toothlessjaws
Well-Known Member
FYEO: Creating boring zoos with 5 A-B-C species only.
Question: Is this an - unfortunate - trend?
What on earth are you talking about?
FYEO: Creating boring zoos with 5 A-B-C species only.
Question: Is this an - unfortunate - trend?
Correct. English is not their first languageABC species means the basic species that people just expect to see, giraffe, elephants, meerkats, lions, tigers and bears (oh my!), as opposed to interesting, unique or more endangered species.
ABC species means the basic species that people just expect to see, giraffe, elephants, meerkats, lions, tigers and bears (oh my!), as opposed to interesting, unique or more endangered species.
@CGSwans I had thought Colobus monkeys were at deaths door here?I suspect that Adelaide may be making a virtue of necessity here, and I think they’re right to do so.
The affected exhibits from the master plan appear to be the gorillas, mandrills and pygmy hippos. The latter two are on death’s door, demographically, within the region and gorillas will be expensive to build an exhibit for and then maintain. By contrast, this proposed giraffe expansion essentially involves demolishing structures that are slated for removal anyway and replacing them with flat space and fences. Easy.
At half a hectare, a savannah exhibit could comfortably accommodate giraffe, nyala, ostrich (all mentioned) and zebras (not mentioned but an easy and crowd-pleasing addition). Combine that with meerkats, lions, colobus monkeys and fennec foxes, all of which are featured in the master plan and whose exhibits I don’t think would be effected, and this is a perfectly acceptable, if unoriginal African precinct.
Maybe gorillas could one day
Maybe gorillas could one day
I did not. I meant boring zoos with just ABC species. And how unfortunate that kind of development would be for zoos into the 21st Century. Nothing more, nothing less.Yes, I understand that. The part I don't understand is this:
I (effectively) say:
"Unfortunate they decided to keep giraffes at Adelaide, I was hoping they would phase them out"
and KB (effectively) argues back:
"Boring zoos with just giraffes etc, how is this unfortunate?!! "
I did not. I meant boring zoos with just ABC species. And how unfortunate that kind of development would be for zoos into the 21st Century. Nothing more, nothing less.
But please let it lie ... now.
The three Asian Small-clawed Otter pups have been sexed as two males and one female.Adelaide Zoo has announced the arrival of three Asian Small-clawed Otter pups to parents Bao and Kalaya. The pups were born on 24th March.
Adelaide Zoo’s otter family grows by three with the birth of adorable triplets
I just saw this section of your post and thought I could add to it. This excerpt comes from Rix's 1978 publication, Royal Zoological Society of South Australia 1878-1978 and is about the Asian Small-clawed Otters:yet Adelaide Zoo has bred over 70 Asian small-clawed otters since their breeding programme began. They must have bred a lot of otters in the early years.
I just saw this section of your post and thought I could add to it. This excerpt comes from Rix's 1978 publication, Royal Zoological Society of South Australia 1878-1978 and is about the Asian Small-clawed Otters:
"In August 1967 three males and one female were obtained from Singapore and in April 1969 a further eleven were purchased from Bangkok. This last acquisition brought the total strength of the group to fifteen... The first births, a twin pair, were in February 1970 but both of these died, but in May another two were born and these survived. Since then nearly 70 young have been born and, while there has been some infant mortality, about 30%, the overall result has been good and many zoos in Australia and New Zealand are now displaying, and in some case breeding, otters which came from Adelaide collection."
We are so sorry that we don't have some better news for you regarding reopening. Here goes...
After careful consultation with the State’s Transition Committee, we find ourselves in a position where we need to await further easing of restrictions until we can reopen.
At present, The Transition Committee’s suggestions to put a very limited cap on numbers and the use of a time-slot system at Adelaide Zoo just won't do. We believe these restrictions aren't workable, safe or fair to our visitors.
Furthermore, we have concerns that such limited numbers throughout the day would cause difficulty in managing bottlenecks at our entrances and that a time-limit would impinge greatly on visitors’ enjoyment. Needless to say, it is also not financially viable for us as the costs incurred in opening would not allow us to offset our expenditure.
While the current outcome is disappointing for our members, visitors and for us, we are grateful for the assistance and consideration shown to Zoos SA by the State Government. Most importantly, this means emergency funding to ensure our critical animal care is maintained.
We keenly await a time when restrictions have eased enough to allow us to reopen in a manner similar to zoos and wildlife parks in most other states. At this stage it appears that this will be on the 3rd July.
Health check time for Adelaide Zoo's colourful female Mandrills“We had the three females Mayombe, Moabi and Niari in our Animal Health Centre to carry out a general health check. We do this about every two years and this coincides with giving them a contraceptive implant which is important to manage our breeding program,’ said David McLelland, Veterinarian at Zoos SA.
“Any time we get our hands on an animal like this we try to do as much as we can. So, this means we give them a full general exam, take bloods to look at internal body function and X-rays to look at their chest, abdomen and skeleton.
“We also looked at their teeth to check for any dental issues. Niari, our eldest female, has already had a number of root canals.
“A health check like this allows us to identify things that they are really good at hiding from us and don’t let us pick up in their day to day life,” finished David.
After the operation the three Mandrills were safely returned to the troop and reunited with Alpha male Tabah and two-year-old Jumoke.
Listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List, the Mandrill population has declined rapidly over the last 30-years due to deforestation and hunting.
Populations in Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea are most seriously threatened with the destruction of their favoured evergreen forest. The large males are also regularly targeted by commercial bushmeat hunters.
With biodiversity the focus of last week’s World Environment Day, keeper Rebecca Sharpe was keen to point out the importance of educating people about the plight of Mandrills in the wild.
“Mandrills face similar troubles to a number of species: deforestation, hunting and poaching for meat and pelts,” she said.
“Adelaide Zoo is one of only two zoos in Australia to have Mandrills. When we reopen, we’d love people to come in and see our Mandrill group and learn more about them,” finished Rebecca.
Mandrill Update:
I don't usually make posts about animal health checks but considering Mandrills are incredibly rare in the region and we don't often get an update about them, I thought it would be worthwhile. Adelaide Zoo's three females - Mayombe, Moabi and Niari - were recently given a full check-up and given contraceptive implants (well I guess there wont be any mandrill births anytime soon). Beside the three females, the zoo also has alpha male, Tabah and two-year-old male Jumoke (2017). Fortunately the three females were successfully integrated back into the group.
If there was one species of exotic mammal that I wish zoos here would import more of - it would be Mandrills.
Health check time for Adelaide Zoo's colourful female Mandrills
It’d be shame if one of their contraceptive implants failed like it did last time...I really wish more zoos would acquire this species.
Mandrill in Australasian Zoos
Adelaide Zoo:
1.0 Tabah (2005) Yonaton x Timbiri
0.1 Niari (1996)
0.1 Moabi (1998)
0.1 Mayombe (2010) Tabah x Niari
1.0 Jumoke (2017) Tabah x Niari
Tasmania Zoo:
1.0 Kouilou (2011) Tabah x Moabi
0.1 Lara (2002) Yonaton x Louise
Louise was the mother of Timbiri; so Kouilou and Lara are related.
If only Melbourne had decided to continue breeding theirs. Instead, they waited until they died out, and chucked a Cassowary in their enclosure.![]()