I saw 23 deer taxa between the two collections back in September. It's heaven to me!
@Grant Rhino I do understand your position here but only displaying one or two ungulate species from each group is how we end up with endangered species being phased-out and an overall lack of biodiversity in captivity. I'd be interested on your thoughts on a zoo like Bronx (or Berlin Zoo for that matter) which has 32 non-domestic ungulate species (12 Bovidae, 10 Cervidae, 2 Giraffidae, 2 Suidae, 1 Tragulidae, 2 Equidae, 2 Rhinocerotidae, 1 Tapiridae) but a grand total of roughly 117 mammal species overall, meaning ungulates as a whole only account for 27% of the mammal collection. Not to mention they have roughly 300 bird species and roughly 220 herp species, meaning the zoo has an incredibly well-rounded collection despite the above average number of ungulates.
~Thylo