Unfortunately I didn't see the armadillo on my visit today. There is no signage of it (yet) in the Small Mammal House, so at first I looked in the central enclosures (that seemed logical to me, keeping an armadillo together with tamarins). I asked a keeper about it and she told me that the armadillo is kept in the darkened enclosure of the mouse lemurs. The armadillo appears to be very shy and hides most of the time in its nest, according to the keeper.
Although I didn't see the armadillo, I left the Small Mammal House happy, because I saw the potto for the first time at this location! (I've seen it several times in the "Jungle by Night"). It was fed just after I entered the SMH, so the potto left his nest box for a couple of minutes.
I also saw the fossa for the frst time since it moved from the Carnivore Gallery to the back of the zoo. Thomson’s gazelles were in the old giraffe enclosure. Ostriches are kept together with nilgai.
Diana monkeys are currently separated of the gorillas, because of the introduction of a young gorilla from Hannover. After the gorillas went outside, I could see them in the inner enclosure. There were lots of suricates in the outside enclosure (using the name "meerkat" would be quite confusing in this case, as the actual meerkats are the Diana monkeys; strange English name...).
Although I didn't see the armadillo, I left the Small Mammal House happy, because I saw the potto for the first time at this location! (I've seen it several times in the "Jungle by Night"). It was fed just after I entered the SMH, so the potto left his nest box for a couple of minutes.
I also saw the fossa for the frst time since it moved from the Carnivore Gallery to the back of the zoo. Thomson’s gazelles were in the old giraffe enclosure. Ostriches are kept together with nilgai.
Diana monkeys are currently separated of the gorillas, because of the introduction of a young gorilla from Hannover. After the gorillas went outside, I could see them in the inner enclosure. There were lots of suricates in the outside enclosure (using the name "meerkat" would be quite confusing in this case, as the actual meerkats are the Diana monkeys; strange English name...).
