Which marmot species?
~Thylo
~Thylo
Yellow-Bellied !Which marmot species?
~Thylo
Yellow-Bellied !
Season 2 of The Zoo on Animal Planet has begun. 1st episode featured a rescued marmot used in the animal ambassador program, an update on the snow leopard cub from last season, a peregrine falcon fledgling rescued near the FDR Drive downtown and successfully checked out by the Bronx vet team and returned to the nest site on a financial district skyscraper, and an Arabian Camel with an abscess on his head.
Isn’t this the start of season 3?
Has anyone heard of any plans for the old polar bear exhibit. I know it requires a significant and probably costly rehab effort. Just wondering if there has been any talk about what to do with the space, even if it's just a wish list item at this point.
Only the giraffes and the rhinos have indoor viewing. I'd bet the nyala could be outside due to their thick coats, but don't quote me on that. Definitely the zebras'll be outside, same with the lions depending on weather.I'll be in New York in November for work and will obviously be visiting all of the zoos. I see that some things are closed at the Bronx - is this the case for all the zoos? Do animals like the African hoofstock have indoor viewing?
It is definitely a good idea to phase out the elephants and send them to reliable sanctuaries.
It was in the low 40s and windy when I was there the other day and it varied. I didn't do the bottom half of Africa (stopped at Giraffe building/Samba village) or go down to Jungle World.
Africa:
Giraffes - in building
Ostriches - out
African Wild Dogs, Spotted Hyenas - out
Ibex - out
Baboons - not out
Lions - heard they weren't out
Himalayas, Tiger Mountain, etc.: All out
Gorilla Forest:
Everything that is normally outdoors wasn't there (Okapi, Colobuses, Red River Hogs, etc). One female gorilla was visible in the indoor area, none outside
Sea Bird Aviary:
All out except the pelicans, which were in with the scarlet ibises in the aquatic bird house, and the flamingos (Chilean flamingos over by the restaurant were out)
Birds of Prey, Pheasant cages:
Hit or miss
@Wyman where is the indoor rhino area?
I'll be in New York in November for work and will obviously be visiting all of the zoos. I see that some things are closed at the Bronx - is this the case for all the zoos? Do animals like the African hoofstock have indoor viewing?
It's the building called the "Zoo Center", AKA the Zoo's old elephant house. It's the one with komodos and other reptiles on the map, south of the Sea Lion habitat on Google Maps (Or to the left on the map)
Robosaurs have returned to the zoo and are currently being assembled for an April opening.
~Thylo
It's the building called the "Zoo Center", AKA the Zoo's old elephant house. It's the one with komodos and other reptiles on the map, south of the Sea Lion habitat on Google Maps (Or to the left on the map)
There aren't any rhinos in there... One side is Komodo and a few other lizards, other side is a set up about the aquarium and the meeting desk for the behind the scenes stuff
Only the giraffes and the rhinos have indoor viewing. I'd bet the nyala could be outside due to their thick coats, but don't quote me on that. Definitely the zebras'll be outside, same with the lions depending on weather.
It was in the low 40s and windy when I was there the other day and it varied. I didn't do the bottom half of Africa (stopped at Giraffe building/Samba village) or go down to Jungle World.
Africa:
Giraffes - in building
Ostriches - out
African Wild Dogs, Spotted Hyenas - out
Ibex - out
Baboons - not out
Lions - heard they weren't out
Himalayas, Tiger Mountain, etc.: All out
Gorilla Forest:
Everything that is normally outdoors wasn't there (Okapi, Colobuses, Red River Hogs, etc). One female gorilla was visible in the indoor area, none outside
Sea Bird Aviary:
All out except the pelicans, which were in with the scarlet ibises in the aquatic bird house, and the flamingos (Chilean flamingos over by the restaurant were out)
Birds of Prey, Pheasant cages:
Hit or miss
@Wyman where is the indoor rhino area?
The tropical bird aviary at Prospect Park will likely be mostly empty and I'd imagine most of the South American birds at Queens will be off-exhibit. That's about it.
~Thylo
Thanks all - very helpful. I'm mostly interested in seeing things that are rare in collections in Europe anyway - the pronghorns in Prospect Park and the sea otters in the aquarium for example - so failing to see some okapi and lions wouldn't be the end of the world, I suppose! Any good advice for NYC collections - what time to see shy/inactive animals etc?