Nocturnal Houses Species Lists

One thing that I think would be fascinating would be to take two identical side by side exhibits- with reverse light cycles to each other to show how animals use a particular space day and night.

The Grzimek-haus in Frankfurt has two more or less identical enclosures after the entrance, one with day light with a diurnal species (elephant-shrew in the past, don't with species is kept nowadays in this enclosure) and the other is darkened with a nocturnal species (spiny mouse if I'm correct).
 
The Grzimek-haus in Frankfurt has two more or less identical enclosures after the entrance, one with day light with a diurnal species (elephant-shrew in the past, don't with species is kept nowadays in this enclosure) and the other is darkened with a nocturnal species (spiny mouse if I'm correct).

Both exhibits contain spiny mice now, albeit different species - Tibesti and Golden, I seem to recall.
 
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I'm wondering what species of neotropical bats are kept in the US and Latin America. Here in Europe it's mostly Carollia perspicillata, with a few other less frequently kept species. Does anybody know more about this?
 
What makes a great nocturnal display?

Several night houses, for example in Frankfurt and Berlin grew into evergreen visitor attractions, when many others were closed. What is responsible for this success?

Common factors is that exhibits were originally planned as big, so they survived the time as at least adequate. These houses were designed with curving corridor and exhibits of different size and approached at different angles, not as a row of identical vitrines. Artificial landscapes were contrasting with each other: rainforest- desert, treetops-ground level-underground etc. Importantly, they were done in good taste and attention to naturalistic detail. Small artificial landscapes in Grzimek house did not grow old in 40 years, they are as attractive as 100 years historic dioramas in museums or their big relative, African panorama in Hagenbeck.

Successful night houses present themselves today as scientific and beautiful exhibits. Interestingly, the public seems little attracted by shock, fear or ugliness, like snakes, bats fluttering close to human faces or rats in artificial sewer. Probably most city dwellers in recent decades associate nature with relaxation, not negative experiences of biting or agricultural pests. A today city dweller sees a Norway rat more commonly as a novelty pet, laboratory animal or children cartoon character than a cellar pest.

And crucially: good houses have separate ventillation for visitors and animals, which prevents strong natural smell of scent glands of many small mammals.

Among species, always favorite are cute nocturnal primates, small cats and fennecs. Visitors also clearly prefer exhibits with lots of activity and big social groups. Attractive are colonies of hectic leaf-nosed bats and hopping small kangaroos, springhaas and jerboas.

Other animal species are favorite of one zoo, usually because they have especially big exhibit and are therefore active, or live in an active social group.: e.g. colony of rock cavies in Berlin, which at night behave much like unrelated African rock hyraxes. In Frankfurt golden water rat became one of most popular species, although it is visually very similar to common rat. Reason is that it was swimming in attractive glass-fronted tank which visitors could lighten underwater with a small lamp. Here is another face of well known rule of modern zoos, that attractive presentation is as important as attractive animal.

In contrast, most small carnivores don't work very well. The reason may be common stereotypies in small space and strong scent glands.

Future

The booklet "Nachttierhäuser in Zoologischen Gärten" suggests that night animals should be again exhibited in daytime exhibits. This is not full solution. Naturally, animals traditionally exhibited in night houses contain species which are diurnal or active round the clock according to current studies. Others normally sleep in the open where they can be comfortably observed, like tree kangaroos, fruit bats, sloths and frogmouths.

However, many small and middle sized mammals are really completely nocturnal, both in the wild and in zoos. They include: possums, quolls, all smaller bats, hedgehogs and gymnures, mouse lemurs, aye-aye, lori and galago families, aardvarks, jerboas and many rodents, genets, black-footed and leopard cats. These groups are destined for nocturnal exhibits. Even more mammals are nocturnal almost completely, and they so-called daytime activity is occassional preening between sleeping bouts or basking in the sun. Examples are rock cavy, fennec and most small cats.

Trying to turn such animals into day activity by e.g. visitor demonstration is not natural. Waking up for presentations disrupts their natural circadian rythm. Alternatively, zoos must prevent animals them from hiding to make them visible. Aardvark in Emmen is exhibited in daytime, but has no hiding house but is sleeping in the open.

