Animals that are only found in one American zoo or aquarium

Just going to add that Omaha also has Lake Titicaca frogs in the Kingdoms of the Night, has had them for at least 2 years.
 
Just going to add that Omaha also has Lake Titicaca frogs in the Kingdoms of the Night, has had them for at least 2 years.
Definitely more than one zoo in the US hold this species - Detroit, Columbus and Fort Worth and Saint Louis have them, there might be others as well.
 
Just going to add that Omaha also has Lake Titicaca frogs in the Kingdoms of the Night, has had them for at least 2 years.
Definitely more than one zoo in the US hold this species - Detroit, Columbus and Fort Worth and Saint Louis have them, there might be others as well.

All of that is true. Should be noted it is a recent development - Denver received the first group of them in the mid-2010s (2015, maybe?), bred them in 2017, and they have since been shipping them out rapidly to several other zoos to build up the captive population.
 
QUOTE="Coelacanth18, post: 1147369, member: 11086"]That's good to hear. I'm not sure if Denver was the only holder when I made the post, but they were the first and only zoo outside South America to hold them recently (2015) since Bronx's group that died in the 1990's.

I thought Denver was the only place that held them, too, until I visited STl and FW in March, 2019. I didn't know they held them and was pleasantly surprised when I saw them. They looked different from what I saw on Animal Planet when I was ten. I've attached a photo from each place, STl and FW, in that order.
Also, I didn't know the Bronx ever had those frogs, but I was wither a baby or not even born when they were there :p.
View attachment 401255 View attachment 401256[/QUOTE]
I remember coming to the Fort Worth Zoo once and I saw the frogs mating.
 
Back
Top