Animals ZooChatters Have Seen Living Before Extinction

Do you mean Baiji, the Chinese river dolphin? I think the possibility of ZCters seeing it is quite low, since I believe it is kept in a facility not open to public, not to mention there aren't many Chinese Zcters here.

It was kept, right ? :confused:

Unless it escaped my attention there haven't been any more captured and taken to that facility since the last captive one died.

In fact, correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there has been anything so far but annecdotal and unsubstaintiated reports of sightings in the wild since the species was declared extinct.
 
It was kept, right ? :confused:

Unless it escaped my attention there haven't been any more captured and taken to that facility since the last captive one died.

In fact, correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there has been anything so far but annecdotal and unsubstaintiated reports of sightings in the wild since the species was declared extinct.
I was confused about this too, but I guess I didn't think much of it. I just assumed it was a simple error or typo.
 
Yes, I think it is a typo, because the baiji in that facility has been dead for quite some time and I don't think that the chances of them still being extant in the wild / in the Yangtze are very high either.
Yeah, but It would be awesome to see one. Such a pretty species! I think the good thing is that it has some footage of it alive in the aquarium, which is pretty cool.
 
Would this have been at ZSL ?

It would have been one of the UK holders that had them on show around 10-15 years ago if I recall - I'd need to go through notes to confirm but I'll try to check later.

The one I definitely saw was Partula faba, at Bristol (I last saw them in 2012; they became extinct in 2016).

Partula turgida was also in the UK before becoming extinct in 1996, but I'm not sure I ever (knowingly) saw that one.
 
Last edited:
There is ongoing dispute over whether this was a species, a subspecies or just a slightly weird island form of Red Kite. It was finished off by hybridisation with Black Kites.

Last I heard the general consensus is that it was always a natural hybrid of Black and Red, with inbreeding depression accentuating the differences. Never saw it myself.

The one I definitely saw was Partula faba, at Bristol (I last saw them in 2012; they became extinct in 2016).

This being the one I saw, too.
 
Does anyone who's seen them have photos of Partula faba? Those would be interesting to upload to the gallery.

I certainly have pictures of the tanks they were in - the Partula snails are always 'on show' via a large window into the biosecure breeding room containing a few dozen snail tanks, and naturally the stuff you can see right at the front by the public window consists of the (relatively!) more numerous species - the faba were right at the back, so it's a shot of the tanks with the snails visible rather than a photo of the snails as such. But I can post when I'm home from work if no-one's found anything in the meantime. :)
 
Does anyone who's seen them have photos of Partula faba? Those would be interesting to upload to the gallery.

I certainly have pictures of the tanks they were in - the Partula snails are always 'on show' via a large window into the biosecure breeding room containing a few dozen snail tanks, and naturally the stuff you can see right at the front by the public window consists of the (relatively!) more numerous species - the faba were right at the back, so it's a shot of the tanks with the snails visible rather than a photo of the snails as such. But I can post when I'm home from work if no-one's found anything in the meantime. :)

Home for lunch in the end so dug them out:

Partula faba (now extinct) in the Partula Room at Bristol, 6th February 2012 - ZooChat

Partula faba (now extinct) in the Partula Room at Bristol, 6th February 2012 - ZooChat
 
2 to my knowledge; Lonesome George on the Galapagos, and Slender-billed Curlew which I twitched in Morocco in the 1990s. Probably soon to be three; old enough to have seen Nortern White Rhino in London Zoo.

Nice, I too saw Lonesome George in the Galapagos in 2012!
 
Back
Top