Wild Animal Encounters has Emperor Tamarin and Pygmy Marmoset.
Wild Animal Encounters
Wild Animal Encounters
Wild Animal Encounters
Wild Animal Encounters
That's cool - I'm surprised they were even allowed into Tasmania to be honest. Their rules are a lot more strict than in other states.Wings Wildlife Park has recieved a Capybara. It’s pleasing to see more zoos holding the species.
Wings Wildlife Park - Tasmania
Must have been an easier procress, since Tasmania Zoo acquired the species in 2016. It was a pleasant surprise though.That's cool - I'm surprised they were even allowed into Tasmania to be honest. Their rules are a lot more strict than in other states.
Oh, well yes, if I had bothered to look at which other zoos had them before I posted I would have realised that!Must have been an easier procress, since Tasmania Zoo acquired the species in 2016.
Not to worry, I often can’t keep up sometimes!Oh, well yes, if I had bothered to look at which other zoos had them before I posted I would have realised that!![]()
Gorge have got Agouti again, from Darling Downs.
Wildlife HQ doesn't have Himalayan Tahr anymore.*Himalayan Tahr (Hemitragus jemlahicus) – Altina; Halls Gap; Mansfield; Taronga; Wildlife HQ
Descended from one import of three animals from NZ to Taronga in 1932. I don't think there have been any later additions, and there are only about 40 left in zoos here.
*Fallow Deer (Dama dama) – Adelaide; Altina; Birdland Animal Park; Caversham; Cooberrie; Halls Gap; Hunter Valley; Mansfield; Mogo; National Zoo; Peel; Rockhampton; Symbio (still?); Tasmania Zoo; Zoodoo
First released into the wild in the 1830s in Tasmania, and later elsewhere on the mainland until the early 1900s. Now also farmed commercially.
Rockhampton Zoo no longer hold Fallow Deer, and their last Water Buffalo died around two years ago.*Domestic Water Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) – Altina; Caversham; Crocodylus; Halls Gap; Mogo; Oakvale; Rockhampton; Shoalhaven; Symbio; Western Plains Zoo; Wings Wildlife Park. [Also probably held in other small collections apart for the ones listed here]
The Australian population is descended from about 80 animals imported from Indonesia to settlements in the Northern Territory between the 1820s and 1850s, which were later released to become feral.
According to the zoo, they are down to five individuals.*Collared Peccary (Pecari tajacu) – Melbourne
The entire (formerly very large) Australasian population was derived solely from one pair imported to Wellington Zoo (NZ) from Canada in 1969. In 2005 there was only one non-castrated male left in Australia (at Melbourne), which was then mated with several of the remaining females. The last individual at Adelaide (a male) was sent to Melbourne in 2015. Currently there are only seven animals left in Australia. The last peccary in New Zealand died in 2011.
Taronga Zoo seems to have Pygmy Marmoset.Pigmy Marmoset (Cebuella pygmaea) – Adelaide; Darling Downs; Halls Gap; Hunter Valley; Mogo; National Zoo; Perth; Symbio; Tasmania Zoo; Wild Animal Encounters; Wildlife HQ
The three main breeders in the country are Adelaide, Perth and Mogo, which all imported them in the early 2000s (Perth also in the early 1990s). There have been several further imports in the later 2000s from Europe and the USA. There are now about 60 animals in Australian zoos.
That's interesting. The farm which is the private holder of Guanacos in Australia is at Taralga - I wonder if there is a connection between the two, or even if they are the same place/owned by the same person.Just had a look at the website for Taralga Wildlife Park which opened earlier this year. Mostly a collection of Australian natives with a bird focus but of interest is that they have a gunaco which makes these the second ones on display in Australia. Animals – Taralga Wildlife Park