Overall, outside exhibits are not intriticallly better. Sometimes cited is the factor of wind or rain. However, I don't know many examples of small mammals enjoying the rain, unlike e.g. parrots, which often use it for bathing. Important factir is space actually available to animals and its use. Here day presentation can be not better but even worse than night house. Therefore, One factor possibly important for welfare of animals are low night-time temperatures in Europe. Many modern outdoor exhibits for small mammals have very small and basically furnished indoor part. However, this part is the main space used by animals many months a year. Tropical animals tolerate mid-day temperature in Germany most of the year, but nocturnal animals face much lower night temperatures. This is a topic for investigation.

One thing to investigate is providing not complete, but 80% switched day cycle with small outside exhibit. Therefore night animals can bask in the sun for several hours in the morning or evening, without disrupting their daily rythm.

Overall, nocturnal houses seem to have a problem of from not following trends in zoo design which changed aquaria, terraria, bird houses and other types of zoo exhibits during last half century. It is possible that big fixed costs of building prevent modernization. It is definitely important that construction of an zoo building should allow easy remodelling. Advancement of zoo science constantly changes standards of zoo design. Therefore a zoo should build exhibits which are easy to remodel in future. Night houses with fixed concrete vitrines are difficult to remodel.

Many night houses with small cages simply closed down. Too small exhibits of other animal groups, however, are usually rebuild in a larger scale. In modern zoo architecture, all exhibit types are build in previously unknown sizes, due to demand and new construction materials. Maybe it is possible to build night exhibits with area of many tens or over hundred square meters? They would provide adequate space for active larger mammals like aye-aye, kinkajou and other small carnivores. Nocturnurama in Kerzers contains individual enclosures 50m2, adequate for crab-eating raccoon. What is certain that small exhibits of traditional night houses are indeed suitable only for active animals size of about rat (or slow lori), or less active animal to size about a cat (or coendou).

Energy efficiency means that zoos might experiment with new technologies like LED lighting. Another possibility may be to illuminate at day not the whole exhibit, but only smaller animal living space or entrance to the den.

Design of nocturnal houses of today is almost always a row of glass-fronted vitrines. This is boring to visitors. The same was noticed about reptile terrariums, where attractive to the public are one or several terrariums built near thematically matching big animals. Night exhibits of 1-3 species near day exhibits may possibly be more interesting. Here interesting trend is Darwineum at Rostock, which presents galagos near big apes.

Artificial materials are overused in night houses. Natural ground and live plants are underused. Night house can in principle be build with natural ground, like a hothouse, and contain live plants which are shade-tolerant or regularly changed.

Overlooked problem may be cutting away outside stimuli like external sounds and smells, creating sensory deprivation chambers for animals. Here interesting design is again galago exhibit at Rostock zoo, which has strongly blackened window looking outside on the open air.

Current zoological trend of making artificial walk-through habitats is still very rare in nocturnal houses. Bird houses developed from rows of aviaries to walk-through tropical halls. Night houses might develop similarly. One example is Amersfoort with walk-through room for night monkeys, aguti and sloth.

Nocturnorama in Kerzers is currently the best example in Europe of this type. Its design is a single landscape hall where some animals are free-living, other poorly jumping species live in own enclosures separated by moats or low glass barrier, and carnivores and caimans have exhibits fully enclosed by mesh and glass. Especially interesting is the visitor path crossing a tunnel in artificial rocks, where some of the numerous leaf-nosed bats at Nocturnorama roost over visitor heads at very small distance.

Another example in the recent past was the bat cave in Rotterdam, not described in the text. It belongs to bigger night exhibits in Europa by size, although it contains really only one exhibit and one species. A very large and tall space under artificial rocks was developed as an artificial cave. Here visitors could walk among a very large colony of free flying egyptian fruit bats, which flew and fed very close to visitors. Unfortunately, a virus similar to rabies was discovered among the bats, and on precautionary grounds the colony was put to sleep, and the visitor path was separated by glass. The exhibit is nevertheless popular. Sometimes small animals are kept on the ground, e.g. one malayan civet. There is also a small additional terrarium for scorpions.

Animal presentation and public interactions are not used in nocturnal houses at all. This could be used, as small night mammals contain many attractive 'cute' species which can be good for animal interactions. Many rodents and small carnivores are also popular private novelty pets.

