine with a more flat enclosure, the Leopards and Snow Leopards at least would require a little bit of climbing opportunity. The first of the three was flat apart from a little step up and was very shady. It held another Transvaal Lion on my visit. The second was sloped and very forested. If it were larger I’d find it to be a very nice enclosure for either the Cougars or Jaguars (though on my visit it held an Amur Leopard). The third enclosure was flat as well, with just a few rocks here and there. There also seemed to be a small ledge halfway up the back wall that the animals could jump up to. This was also the largest of the three so all together it was the best, though not by much. It held a pair of Snow Leopards on my visit.

The only change here is the zoo no longer holds Jaguars, which still means they keep one more species than can be displayed.


It was sad to see that the zoo had lost so many of its rarities since my last visit and several of the exhibits had declined in quality, especially the mammal house. When I first visited the zoo, I had it placed in my Top 5 collections I've visited and have kept it there ever since. However, after this visit I'd say it's dropped out of that spot, though it still is a very nice zoo with a great collection and well worth a visit.

~Thylo
 
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So I revisited the zoo with @jayjds2
This exhibit has changed very little, though there are now two combined Red Panda enclosures and the zoo keeps both subspecies (not mixed) and the Black-Footed Cats have been replaced by Fossa. The pelican was still a no-show, and the zoo is down to a single elderly mongoose.

The only change here is the zoo no longer holds Jaguars, which still means they keep one more species than can be displayed.

Were both red panda exhibits in use during your trip this time? The zoo only has one subspecies now and for the past few months, the open air exhibit has been empty. They plan to put a mesh barrier around it soon.

Also, the zoo still has jaguars. The male usually comes out at the end of the day so is often missed. Lately during the day the exhibit is used for the older male and female lion or an Amur leopard. I think I have heard rumors they are planning to get a female jaguar to come to the zoo to breed with him.
 
So I revisited the zoo with @jayjds2 on November 11 and figured I'd comment on some bits of my previous review. Spoiler alert, I did not enjoy the zoo as much this time around.




So this house has declined a lot since 2014. As most of you know, the nocturnal hall was closed down some time ago and I found that all of the species kept in it bar the vampire bats have gone. The entrance into the section was walled off and replaced by a single bat enclosure- which is much better than the old one to be fair. I also found that all the enclosures on the right-side of the house were all empty and covered over and only Degu, Pygmy Marmoset, Northern Tree-Shrew, and African Pygmy Hedgehog inhabit the rows of enclosures. The Aardvark/Meerkat and sloth/agouti remain unchanged, though there's only one elderly Aardvark left and the Meerkats have an outdoor enclosure now as well. The Okapi has left the collection and the hogs moved to African Plains. Their enclosures were combined and are now home to the kangaroos and some Emus, while the old kangaroo enclosure sits empty.



This house has gone relatively unchanged since my visit, though giant rats were moved to the PECO Primate Reserve, the colobus is gone, the parrot as well as its enclosure are gone, and the mongoose enclosure has been renovated for a pair of Pancake Tortoises. The Emu enclosure is now also home to Domestic Turkeys. The mangabey and douc langur are still alive and both were actually more active this visit than my previous one.



Not much has changed here and the house is still very nice, though I now consider LA's reptile house to be much better. It's worth mentioning that the Nile Crocodiles turned out to be Desert Crocodiles, and the Bog Turtle and Central American River Turtle are both unfortunately gone (or at least not on-exhibit). I also got to see the giant tortoises inside, and as I suspected it's a very cramped set-up.



Within the past year, this exhibit underwent a series of bizarre changes. For one, the penguin flock was moved to a much smaller section and and their old enclosure is now home to a single swan... An Emu now lives here also. Aside from this most of the other species I noted are gone and much of this exhibit sits empty.



This exhibit has gone more or less unchanged since my last visit, though the occupants have changed slightly. The black bear died shortly before my visit, meaning all the bear species can be out at once as before one always had to be off-exhibit with their only being three enclosures (I forgot to mention that in my previous review). The zoo is down to one Polar Bear, who is apparently the oldest one in America. The zoo also now has a mixed pair of Sri Lankan and Indian Sloth Bear.



