The macaw death is a bit odd, was he an older bird?
He was a customs seizure so I’m not sure if his age was ever verified.
He's been there for at least twenty years though, so would've be an older bird.
The macaw death is a bit odd, was he an older bird?
He was a customs seizure so I’m not sure if his age was ever verified.
wait were those the older lions? or the new ones?
wait were those the older lions? or the new ones?
The ones that died were the older females. The new males arrived last year.
Are they related to the Hamilton zoo pygmy marmosets?
I’d say it’s a strong possibility.
Hamilton Zoo originally acquired 1.1 Pygmy marmoset from Wellington Zoo in December 2011. They were a mother and son named Tinka and Salavador (both now deceased). Their current marmosets are Picchu (2008) and Sisa (2016), the latter of which is the daughter of Salvador and Picchu.
Tinka and Salvador were imported by Wellington Zoo in January, so even assuming they didn’t have time to breed in their 11 months at Wellington, it’s likely they were related to others in the same import that were retained by Wellington. Maya (Wellington’s current breeding female) was born there; while Tunche came from Natureland.
Right so currently three holders locally (Wellington, natureland and Hamilton)? Are there six (2.4) excluding the new triplets?
Edit: looks like Wellington has two troops, so must be a few more adults in the region.
There’s currently three holders - Wellington, Hamilton and Natureland:
Hamilton Zoo have 0.2.
Natureland had 2.1.2 (breeding and 1.0.2 offspring) as of September 2019; the male offspring (Tunche) was subsequently transferred to Wellington. Their breeding pair came from Wellington.
Wellington Zoo have 1.1.3 in their eatery exhibit. I’m not sure if their previous offspring (twins born 2021) are housed with them or are the second troop you mention.
Thanks! Do you know if there is a reason they are held in small troops? They seem like the sort of exhibit that would be more engaging and natural in larger troops.
Pygmy marmoset triplets:
Wellington Zoo are have welcomed Pygmy marmoset triplets to Tunche and Maya. The pair previously welcomed twins late last year.
Coincidentally, Wellington Zoo bred New Zealand’s first set of Pygmy marmoset triplets a decade ago on 11/07/2012.
It’s the second recent primate birth at the zoo, following a Cotton-top tamarin infant to Soto and Celeste.
There is some drone footage of the work on the Snow Leopard enclosure in the following video from about a week ago. The path along the top where the truck and workmen are was, back in the old days, a visitor path from which you could look down into the bear pits from above.