Luke da Zoo nerd
Well-Known Member
In yorkshire willife park they have meerkats and yellow mongooses in the same enclosure
This sometimes works, especially (only?) if both species are non-breeding. I can think of two situations where it didn't. Porcupines in the mix can work, too.In yorkshire willife park they have meerkats and yellow mongooses in the same enclosure
That makes more sensePretty sure these are not on exhibit together, they alternate time in the same exhibit yard.
Taiping Zoo in Malaysia rotates Serval and Chimps (apparently a zoo in Europe does this too?).Servals and asian golden cats use enclosures of chimps and orangutans, respectively, at night (in rotation with apes). I saw it online in one zoo in Asia or South America, cannot find now which one.
Servals and asian golden cats use enclosures of chimps and orangutans, respectively, at night (in rotation with apes). I saw it online in one zoo in Asia or South America, cannot find now which one.
Fennec foxes with trumpeter hornbills - Augsburg. Fennecs could be good in mixed exhibits with animals larger than themselves.
Yellow mongoose with vultures and secretarbirds in a walk-though aviary - Magdeburg. Is this the first walk-through enclosure with carnivores of any kind?
Would meerkats be suitable to a walk-through exhibit? Prairie dogs are exhibited this way in Rotterdam, and visitors somehow can resist touching them. Meerkats bite, of course, but probably no more than any rodent of similar size.
As noted above, the zoo in question is Taiping Zoo in Malaysia.Maybe servals but I'm almost certain that there are no Asian golden cats kept anywhere on the South American continent.
As noted above, the zoo in question is Taiping Zoo in Malaysia.
Taiping Zoo in Malaysia rotates Serval and Chimps (apparently a zoo in Europe does this too
Zoo Leipzig now has maned wolf and giant anteater in the same exhibit. It's been about a month and seems to be going very well.
Edinburgh had this combination a few years back.I'm actually not at all suprised about this mix apparently working well. In the Cerrado grasslands (that remain) they can be found in very close proximity (along with brocket or pampas deer).
I've seen them on one occasion within minutes of eachother under wild conditions and you almost always (except in areas where the anteater has been extirpated which is sadly today across much of former range in São Paulo state) find their pugmarks overlapping almost the way that those of badgers and foxes do in woods or glades in Europe.
I think it is quite an interesting concept for a mixed species exhibit and as long as there is plenty of space in the enclosure for both species I am pretty sure that they will just peacefully coexist and ignore one another. I think it is quite educational too as visitors get to see something that is a bit different from the ubiquitous biome themed mixed African / Asian ungulate species.
Edinburgh had this combination a few years back.
Nowadays Maned Wolves kept together with Giant Anteaters in several North-American zoos. The Greensboro Science Center in North-Carolina keeps its breeding pair of Maned Wolves together with a male Giant Anteater in a mixed exhibit is about 2700 m².
Keeping together Maned Wolves and Giant Anteaters has already started in the 1980s in Zoo Osnabrück, Germany in a relatively small, 350 m² exhibit. The species were separated over night and during feeding. Most of the time the species were ignored each other, but sometimes juvenile wolves performed playful attacks and the anteater showed threat display on their hindlegs (DRÜWA 1986).
Houston Zoo has also had their Maned Wolves together with a Capybara for a few months with no apparent issues. The institution has also tried the Maned Wolf with a South American Tapir, however there was aggression from the tapir towards the wolf so it lasted less than a week (HODGE 2018, pers. comm.).
In Europe Parc Zoologique CERZA has had experinece keeping the Maned Wolves together with South American Tapirs, Capybaras and Black-capped Capuchins. According to the observations the carnivores tried to catch the monkeys.
Source:
en/Mixed exhibit Canidae
So did Osnabruck - but it is interesting just how many references to 'mixed' exhibits are made in the past tense. The implication is that many of these are done for convenience or temporary exhibit reasons, rather than for medium to long term animal welfare; just as are some of the currently horrendous 'shared' exhibits where individual animals spend more time shut away than on display.
In the case of Edinburgh the past tense is more down to the fact the maned wolves were actively phased out as a species of no further interest - despite breeding pretty well, as I recall......![]()
Most of the diet is vegetable matter and particularly lobeira ("wolf apple")
So it seems that the key here in successfuly maintaining these two species together is ample space