Bronx Zoo Bronx Zoo News 2022

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I visited the zoo for a half-day this past Saturday for the World of Birds 50th anniversary members celebration. Lots of exciting bird news!

-First, the zoo hosted a wildlife encounter group who showcased a number of birds, including Military Macaw, Black-Throated Magpie-Jay, Eurasian Eagle-Owl, Silver-Cheeked Hornbill, and a Common Buzzard. The hornbill and macaw did flight displays while the other three all interacted with the crowd to varying degrees. The buzzard was still young and hadn't lost all his down yet. He was also an odd morph, being almost completely blond in color.
-Cabot's Tragopan, African Spoonbill, and Red-Crested Turaco all have chicks at the moment. The Snowy Egrets are also sitting on eggs.
-Green Honeycreeper and Violaceous Euphonia have both been added back to the Blue-Billed Curassow and Golden-Headed Quetzal habitat.
-The zoo's Cuban Amazon are either gone or off-exhibit.
-The Sulawesi Dwarf Hornbill female has been enclosed inside her nestbox by the male, so fingers crossed the zoo manages to breeding this rare bird!
-There is a Pied Avocet chick in the World of Birds nursery. The remaining Red Bird-of-Paradise chick and Guam Rails have outgrown the nursery displays and have been moved off-exhibit to grow.
-The American Flamingo and Trumpeter Swan have gone back on-exhibit. I do not think any of the cranes have been.
-The zoo has shipped out its last crowned-crane.
-Since my visit only a few weeks ago, the zoo has added four new species on-exhibit in World of Birds: Pink-Headed Fruit-Dove, Chestnut-Breasted Malkoha, Indian Pygmy-Goose, and Yellow-Rumped Cacique. The first two have replaced the the amazons, the goose are in the two-story Asian forest with the pool, and the cacique are mixed with the quetzal aviary. There is a second malkoha on-exhibit in the Pheasantry as well.

In addition to the bird news:
-The North Indian Muntjac and Indian Hog Deer have returned to the on-show collection, with the hog deer herd having grown by a few individuals by the looks of things!

~Thylo
 
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I saw online that World Of Birds was closed today. Does anybody know the reason? I hope this exhibit is open when I visit soon.
 
Why ship out the Crowned Cranes, I wonder.

I think they were down to only one and the bird had been off-exhibit for quick some time. Both the zoos African crane species seem to have been pulled from the hoofstock yards after not being mixed for all too long. Not sure if they still have any Blue Crane behind the scenes.

~Thylo
 
I visited the zoo for a half-day this past Saturday for the World of Birds 50th anniversary members celebration. Lots of exciting bird news!

-First, the zoo hosted a wildlife encounter group who showcased a number of birds, including Military Macaw, Black-Throated Magpie-Jay, Eurasian Eagle-Owl, Silver-Cheeked Hornbill, and a Common Buzzard. The hornbill and macaw did flight displays while the other three all interacted with the crowd to varying degrees. The buzzard was still young and hadn't lost all his down yet. He was also an odd morph, being almost completely blond in color.
-Cabot's Tragopan, African Spoonbill, and Red-Crested Turaco all have chicks at the moment. The Snowy Egrets are also sitting on eggs.
-Green Honeycreeper and Violaceous Euphonia have both been added back to the Blue-Billed Curassow and Golden-Headed Quetzal habitat.
-The zoo's Cuban Amazon are either gone or off-exhibit.
-The Sulawesi Dwarf Hornbill female has been enclosed inside her nestbox by the male, so fingers crossed the zoo manages to breeding this rare bird!
-There is a Pied Avocet chick in the World of Birds nursery. The remaining Red Bird-of-Paradise chick and Guam Rails have outgrown the nursery displays and have been moved off-exhibit to grow.
-The American Flamingo and Trumpeter Swan have gone back on-exhibit. I do not think any of the cranes have been.
-The zoo has shipped out its last crowned-crane.
-Since my visit only a few weeks ago, the zoo has added four new species on-exhibit in World of Birds: Pink-Headed Fruit-Dove, Chestnut-Breasted Malkoha, Indian Pygmy-Goose, and Yellow-Rumped Cacique. The first two have replaced the the amazons, the goose are in the two-story Asian forest with the pool, and the cacique are mixed with the quetzal aviary. There is a second malkoha on-exhibit in the Pheasantry as well.

In addition to the bird news:
-The North Indian Muntjac and Indian Hog Deer have returned to the on-show collection, with the hog deer herd having grown by a few individuals by the looks of things!

~Thylo
The zoo's already had malkoha. I have a picture of one.
 
A male Indian rhino calf was born in June 2021, I don’t think the birth was announced but the zoo posted about the calf’s 1st birthday celebration on their social media pages a few days ago. The calf’s parents weren’t specified in the post but the zoo only has a single adult male, Sanjay, and the mother is most likely the new female, Priya, that arrived from The Wilds a few years back.
 
QUOTE{Kevin2342 said:
Grunt joins two other male Aldabras at the Bronx Zoo, forming a bachelor, non-breeding group of three males.
Bronx has kept and displayed a potential breeding group of 2.2 Aldabrans for some years now, the addition of Grunt makes this 3.2.

~Thylo
}UNQUOTE
Any idea which Aldabra tortoise are at Bronx Zoo now. I have it on good authority that they have just 2.0 Abdul and Grunt (recently arrived from Philly). I wonder about the females. Any more definite information?
 
QUOTE{Kevin2342 said:
Grunt joins two other male Aldabras at the Bronx Zoo, forming a bachelor, non-breeding group of three males.
Bronx has kept and displayed a potential breeding group of 2.2 Aldabrans for some years now, the addition of Grunt makes this 3.2.

~Thylo
}UNQUOTE
Any idea which Aldabra tortoise are at Bronx Zoo now. I have it on good authority that they have just 2.0 Abdul and Grunt (recently arrived from Philly). I wonder about the females. Any more definite information?

They should have 2.2 unless other moves have been made more recently.

~Thylo
 
I swear I saw 5 tortoises on my visit in May. I thought there had been 4 for years, but was shocked to see another one.
Apparently a male from Philadelphia moved to Bronx last year to make 3.2 - post from Thylo last September: Philadelphia Zoo 2021 News [Philadelphia Zoo]

Yes but then the big male was sent to Sedgwick more recently. My understanding is the 3.2 would have been between receiving the Philly male and sending out the Sedgwick male.

~Thylo
 
I'm not sure if this has been posted, but it appears that there is an unsigned Tricolor Parrotfinch on display at World Of Birds, in the enclosure where the other parrotfinch species are signed.
I also didn't see the Bolivian Titi, Hyacinth Macaw, Blue Fairybird, Marabou Stork, Gray Crowned Cranes, or any pelican species, and there was no signage for them. It's been a while since I visited some sections that contained them, so not sure their status. Are any of these still on-display?
 
I'm not sure if this has been posted, but it appears that there is an unsigned Tricolor Parrotfinch on display at World Of Birds, in the enclosure where the other parrotfinch species are signed.
I also didn't see the Bolivian Titi, Hyacinth Macaw, Blue Fairybird, Marabou Stork, Gray Crowned Cranes, or any pelican species, and there was no signage for them. It's been a while since I visited some sections that contained them, so not sure their status. Are any of these still on-display?

These have all been reported on apart from the fairybird and macaw, some just a few posts ago. As I already answered in your travel thread, the pelicans are likely all off-exhibit still due to HPAI. The crowned cranes are gone, the stork died a couple years back I believe, and the titi are usually off-display but can sometimes be seen outside of the Mouse House.

~Thylo
 
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