The only example of interactive exhibit I know developed incidentally in a night exhibit in the old Emmen zoo. This exhibit was located under the South American hothouse AmeriCasa and is not described in the article. Here night monkeys learned to jump across the water moat, and climb on the shoulders of the public. The exhibit itself was a straight corridor for visitors. On one side was a visually continous rainforest exhibit for South American mammals. The animals, which included sloth and a species of armadillo, were separated by a narrow water moat, not glass. At the end was also a small artificial cave behind glass.

Another suggestion that animal interactions are potentially hit with visitors is that wild living night mammals are locally additional tourist magnets of hotels or safari lodges. These are edible dormouse visiting country guesthouses in at least two places in Germany, genets in East Africa, olingo in Monteverde, Costa Rica, quokka in West Australia and possums in O'Reilly Lodge, Queensland. Long-tongued bats in one lodge in South America even feed from a hummingbird feeder held in hand by a tourist.

One trend not tested in night houses are rotation exhibits, a concept developed in several American zoos. This means building exhibits so that several species have access to the same several exhibits from their nest boxes, and on different days switch places in rotation. Two or more species can rotate this way. This may increase the total area and stimuli for animals, and mimic that animals visit different parts of territory different days. It remains to be seen whether it really has positive influence and what species.
 
Today I took two issues of the International Zoo Yearbook out of my university library for general reading purposes. One of them (the 1975 volume) contains details about the World of Darkness at Bronx Zoo and the Clore Pavilion at London Zoo, with a full species list of the former. I am going to upload the Bronx list here, as the Clore is not entirely a nocturnal house (although I am open to providing this information if it is wanted). I will note down all the species first, with an x indicating if the species has bred in the zoo. I will then include details from the article about the enclosures, including mixed exhibits and former displays. Note the scientific names included below are taken directly from the article, some of them are definitely out of date.

Species List:
Mammals
Brown-eared woolly opossum Caluromys lanatus
Common brush-tailed possum Trichosurus vulpecula x
Sugar glider Petaurus breviceps x
Indian fruit bat Pteropus giganteus x
Fisherman bat Noctilio leporinus rufipes x
Lesser spear-nosed bat Phyllostomus d. discolor x
Lesser long-tongued bat Glossophaga soricina x
Tailless long-tongued bat Anoura geoffroyi x
Short-tailed fruit bat Carollia perspicillata x
Yellow-shouldered bat Sturnira lilium
White-lined bat Vampyrops lineatus
Mexican fruit bat Artibeus jamaicensis x
Great fruit-eating bat Artibeus l. lituratus
Mexican vampire bat Desmodus rotundus murinus
Lesser mouse lemur Microcebus murinus
Slow loris Nycticebus c. counang
Thick-tailed galago Galago crassicaudatus x
Demidoff's galago Galago demidovii x
Dourocouli Aotus trivirgatus
Hoffman's two-toed sloth Choloepus hoffmanni
Nine-banded armadillo Dasypus novemcinctus
Desert woodrat Neotoma lepida
Degu Octodon degus x
African brush-tailed porcupine Atherurus centralis
Indian crested porcupine Hystrix indica x
Prehensile-tailed porcupine Coendou prehensilis x
Kit fox Vulpes macrotis
Raccoon Procyon lotor x
Striped skunk Mephitis mephitis
Hog-nosed skunk Conepatus mesoleucus
Small-toothed palm civet Arctogalidia trivirgata stigmatica
Leopard cat Felis bengalensis x
Southern tree hyrax Dendrohyrax arboreus
Bay duiker Cephalophus dorsalis x

Birds
White-backed night heron Calherodius leuconotus
White-throated bat falcon Falco ruficularis ruficularis
Eastern screech owl Otus asio acadius
Saw-whet owl Aegolius a. acadicus
Tawny frogmouth Podargus s. strigoides

Reptiles
South American caiman Caiman crocodilus
Boa constrictor Boa constrictor
Bullsnake Pituophis melanoleucus sayi

