Oh, wow I didn't know about that. At one point they were the only zoo outside of their native range, but I guess not anymore.Some less-than-reputable places have them, and a primate sanctuary in Texas recently rescued three.
Oh, wow I didn't know about that. At one point they were the only zoo outside of their native range, but I guess not anymore.Some less-than-reputable places have them, and a primate sanctuary in Texas recently rescued three.
I really don't think Walrus fits this thread.A list of rare marine species I've seen:
Hawaiian deep anthias
O'opu species (don't remember which ones)
Atlantic tarpon
Bowmouth guitarfish
Silky shark
Blacktip shark
Madagascar panchax
Haplochromis ishmaeli
Giant isopod (again, don't know the specific species)
Green sawfish
Walrus
Pearl River stingray
I really don't think Walrus fits this thread.
Was that the individual at Hale? Cracking bird to see! By no means my First Sabine’s. Anyone else seen Olrog’s Gull? Or Pallas’s (aka Great Black-headed)? Ivory? Ross’s?
yes i saw one or two in mongolia last yearI think both @carl the birder and @Chlidonias have seen Pallas's gull, and I'm certain @Vision saw a Ross's gull. I'm not sure about Olrog's. Pallas's would be a very cool species to see, but alas It will probably take may years before I'm able to see one in the flesh.
I don't think they are kept outside of Hawaii so yes. Not very many ZooChatters have been to Hawaii.Is the Kamehameha Butterfly rare? Because I got to see some at the Honolulu Zoo.
I don't think they are kept outside of Hawaii so yes. Not very many ZooChatters have been to Hawaii.
Did you see any of the endemic birds while you lived there? I'm not sure any ZooChatter has seen any of those except for the waterfowl.I used to live there from mid 2018- to mid 2020 on the island of Oahu, but I recently moved back to the mainland.
I really don't think Walrus fits this thread.
Did you see any of the endemic birds while you lived there? I'm not sure any ZooChatter has seen any of those except for the waterfowl.
Which amakihi?Philadelphia had amakihi for many years until their last female's death a month or so after my visit in 2014.
~Thylo
Just thought I'd throw Ethiopian Eagle Owl into the mix. Now entirely absent from captivity as well... Also (almost certainly pure) Pardine Genets don't seem overly common.
The one Hawai'i 'Amakihi speciesWhich amakihi?
Which amakihi?
I once saw a picture of an Ethiopian eagle owl here on zoochat. The caption under the photo read that it was rescued from some kind of situation of cruelty in that country by an Italian diplomat and sent to an owl sanctuary in Europe (I think it was the UK).
IIRC she was found for sale in a market destined for the cooking pot and was later sent to the Mancaster World Owl Trust before it closed "temporarily", at which point she and many other owls took residency at Rodbaston College where she would spend the rest of her days.
~Thylo
First of all , very suprising (and depressing) to learn that owls are eaten in Ethiopia (there are a lot of taboos against eating owl in many parts of the world and they are not the usual targets of hunters) and second I take it from your use of the past tense that she has now passed away ?
I suppose that if she is no longer with us then it is worth considering that she was a very lucky owl to avoid becoming a stew and at least she lived out her days in a safe and decent environment.