SusScrofa
Well-Known Member
I noticed that Western European zoos have a much better collection of Central & South American mammals than US & Canadian zoos. You guys have a better carnivore collection including more zoos with Bush Dog, and also have grison and small cats like Oncilla and Margay that are not (or nearly so) found in our collections. Your primate collection from the region beats ours with Silvery Marmosets, Black Lion Tamarin, Red Howler Monkey and various other species found in your zoos that are either absent or nearly absent from the entirety of our country; I don't think we have a single species in this group that is endemic to our collections vs yours. On the ungulate side, you guys have White-lipped Peccary which I'm sure are absent here, and more Vicuna as well. I think Pampas Deer as well?
I would think the closer proximity and more suitable climate (in states like Florida, Texas and California) would give the US the advantage in displaying neotropical mammals but we seem to be significant losers here. The UK alone might beat the entirety of the US and Canada in this regard. Any reasons for Western Europes strong collection?
I would think the closer proximity and more suitable climate (in states like Florida, Texas and California) would give the US the advantage in displaying neotropical mammals but we seem to be significant losers here. The UK alone might beat the entirety of the US and Canada in this regard. Any reasons for Western Europes strong collection?