Amphibians
Cane toad Bufo marina

Some exhibit notes:
- Two identical enclosures were originally included, both housing chipmunks and flying squirrels; one was lit diurnally with the chipmunks active and the squirrels viewable sleeping in a hollow tree and the other portrayed nocturnally with the squirrels active and the chipmunks visible sleeping in a cross-section burrow. The exhibit was discontinued as the reflections from the lit exhibit made seeing into the nocturnal enclosure too difficult.
- A North American cave exhibit housing insectivorous bats, blind cave fish and cave salamanders was replaced with the vampire bat exhibit as the cave enclosure had high maintenance demands with little animal activity in the display (the animals in the American cave exhibit all survived well).
- Sand boas Eryx johnii were originally used to exemplify nocturnal burrowers but were replaced by the degus as the boas tended to stay buried in the sand.
- An African forest display housed together the bay duikers, thick-tailed galagos, brush-tailed porcupines and tree hyrax.
- A swamp exhibit was designed to make it appear that the caiman, raccoons and striped skunks shared an exhibit. The caiman were separated from the mammals behind by a pane of glass that was invisible under low light - the raccoons and skunks were raised together and so were completely compatible.
- The largest exhibit in the house was a South American forest display housing the six species of Neotropical fruit bats, two species of nectar-feeding bats, two-toed sloths and striped skunks (the latter species was apparently habituated to eating mice and kept in several exhibits as biological rodent control, to little success). Originally coypu and agouti were also included in this display but were removed as they were too destructive to the exhibit. To help visitors view the bats closer, there was a cross-section of a hollow tree display included in this exhibit.
 
I'd love to see the information for the Clore too if it's not too much trouble :)
 
The article on the Charles Clore Pavilion contains no full species list and is a review of the first seven years of operation, so the animals listed here may not have all been present simultaneously. As with the Bronx list, I know a lot of the scientific names are rather out of date. Rather than writing out a simple list of species, I will divide this post taxonomically with notes on how the species in question have done:

