I am so excited to hear that. I search almost daily for news on Amur leopards especially the population in US zoos so this is great given Satka is a young first-time mother at only 4 years old. Her lovely sister Liski is in the zoo by me and I am very hopeful that someday soon she will also be a mother.Two Amur leopard cubs were born April 5th. First time mom is Satka and dad is Oskar. They are on exhibit in the Asian Cat area. Mom is doing a great job of keeping them close but they are getting more adventurous every day.
I don't think they will be coming back. A male fossa was in that exhibit yesterday.Are the honey badgers back in Africa rocks?
Do you know of any plans to place them elwhere?I don't think they will be coming back. A male fossa was in that exhibit yesterday.
One idea I have is that one of the leopard exhibits in Africa Rocks has a concrete foundation installed, making sure that honey badgers aren't able to escape. Besides, it would make more geographic sense then putting them in Madagascar.Do you know of any plans to place them elwhere?
I talked to one of the people involved in the building of Africa Rocks before it opened. They thought they had designed an escape-proof exhibit for the honey badgers but I guess they were wrong. I believe their exhibit is on the bus route road behind the baboons. That is the only way to see them and it doesn't really give you a good look at them.One idea I have is that one of the leopard exhibits in Africa Rocks has a concrete foundation installed, making sure that honey badgers aren't able to escape. Besides, it would make more geographic sense then putting them in Madagascar.
I expect that is a misnomer and babies is meant (allthough links between herps and birds go far back ...).There is a habitat for West African Dwarf Crocodile chicks in the turtle section of the reptile walk.
I expect that is a misnomer and babies is meant (allthough links between herps and birds go far back ...).
Following the recent death of the zoo’s pair of brown spider monkeys (old age), the zoo’s troop of lion-tailed macaques has once more gone on exhibit in the old spider monkey exhibit.