Marwell Wildlife Marwell Zoo News 2021

Cat-Man

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
Sable antelope are the latest in a long list of ‘charismatic’ hoodstock to leave Marwell. What a shame; the ‘Africa’ area of the park is starting to feel a bit empty..

Any idea where the banteng will be situated?
 
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Sable antelope are the latest in a long list of ‘charismatic’ hoodstock to leave Marwell. What a shame; the ‘Africa’ area of the park is starting to feel a bit empty..

Any idea where the banteng will be situated?
I think they will be in the former Sable area,which is why the Sable were moved on.
 
Sable antelope are the latest in a long list of ‘charismatic’ hoodstock to leave Marwell. What a shame; the ‘Africa’ area of the park is starting to feel a bit empty..

Any idea where the banteng will be situated?
It is interesting that there is a perception that a lot of "charismatic hoof-stock", and African species in particular, have left Marwell as this is not substantiated by facts. I have check back on the records of the African ungulates (omitting domestic animals which Marwell has not kept for years and would not be considered charismatic species anyway) and note the following. From when Marwell opened (1972) through to the end of the 1970s, the most species of African ungulates kept was 17 and it was not until 1984 that the total reached 20. It has remained, give of take one or two species, to around 20 since then, only exceeded in 2009-2011 when there were 23 (18 Artiodactyla and 5 Perissodactyla) There has only been one year since 1993 when the African Perissodactyla dropped to 4 and that was when the Common zebra were moved out of the Zoo to allow the building of Wild Explorers (much needed new housing for 3 of the existing African ungulates). The 2019 Annual Report lists 22 species and about three-quarters of these species were at Marwell 25 years ago (and many for a much longer period). So the collection of species is more stable than is assumed by some.

The fact that the numbers of specimens of many of these species has declined (often to improve animal welfare and management needs) is probably a reason why there is the perception that there are less species to be seen.

In 2020 the Congo buffalo and Warthog left and, as reported elsewhere, the Sable are scheduled to go, but there are good indications that they will be replaced by new African species during the course of this year, thus maintaining a count of 20 or more species.
 
There's definitely more hope for the place at present than there has been in a while, methinks.
Time will tell I guess, but I'm not as optimistic as some. I will believe it when I see it! Marwell will need a net gain of at least 10-15 species to get back to where it once was! African hoofstock may not have reduced much but everything else has!
 
And why would that be, Dave?

Time will tell I guess, but I'm not as optimistic as some. I will believe it when I see it!

Not sure I can go on the record with the exact details, but broadly speaking "a recent change in staff/management which I have been informed about" covers it.
 
Time will tell I guess, but I'm not as optimistic as some. I will believe it when I see it! Marwell will need a net gain of at least 10-15 species to get back to where it once was! African hoofstock may not have reduced much but everything else has!
I guess the Arabian Oryx are no longer in the collection?
 
At a guess, the Banteng where the Congo Buffalo were, and the pigs where the wart hogs were?
 
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