Thats the 64 million dollar question????The question, I believe right here, is what is there now, who owns it and how is it regulated?
Thats the 64 million dollar question????The question, I believe right here, is what is there now, who owns it and how is it regulated?
The animals were up for sale to whoever wanted them when the ranch was sold. I don't know what remains there currently. The likes of lechwe, kudu, etc are long gone though.Given the place was shut down ..., has anyone any idea whom the current owners are, what is going on these days at Mary River ranch and what animal population is place.
I would (hope and) assume that the exotic species held are somehow regulated by State or Federal laws and overseen by qualified and independent enforcement / vet staff?
I would be very surprised if there were a lot at pearl coast zoo they really did not have that much room however no number at Mary River would surprise me it could be huge!i found a reference a while back saying when the Oryx were transferred to Mary Rive from Lord McAlpines nearby property, they started with 300 oryx and had since doubled that number, but only 2 had been shot as part of the hunting operation. There must be many more now!
Dear me, and I thought that Australia had very strict IRA import / export regulations in place!The animals were up for sale to whoever wanted them when the ranch was sold. I don't know what remains there currently. The likes of lechwe, kudu, etc are long gone though.
I'm not sure what your "import / export regulations" refers to. The animals are already in Australia. And they are privately owned stock, so sales should only be governed by state laws.Dear me, and I thought that Australia had very strict IRA import / export regulations in place!
Reading between the lines of the Mary River endroite, it would seem authorities are simply uninterested and unconcerned (which to me - to put it mildly - is quite surprising).
What next?
International Scimitar-horned Oryx Studbook 2020International Scimitar-horned Oryx Studbook 2019
This studbook has been out for a while but I thought it would still be worth mentioning to better understand the current oryx numbers in the region. The only zoo that bred oryx during 2019 was Dubbo and there was only one death in the region. There were also several transfers between the zoos. There were 139 (65.64.10) Scimitar-horned Oryx across five Australasian zoos as of 2019.
Full studbook: https://www.marwell.org.uk/media/other/Scimitar-horned_oryx_ISB_2019_compressed.pdf
Altina Wildlife Park – 38 (22.14.2) oryx as of December 2019; there were no oryx births at Altina during 2019; 2.0 oryx were transferred from Monarto to Altina in October 2019
Monarto Safari Park – 28 (5.19.4) oryx as of December 2019; there were no oryx births at Monarto during 2019
Orana Wildlife Park – New Zealand’s last two (2.0) oryx were still alive as of December 2019
Taronga Western Plains Zoo – 44 (18.22.4) oryx as of December 2019; there were 12 (6.4.2) oryx births at Dubbo throughout 2019; there was 0.1 death during 2019; 2.0 oryx were transferred from Altina to Dubbo in September 2019
Werribee Open Range Zoo – 27 (18.9.0) Oryx as of December 2019; there were no oryx births at Werribee during 2019; 2.0 oryx were transferred from Dubbo to Werribee in October 2019
Thats not a bad number for just a handful of the regional zoos to hold. Not real sure why the NZ zoos are losing interest with them.International Scimitar-horned Oryx Studbook 2020
I finally got around to look through the latest international studbook for Scimitar-horned Oryx. There are currently 169 Scimitar-horned Oryx in Australasian zoos as of the 31st December 2020 (this number includes two calves born in January 2021) which is quite an increase from 2019’s figure of 139. Monarto’s herd has increased significantly to now 52 animals! Some of the births in late 2019 were not recorded in the previous studbook hence the leap in numbers. There were a couple of deaths (around 10) and a transfer of a male from Werribee to Monarto recorded in the studbook but I only included births and current population figures below.
Full studbook: https://www.marwell.org.uk/media/other/1._scimitar-horned_oryx_isb_2020-compressed.pdf
Altina Wildlife Park – 38 (22.15.1) oryx as of December 2020; one (1.0) oryx was born in March 2020
Monarto Safari Park – 52 (19.29.4) oryx as of December 2020; there was a whopping 13 (5.4.4) successful oryx births in 2020 and one (1.0) in January 2021
Orana Wildlife Park – New Zealand’s last two (2.0) oryx were still alive as of December 2020
Taronga Western Plains Zoo – 41 (19.21.1) oryx as of December 2020; there were no oryx births at Dubbo during 2020
Werribee Open Range Zoo – 36 (18.18) oryx as of December 2020; there were six (2.4) oryx births in 2020 and one (1.0) in January 2021