San Diego Zoo Safari Park San Diego Zoo Safari Park News 2022

Does the Safari Park still have Shoebills in its collection? I noticed they were absent from a few recent species lists from this website.
 
They were in the Mombasa Lagoon iirc, they had a small island with cranes and geese on it which is located closer to the Mombasa Cooker. I saw one when I first visited in 2019 and I wish I had captured a photo of it :(
One of my fondest memories from my last visit to the Safari Park was eating an excellent lunch at the Mombasa cooker on the patio deck while watching the shoebills and other wading birds. It's been a few years, but I still remember that experience vividly. They are my favorite birds and I concur that it is absolutely tragic that they have become so scarce. Here is a photo I was able to capture during my visit.

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One of my fondest memories from my last visit to the Safari Park was eating an excellent lunch at the Mombasa cooker on the patio deck while watching the shoebills and other wading birds. It's been a few years, but I still remember that experience vividly. They are my favorite birds and I concur that it is absolutely tragic that they have become so scarce. Here is a photo I was able to capture during my visit.

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Seeing them on my visit was one of my highlights as well, they were one of the species I most wanted to see and I'm glad I was able to. They're so cool and wierd at the same time. Pity the species just doesn't breed well in captivity.

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If I’m correct shoebills with pinioned wings have less success with breeding compared to free flight shoebills in aviaries. San Diego giving theirs to Tampa might have been for breeding reasons.
 
San Diego Zoo Safari Park has only California, unless they *just* acquired Andeans.
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It is also mentioned in species lists dating back to at least 2018.
Edit: my mistake I thought this was the zoos thread not the Safari park.
 

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A very rare COOKS PETREL ( Pterodroma cookii)
has been sighted three days ago at the african outpost in the lower lagoon.

https://ebird.org/checklist/S112626...00.114021697.1655146863-1105274724.1642209682

A short bit on Cook's Petrel for those unfamilar: a uncommon threatened species that breeds on three islands off New Zealand, and travels northeast to the Eastern Pacific in winter. They are generally rare far off the West Coast of the US, but there are several summer records from the Salton Sea which are presumed to be birds cutting back over to the Pacific from the Gulf of California. Thus this record is not unprecedented, but very unusual indeed!
 
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