Bengal Tiger
Well-Known Member
If you’re looking for small nocturnal species still, just try and find some rodents
Sure. The third zoo I will cover is the Stone Zoo. I'll gather my thoughts and describe it later today, as this zoo will have the fewest changes.Any updates or new additions Neil?
For the Stone Zoo, there are only a few areas that I believe warrant changes, and this is perhaps the most realistic of any of my proposed re-imaginings.
-The Caribbean Coast area is one of the strongest zoo areas I've ever seen, especially for a small zoo. The Flamingo aviary is phenomenal, but I would enhance it by adding West Indian Whistling Ducks, Black-crowned Night Herons, and Roseate Spoonbills, as well as the zoo's Linneaus Two-toed Sloths. The Bush dog habitat and Jamaican Iguana habitat will be maintained, and a small standalone aviary will be added for Crested Quail-Doves.
The Treasures of the Sierra Madre is another strong area. Both the peccary and Jaguar habitats are very nice, and while nothing special the small habitats for peregrine falcon, Roadrunner, coati, etc are perfectly fine. I would add an additional habitat for black-tailed Prarie dogs, and replace the cougars with ocelots, so that the zoo can compare/contrast them with the Jaguars next door. These ocelots would be relocated from the Franklin Park Zoo.
The Animal Discovery Center, Windows to the Wild, Bird Show area, and Treetops & Riverbends are the zoo's weaker areas. These areas of the zoo would be completely gutted, and replaced with more modern areas. The Windows to the Wild would be replaced with a new Desert Dome exhibit, an idea that I'm really fascinated by and wish more Zoos would implement. In order to fit better with the thematic of the rest of the zoo, this Desert Dome will purely focus on species from The Americas, and will not be to re-home species from Treasures of the Sierra Madre. Instead, this area will feature new species, including Nine-banded Armadillo, Swift Fox, Burrowing Owls, Montezuma Quail, Desert Tortoise, Mexican Beaded Lizard, San Esteban Chuckwalla, Common Vampire Bat, and multiple Rattlesnake species. All of the species would live in large, naturalistic enclosures- with the quail/tortoise and Beaded Lizard/chuckwalla as mixed species exhibits. While lacking any real crowd-bringers (like other Desert Domes I've proposed), this would serve as a very nice addition to the zoo and allow visitors to immerse themselves in the Desert.
The Bird Show/Animal Discovery Center/Treetops & Riverbends area would become a new area called South America: Beyond the Amazon, featuring South American fauna from a variety of South American habitats. A mixed species habitat will feature Maned Wolves and Guanaco, while a large, streamside habitat will house Andean Bears. Smaller habitats will house Chilean Pudu, Magellanic Penguins/Inca Terns/Grey Gulls, and a Waterfowl Aviary. These five habitats will bring some unique and popular species to an underutilized area of the zoo.
The markhor exhibit in Himalayan Highlands will be turned into a mixed species habitat, with both Turkmenian Markhor and Sichuan Takin. Other than that, these areas of the zoo will remain the same, along with the wolf exhibit, crane habitats, and much of Yukon Creek. The only change to Yukon Creek would be replacing the black bears with a new North American River Otter habitat.
just saw that you suggested Andean bears, but if Beardsley is opening up a new habitat for them doesn't that make Stone less unique... then again, Buttonwood has black bears as well. Hmm...
Yeah- Beardsley and Stone are definitely not competition. Well over two hours apart from each other. Hence why I've never been to Beardsley, and won't be featuring it in this thread.I don't think the andean bears would be an issue. I might be wrong, but it seems to me like Beardsley Zoo and Stone Zoo are far enough apart to not compete with each other. SZ is north of Boston, so I'd imagine that they get most of their visitors from Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, and possibly Vermont. Beardsley Zoo on the other hand is in southwestern Connecticut, meaning people from ME, NH, and VT would have to travel across two states just to get there. This seems like a pretty long trip for an average visitor to take just to go to a small zoo, so I would assume that the two zoos get their visitors from different geographic sections of New England and therefore are not competing with each other in the way you have suggested.
Yeah, I guess that location choice wasn't a very good choice. The barn could take over part of the pronghorn habitat, and possibly the muntjac habitat as well.I don't understand where a barn would go for the giraffes and other hoofstock at RWPZ? Behind the tortoise are is the lake. The only feasible place to put a barn would be where the muntjac are encroaching towards the zoo's vet building. This would make the path to the playground area a dead-end space.
~Thylo
As promised, I will go back and re-work some of my ideas for the Roger Williams Park Zoo.Yeah, I guess that location choice wasn't a very good choice. The barn could take over part of the pronghorn habitat, and possibly the muntjac habitat as well.
I will also say that looking at it with fresh eyes, there are a few parts of my Roger Williams proposal I'm no longer happy with. I'll go back and make some modifications to it next.
The Treasures of the Sierra Madre is another strong area. Both the peccary and Jaguar habitats are very nice, and while nothing special the small habitats for peregrine falcon, Roadrunner, coati, etc are perfectly fine. I would add an additional habitat for black-tailed Prarie dogs, and replace the cougars with ocelots, so that the zoo can compare/contrast them with the Jaguars next door. These ocelots would be relocated from the Franklin Park Zoo.
I'm not 100% sure yet, but will describe my plans when I do Franklin Park Zoo. I'm thinking possibly some sort of primate, since the ocelots are often hard to see in that habitat and a primate would be more active- but there are other species I'm considering as well (like Clouded Leopard or Binturong).If you moved the ocelots to SZ, what species would you put in the ocelot habitat at Franklin Park?
I'm not 100% sure yet, but will describe my plans when I do Franklin Park Zoo. I'm thinking possibly some sort of primate, since the ocelots are often hard to see in that habitat and a primate would be more active- but there are other species I'm considering as well (like Clouded Leopard or Binturong).
Well since the two zoos are not connected, it wouldn't necessarily be as simple as those exact animals switching zoos- but the species is one I'm considering, for a Franklin Park Zoo plan that resembles a modernized version of a plan from 50 years ago.Maybe move the binturong from RWPZ to FPZ?
I'll mainly focus on the Domes, but first will describe all of the other habitats in the zoo:Franklin Park Zoo is the New England Zoo I feel could benefit the most drastically from major changes. While the changes I'd like to see at other zoos are relatively modest, the Franklin Park Zoo provides an interesting opportunity for a major overhaul. This new masterplan will feature eight different areas:
- Nature's Neighborhoods (only slight modifications to the existing area).
- Re-opening of the Hoofstock Yards.
- A Bird's World (slight modifications only)
- A new habitat located behind A Bird's World.
And a re-vamped version of the 1970's masterplan, with four large domes:
- Existing, updated Tropical Forest Dome.
- Grasslands Dome, connected to Giraffe Savanna
- Desert Dome, located on top of or attached to the Kangaroo exhibit.
- Freshwater Dome, location TBD, either on top of the farm or on top of the zebra/Wildebeest habitat.
I will make more posts looking more in depth at all of these proposed areas.