The Tapir's departed for Peak Wildlife Park today. Taking Bristol out of the species for the foreseeable future
It's getting pretty empty in that part of the zoo now. Hopefully they release plans for the area soon.
The Tapir's departed for Peak Wildlife Park today. Taking Bristol out of the species for the foreseeable future
Hollywood Towers happened anyway! I remember the last of Bristol's Barbary Sheep, oddly enough in the Monkey Temple with Long-tailed Macaques.I posted this in 2014 which was a report in the Bristol Post in 2011. Now a further 5 years later and still no progress...
n July 2011, the Bristol Post wrote the following article and I wondered if anyone knew (Gorilla House excluded of course) about the progress of the other plans...
Ten-year plan for Bristol Zoo
By The Bristol Post | Posted: July 15, 2011
BRISTOL Zoo will be transformed by four major projects over the next decade, the Evening Post can reveal.
The zoo, which is celebrating its 175th anniversary, hopes to have all four new developments
in place in 10 years. They are:
â– Building an Eden Project-style tropical rainforest area
â– Building a replica mountain environment
â– The gorilla house doubling in size
â– Construction of a river section that could include crocodiles.
Zoo director Dr Bryan Carroll told the Evening Post: "It's important to keep giving visitors something new.
"Our conservation work relies heavily on visitors coming back for repeat visits to the zoo, so we have to make sure we are constantly evolving to give visitors new experiences."
As well as transforming the landscape of the zoo, Dr Carroll also hopes several new species will be brought to Bristol, including Barbary macaques, well-known for living on the Rock of Gibraltar but endangered elsewhere in the world.
The four major development projects on the 12-acre Clifton site are planned to be introduced one-by- one, with a new scheme coming along every two to three years – although the order in which they will be developed has yet to be decided upon.
The replica "mountain" environment will be built around and incorporate the zoo's existing Monkey Temple, which has stood empty for decades.
The "riverine exhibit" would create a river-like habitat and could feature a variety of river creatures from otters to crocodiles.
Dr Carroll said: "When I first came many of the old 1950s enclosures were still in place, and we were just about to begin a period of capital investment that brought about new enclosures like the seal and penguin area, which have been fabulous additions to the zoo."
Dr Carroll, who has worked at the zoo for 15 years and was promoted to the role of director last year, said the institution had to balance the demands of visitors for new experiences with changes in its conservation role.
He said: "From a conservation point of view, ideas about which animals are most in need of being part of the zoo's captive breeding programme are changing all the time, and of course we have to keep up with those changes in demand.
"For example, we hope to bring Barbary macaques here for the first time as part of the proposed mountain exhibit.
"These creatures may be plentiful on the Rock of Gibraltar, but internationally they are an endangered species, and we can hopefully help raise their numbers in captivity."
Of the prospect of bringing the Monkey Temple back into use, Dr Carroll said: "It will be nice to use the building – it is no longer suitable for keeping monkeys, but clearly it is an iconic building for people who remember childhood visits to the zoo in the 1950s and 1960s.
"Clearly we can't create a mountain in the zoo, but we can recreate a mountain habitat.
"We would hope to move our red panda into this new area, as well as bringing in new animals such as Barbary sheep, Barbary macaques, pika, rock wallaby, montane chameleon, giant salamander, cheer pheasant, pekin robs, cave cricket and cave spiders."
Another exciting addition planned for the zoo in the coming decade would be a mini Eden Project-style tropical rainforest exhibit.
Dr Carroll said: "It would be built on the south side of the zoo – the area that is currently themed as Zona Brazil, which was only ever meant to be a temporary exhibit."
The "most distant" planned exhibit for the zoo's 10-year strategy, Bryan says, would be a "riverine exhibit" – which would "focus on the importance of water to life on Earth and the impact of unsustainable water use, pollution, contamination, flooding, draining of natural wetlands and loss of habitat".
He said: "As this is the furthest down the line of planned exhibits, we don't yet have a firm idea of how this would look, but again, we could include a varied range of animals such as otters, pygmy hippos, Cuban crocodiles, freshwater turtles, pygmy geese, African darter and whistling ducks."
All of this development would come on top of existing plans to develop a safari park-style attraction on land owned by the zoo at the Hollywood Towers estate, near Cribbs Causeway.
The zoo director declined to comment on the current state of the plans, which have been in the pipeline for more than a decade
Another exciting addition planned for the zoo in the coming decade would be a mini Eden Project-style tropical rainforest exhibit.
