The zoo announced via social media that a male white handed gibbon baby named Polaris was born to Phoenice and Mercury.
Did you see the aforementioned baby gibbon yet?I visited the zoo today. I saw there are two pygmy slow loris on exhibit. The glass to their exhibit is covered in construction paper with holes for guests to view the loris. The Reptile and Amphibian House has two new rattlesnakes, a rock rattlesnake and a panamint rattlesnake. The rock rattlesnake lives in the exhibit where the Conant's milksnake used to live, and a pancake tortoise lives where the black-tailed rattlesnake used to live, and finally the panamint rattlesnake lives where the red diamond rattlesnake used to live. Also the exhibit where the poison dart frogs used to live is completely blocked off. Finally, there is a cornsnake on exhibit where the copperhead used to be. There are also steamer ducks that live with the Humboldt penguin colony.
Where are the slow loris exhibited?
~Thylo
In the Small Mammal House, where the Northern tree shrew used to live.
Meerkats, Aardvark, Hoffman's Two-toed Sloth, Degu, African Pygmy Hedgehog, Pygmy Marmoset, Eurasian Harvest Mice, Pygmy Slow Loris, and Common Vampire Bats. I understand that the Small Mammal House is a shell of its former self, and the Small Mammal House in D.C. is much better. I was told that the reason the Small Mammal House is so short on animals is because of how short their life spans are.What's left in that house at this point? When I visited last in November 2017, there were very few species left and many of them were only on one or two individuals.
~Thylo
Meerkats, Aardvark, Hoffman's Two-toed Sloth, Degu, African Pygmy Hedgehog, Pygmy Marmoset, Eurasian Harvest Mice, Pygmy Slow Loris, and Common Vampire Bats. I understand that the Small Mammal House is a shell of its former self, and the Small Mammal House in D.C. is much better. I was told that the reason the Small Mammal House is so short on animals is because of how short their life spans are.
I wasn't sure, there was no sign. My guess is that is was a flying steamer duck (Tachyeres patachonicus). There are three other species.What species of steamer duck is on exhibit?
Not sure. I didn't see any Haitian galliwaspCarLover, did you notice the scientific names for the Haitian Galliwasp and Haitian Giant Anole?
Common names zoos use and common names in use don't always refer to the same thing.
CarLover, did you notice the scientific names for the Haitian Galliwasp and Haitian Giant Anole?
Common names zoos use and common names in use don't always refer to the same thing.
Not sure. I didn't see any Haitian galliwasp
I think I remember there being Haitian giant galliwasp when I visited last year, but I can't confirm... might have mentioned in the 2018 thread.
I went through the old thread and I'm the only one who mentioned it, no idea why! The only thing I can think of is someone might have told me that this unsigned species was one, but it doesn't look correct to me?