This exhibit continues to disappoint and the previously very good gazelle enclosure has now been destroyed to an extent with the Red River Hogs now living here. The zoo is also down to a single gazelle (which makes her the last Mhorr Gazelle in an AZA zoo), though she was once again off-exhibit. This makes the third time I've failed at seeing the species :p The Addax and Secretary Bird are gone now, as well.



This exhibit has changed very little, though there are now two combined Red Panda enclosures and the zoo keeps both subspecies (not mixed) and the Black-Footed Cats have been replaced by Fossa. The pelican was still a no-show, and the zoo is down to a single elderly mongoose.



The eagle enclosure present during my visit now sits empty and a newer, much larger eagle enclosure was built by the Cheetahs as was a Barn Owl aviary. The ibises are gone and replaced by the Turkey Vultures and Red-Breasted Geese.



This house was still very enjoyable and a lot more birds seemed to be present, though many of the rare ones from my last visit (ie amakihi, fincebill, bulbul, tinamou, tanager) were gone. The amakihi actually died a month after my original visit. The South American aviary seemed to be a bit more mixed with random species, and the trio of enclosures that previously focused on island birds just had a random mix of different animals, though the Guam enclosure remained the same. The African enclosure had a lot more birds present.



The Spectacled Langurs have gone and the Aye-Aye enclosure is now also home to the zoo's remaining Malagasy Giant Rats. There's also a very nice Coquerel's Sifaka enclosure in a separate section of the house from the rest of the animals which I believe I missed last time.



The only change here is the zoo no longer holds Jaguars, which still means they keep one more species than can be displayed.


It was sad to see that the zoo had lost so many of its rarities since my last visit and several of the exhibits had declined in quality, especially the mammal house. When I first visited the zoo, I had it placed in my Top 5 collections I've visited and have kept it there ever since. However, after this visit I'd say it's dropped out of that spot, though it still is a very nice zoo with a great collection and well worth a visit.

~Thylo
Kesho, the Okapi that lived in that enclosure passed away in November of last year. It's sad to see how the African Plains portion has just been so under-maintained as well as the odd decision to move the penguins from their beautiful habitat to a smaller pit.
 
Were both red panda exhibits in use during your trip this time? The zoo only has one subspecies now and for the past few months, the open air exhibit has been empty. They plan to put a mesh barrier around it soon.

Also, the zoo still has jaguars. The male usually comes out at the end of the day so is often missed. Lately during the day the exhibit is used for the older male and female lion or an Amur leopard. I think I have heard rumors they are planning to get a female jaguar to come to the zoo to breed with him.

I do not recall. Jay was the one who told me during the visit that they kept both ssp of Red Panda and that the Jaguar had left.

Good to hear they still keep Jaguar and plan to breed them, I just wish they had enough enclosures for all the species they hold. On both of my visits the Cougars have always been in the trail system but not the actual enclosures.

~Thylo
 
I do not recall. Jay was the one who told me during the visit that they kept both ssp of Red Panda and that the Jaguar had left.
The second enclosure was not in use but was signed for the other subspecies, I believe. I had believed the jaguar was gone because there is no signage about jaguars that I recall, and I haven’t seen one in 3-4 visits over the last two years. Thanks for the tip, I’ll be sure to visit the complex during the end of the day on my next visit.
 
The second enclosure was not in use but was signed for the other subspecies, I believe. I had believed the jaguar was gone because there is no signage about jaguars that I recall, and I haven’t seen one in 3-4 visits over the last two years. Thanks for the tip, I’ll be sure to visit the complex during the end of the day on my next visit.

Yes, I believe he's shy so they do not have him out a lot. I know a zoo regular who is a jaguar enthusiast so she's kept me updated. I have tried to catch him myself, but I still haven't been able to manage it. A side note to @ThylacineAlive, I agree, even with the rotation system I often wonder if all the big cats are getting enough time on exhibit. All my recent visits, the cougars have been in the trail system or off exhibit. Juvenile lions or Grom the Amur tiger in the lion exhibit, usually an Amur leopard in one of the trails, but access to leopard exhibit, snow leopard in cougar exhibit, and rotation of tigers in Amur tiger exhibit.

You are correct about the old signage still at the red panda exhibit, where the other subspecies was housed. I know they are supposed to do construction on Carnivore Kingdom soon so hopefully they will finally modify that exhibit. Although I will miss it was open air and easier to photograph. I bet when it's completed the male will live on one side and the female and cubs (until they leave) on the other.
 
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