Dr Carroll said: "It would be built on the south side of the zoo – the area that is currently themed as Zona Brazil, which was only ever meant to be a temporary exhibit."
I posted this in 2014 which was a report in the Bristol Post in 2011. Now a further 5 years later and still no progress...
n July 2011, the Bristol Post wrote the following article and I wondered if anyone knew (Gorilla House excluded of course) about the progress of the other plans...
Ten-year plan for Bristol Zoo
By The Bristol Post | Posted: July 15, 2011
BRISTOL Zoo will be transformed by four major projects over the next decade, the Evening Post can reveal.
The zoo, which is celebrating its 175th anniversary, hopes to have all four new developments
in place in 10 years. They are:
â– Building an Eden Project-style tropical rainforest area
â– Building a replica mountain environment
â– The gorilla house doubling in size
â– Construction of a river section that could include crocodiles.
Zoo director Dr Bryan Carroll told the Evening Post: "It's important to keep giving visitors something new.
"Our conservation work relies heavily on visitors coming back for repeat visits to the zoo, so we have to make sure we are constantly evolving to give visitors new experiences."
As well as transforming the landscape of the zoo, Dr Carroll also hopes several new species will be brought to Bristol, including Barbary macaques, well-known for living on the Rock of Gibraltar but endangered elsewhere in the world.
The four major development projects on the 12-acre Clifton site are planned to be introduced one-by- one, with a new scheme coming along every two to three years – although the order in which they will be developed has yet to be decided upon.
The replica "mountain" environment will be built around and incorporate the zoo's existing Monkey Temple, which has stood empty for decades.
The "riverine exhibit" would create a river-like habitat and could feature a variety of river creatures from otters to crocodiles.
Dr Carroll said: "When I first came many of the old 1950s enclosures were still in place, and we were just about to begin a period of capital investment that brought about new enclosures like the seal and penguin area, which have been fabulous additions to the zoo."
Dr Carroll, who has worked at the zoo for 15 years and was promoted to the role of director last year, said the institution had to balance the demands of visitors for new experiences with changes in its conservation role.
He said: "From a conservation point of view, ideas about which animals are most in need of being part of the zoo's captive breeding programme are changing all the time, and of course we have to keep up with those changes in demand.
"For example, we hope to bring Barbary macaques here for the first time as part of the proposed mountain exhibit.
"These creatures may be plentiful on the Rock of Gibraltar, but internationally they are an endangered species, and we can hopefully help raise their numbers in captivity."
Of the prospect of bringing the Monkey Temple back into use, Dr Carroll said: "It will be nice to use the building – it is no longer suitable for keeping monkeys, but clearly it is an iconic building for people who remember childhood visits to the zoo in the 1950s and 1960s.
"Clearly we can't create a mountain in the zoo, but we can recreate a mountain habitat.
"We would hope to move our red panda into this new area, as well as bringing in new animals such as Barbary sheep, Barbary macaques, pika, rock wallaby, montane chameleon, giant salamander, cheer pheasant, pekin robs, cave cricket and cave spiders."
Another exciting addition planned for the zoo in the coming decade would be a mini Eden Project-style tropical rainforest exhibit.
Dr Carroll said: "It would be built on the south side of the zoo – the area that is currently themed as Zona Brazil, which was only ever meant to be a temporary exhibit."
The "most distant" planned exhibit for the zoo's 10-year strategy, Bryan says, would be a "riverine exhibit" – which would "focus on the importance of water to life on Earth and the impact of unsustainable water use, pollution, contamination, flooding, draining of natural wetlands and loss of habitat".
He said: "As this is the furthest down the line of planned exhibits, we don't yet have a firm idea of how this would look, but again, we could include a varied range of animals such as otters, pygmy hippos, Cuban crocodiles, freshwater turtles, pygmy geese, African darter and whistling ducks."
All of this development would come on top of existing plans to develop a safari park-style attraction on land owned by the zoo at the Hollywood Towers estate, near Cribbs Causeway.
The zoo director declined to comment on the current state of the plans, which have been in the pipeline for more than a decade
Also I think White-faced Whistling Ducks are now in the collection?Wasn't it Rock Wallabies in that walkthrough that didn't work?
Hopefully we may see new lion cubs in the future if the pairing goes well!
New female Asiatic Lioness Sonika has arrived from Cotswold Wildlife Gardens