- Western long-beaked echidna Zaglossus bruijni and short-beaked echidna Tachyglossus aculeatus have been kept with no trouble at all, although no breeding was achieved.
- Common opossum Didelphis marsupialis, brown-eared woolly opossum Caluromys lanatus and mouse opossum Marmosa carri were all quite successful; Tasmanian devil Sarcophilus harrisii lived well in the house but did not breed; common brush-tailed possum Trichosurus vulpecula bred repeatedly but the replacement breeding stock was then given away; at the time of writing sugar glider Petaurus breviceps, Goodfellow's tree kangaroo Dendrolagus goodfellowi, agile wallaby Macropus agilis and wombat Vombatus ursinus hirsutus all lived in the house, with only the wallabies being a breeding group.
- Individual moonrat Echinosorex gymnurus and Hispaniolan solenodon Solenodon paradoxus have been kept; greater hedgehog-tenrec Setifer setosus are breeding; common shrew Sorex araneus proved impossible to maintain.
- Indian flying fox Pteropus giganteus and common vampire bat Desmodus rotundus represent the bats; the latter species has bred but not sufficiently to ensure a stable population - at the time of writing it was hoped that the addition of vitamin supplements into the blood would improve breeding success.
- Short-snouted sengi Elephantulus brachyrhynchus became well established but an attempt to keep North African sengi E. rozeti was not successful.
- Treeshrews were very successful - common treeshrew Tupaia glis bred many times and large treeshrew T. tana also bred most satisfactorily.
- Among the prosimians, grey mouse lemur Microcebus murinus and brown mouse lemur M. rufus survived well but breeding was yet to occur (the animals in question were captive-bred themselves); a black-and-white ruffed and red ruffed lemur were housed together and produced a hybrid offspring (at the time both were considered varities of the same species, Lemur variegatus); ring-tailed lemurs Lemur catta did well and at one point thirteen lived in the Clore until a condition killed off all but the adult male; potto Perodicticus potto had similar problems, with a bacterial infection reducing a group of five animals down to one; angwantibo Arctocebus calabarensis were maintaining their numbers and slow loris Nycticebus counang regularly bred and reared their young, however a group of red slender loris Loris tardigradus after making an encouraging start did not thrive and died out; thick-tailed galago Galago crassicaudatus and Senegal bushbaby G. senegalensis both bred well; while the Allen's bushbaby G. alleni produced several young but the female habitually destroyed them as they were born and the group died out.
- Among the monkeys, marmosets and tamarins (species unspecified) lived satisfactorily in the house once their nutritional issues were worked out; the only other primates in the building were dourocouli Aotus trivirgata, titi monkey Callicebus moloch, squirrel monkey Saimiri sciureus and talapoin Cercopithecus talapoin - all of these, apart from the squirrel monkeys, have bred.
- One attempt was made to keep steppe pika Ochotona pusilla but it was impossible to keep the temperature consistently low enough for them.
- Sciuromorph rodents have not been easy to breed and the only satisfactory breeding group in the house was the fire-footed squirrel Funisciurus pyrrhopus; similar to the pikas it was imnpossible to breed the North American flying squirrels Glaucomys volans and G. sabrinus as winter temperatures were too high.
- Myomorph rodents were successful whenever a group was present - among the most successful were white-footed mice Peromyscus leucopus, dwarf hamsters Phodopus sungorus and P. roborovskii, red-backed vole Clethrionomys gapperi, steppe lemming Lagurus lagurus, African gerbil Tatera afra, clawed jird Meriones unguiculatus, field mouse Apodemus sylvaticus, long-tailed thicket rat Grammomys dolichurus, Nile rat Arvicanthis niloticus, four-striped rat Rhabdomys pumilio, Sladen's rat Rattus rattus sladeni and African giant rat Cricetomys gambianus, though some have now been discontinued as exhibits.
- Hystricomorph rodents have been kept very successfully as a group; Indian crested porcupine Hystrix indica, African brush-tailed porcupine Atherurus africanus, common yellow-toothed cavy Galea musteloides, acouchi Myoprocta pratti, vizcacha Lagostomus maximus, chinchilla Chinchilla laniger, degu Octodon degus and casiragua Proechimys guairae have all bred well; long-tailed porcupine Trichys lipura, North American porcupine Erethizon dorsatum, paca Cuniculus paca, red-rumped agouti Dasyprocta aguti, red acouchi Myoprocta acouchi, mountain vizcacha Lagidium peruanum and tuco-tuco Ctenomys talarum have also been displayed.
- Carnivores generally required a higher quality of space - European badger Meles meles, African civet Viverra civetta and bobcat Felis rufa were deemed to be out-of-place in the house and were taken out; the leopard cat Felis bengalensis, zorilla Ictonyx striatus, small-toothed palm civet Arctogalidia trivirgata and fennec fox Fennecus zerda have all bred in this house; red panda Ailurus fulgens, bat-eared fox Otocyon megalotis, masked palm civet Paguma larvata, Chinese ferret-badger Melogale moschata, tayra Eira barbara and margay Felis wiedii are among the species which have done well in the house; in all 36 species of carnivore had been on-show in the house and thrived (at the time of writing).
- A pair of aardvarks Orycteropus afer were kept in the Moonlight World but the need to dig proved impossible to meet until they were moved into an outdoor paddock where overnight a tunnel several feet long had been dug; rock hyrax Procavia capensis and Western tree hyrax Dendrohyrax dorsalis have also been kept in this house.
 
Thank you so much for the summary @DesertRhino150 :) the Clore has to be one if my favourite houses at London, but there doesn't seem to be much about is history out there
 
Great additions to this thread @DesertRhino150 :) Very interesting to read about such great collections of nocturnal animals and small mammals!

I enjoyed my visit to the Mouse House in the Bronx, but World of Darkness was probably even better.

In the late 1990's I used to watch "Zoo Stories" on Discovery and I was always impressed by the interesting species in the small mammal house of London. I read something about 55 diurnal enclosures and 58 nocturnal enclosures at time of opening in 1967.
 
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The article on the Charles Clore Pavilion contains no full species list and is a review of the first seven years of operation, so the animals listed here may not have all been present simultaneously....
Thank you for taking the trouble to type all this out.

This brought back many memories as I recall the Clore Pavilion housing most of the species you list (and many other species too). What a marvellous collection this building housed in its heyday!
....a black-and-white ruffed and red ruffed lemur were housed together and produced a hybrid offspring (at the time both were considered varities of the same species, Lemur variegatus)....
London Zoo acquired a female black & white ruffed lemur from David Attenborough’s “Zoo Quest to Madagascar” expedition in 1960; nine years later, in 1969, the Jardin des Plantes Menagerie (Paris) loaned a male red ruffed lemur to London Zoo and in 1972 this pair produced a hybrid youngster, the first ruffed lemur to be born in the UK.
 
Thank you for taking the trouble to type all this out.

No problem!

London Zoo acquired a female black & white ruffed lemur from David Attenborough’s “Zoo Quest to Madagascar” expedition in 1960; nine years later, in 1969, the Jardin des Plantes Menagerie (Paris) loaned a male red ruffed lemur to London Zoo and in 1972 this pair produced a hybrid youngster, the first ruffed lemur to be born in the UK.

The article includes some more detail on these animals - the female offspring was born buff-coloured but by adulthood had become almost completely black and white with only a trace of brown; the young female later gave birth to twins sired by the French male when she was two years of age (by this stage, the initial female black-and-white ruffed had died in extreme old age of cancer).
 
The article includes some more detail on these animals - the female offspring was born buff-coloured but by adulthood had become almost completely black and white with only a trace of brown; the young female later gave birth to twins sired by the French male when she was two years of age (by this stage, the initial female black-and-white ruffed had died in extreme old age of cancer).
Thanks for the additional information.
I believe that the original female (i,e, the one from David Attenborough) died about six weeks after the first youngster was born. Several of the subsequent ruffed lemurs born at London Zoo were completely hairless and never grew any fur; they looked very weird.
 
I came across an article about the closing of the nocturnal house in Burgers' Zoo, which includes a brief overview of species kept in the 30 years the house was used (with additions from zootierliste):

Sugar glider
Coppery brushtail possum

Aardvark
Greater tenrec

Giant anteater
Nine-banded armadillo
A second unnamed Armadillo species
Two-toed sloth

Bengal slow loris
Potto
Greater galago (originally signed as Greater galago, listed as Garnett's greater galago in yearbook)
Senegal galago
Azara's night monkey
Grey-handed night monkey
Grey mouse lemur

Lyles' flying fox

Common tupaia

White-bellied pangolin

European badger
Ring-tailed chacomistle

Mountain paca

Lesser kanchil

Burrowing owl
 
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I came across an article about the closing of the nocturnal house in Burgers' Zoo, which includes a brief overview of species kept in the 30 years the house was used (with additions from zootierliste):

Sugar glider
Coppery brushtail possum

Aardvark
Greater tenrec

Giant anteater
Nine-banded armadillo
A second unnamed Armadillo species
Two-toed sloth

Bengal slow loris
Potto
Greater galago (originally signed as Greater galago, listed as Garnett's greater galago in yearbook)
Senegal galago
Azara's night monkey
Grey-handed night monkey
Grey mouse lemur

Lyles' flying fox

Common tupaia

White-bellied pangolin

European badger

Mountain paca

Lesser kanchil

Burrowing owl

I don't think I've ever seen the four highlited species in a nocturnal house before. The inclusion of giant anteater is probably the most surprising,:eek: but the other three species have always been fairly showy in diurnal enclosures, particularly burrowing owls.
 
I came across an article about the closing of the nocturnal house in Burgers' Zoo, which includes a brief overview of species kept in the 30 years the house was used

Did you find this article on the Internet or is it in a book?
 
Does anyone know if Tasmanian devils have ever been kept in nocturnal houses? (considering they are naturally nocturnal). If not, does anyone think, as long as they're given a properly-sized exhibit, that this would be a good/interesting idea? I know that the last time I saw Sarcophilus harrisii (which was at the San Diego Zoo) both individuals were sleeping.
 
Does anyone know if Tasmanian devils have ever been kept in nocturnal houses? (considering they are naturally nocturnal). If not, does anyone think, as long as they're given a properly-sized exhibit, that this would be a good/interesting idea? I know that the last time I saw Sarcophilus harrisii (which was at the San Diego Zoo) both individuals were sleeping.
Yes, Tasmanian devils have been kept in nocturnal houses, for example, in London Zoo.

However, I much prefer to see them with access to a spacious outdoor exhibit. I have seen the species very active outdoors, in bright sunshine, in Los Angeles, Rotterdam and Planckendal, so it is unnecessary to confine them to relatively small exhibits in nocturnal houses.
 
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