I forgot that European zoos often have ungulates in aviaries. Mostly unheard of in North America.There is a thing called an aviary. Aviaries with ibex exist (Nordhorn and la Garenne) and could be used for birds as small as kites etc.
I forgot that European zoos often have ungulates in aviaries. Mostly unheard of in North America.There is a thing called an aviary. Aviaries with ibex exist (Nordhorn and la Garenne) and could be used for birds as small as kites etc.
In Beauval nearly all the crocodilian species are kept with fish of all sizes : cichlids, gars, stingrays, piranhas, loaches, gouramis... and with river turtles.The birds have access to a whole upper part where the mongoose don't come and crocodiles aren't interested in small fish generally. A lot of zoos mix crocodiles and fish and if you keep the crocodiles fed there isn't a problem.
I meant like in an aviary with points that weren’t accessible to the ungulates. Also was asking about small predatory birds like kites and falcons.How would you keep the birds contained? If they are flightless than no, mixing with ungulates is a bad idea.
I meant like in an aviary with points that weren’t accessible to the ungulates. Also was asking about small predatory birds like kites and falcons.
Yes if the enclosure is large enough.could you mix mongolian wild ass and wild bactrian camels?
A camel in my home zoo of Helsinki zoo once killed a kulan so I would be a bit cautious with that mix. As long as you have enough space it should work.could you mix mongolian wild ass and wild bactrian camels?
Curious about whether smaller birds of prey (falcons, small owls, kites, etc.) could be mixed with larger ungulates (takin, goral, serow, mountain goat, etc.)
I have seen Bactrian Camels mixed with Persian Onagers at The Wilds.could you mix mongolian wild ass and wild bactrian camels?
Could a large walkthrough aviary work with Demoiselle crane, Black stork, Ruddy shelduck, Red crested pochard, Ferruginous duck, Black winged stilt, Pied avocet, Eurasian spoonbill, Dalmatian pelican, Northern shoveler, Little egret?
Also, Avocets and Stilts have been known to hybridise. Cranes might object to the Storks in the breeding seasonPelicans will sometimes eat ducks or other smaller birds, so I would advise to house them separetely.
I'm not sure the avocets and stilts would be able to compete with the other species ,and they might also have their young preyed upon by the egrets and spoonbills.
Multiple zoos and aquariums in North America at least in the past (don't know if any of them have it anymore) have the first mix. So I would say it probably works fine.In a large exhibit, would this mix work:
American alligator
Alligator snapping turtle
Alligator gar
Missisipi paddlefish
Arapaima
South American lungfish
Ripsaw catfish
Tiger sorubim
Multiple zoos and aquariums in North America at least in the past (don't know if any of them have it anymore) have the first mix. So I would say it probably works fine.
No that's my fault, I should have read the description more carefully.It's one mix, but I listed the fish separate from the reptiles. It is all in the same tank, sorry for the confusion
It's a bit of an odd mix, and I don't think it would work.In a large exhibit, would this mix work:
American alligator
Alligator snapping turtle
Alligator gar
Missisipi paddlefish
Arapaima
South American lungfish
Ripsaw catfish
Tiger sorubim
It's a bit of an odd mix, and I don't think it would work.
I was concerned about the arapaima and the gators, I doubt that would be a very successful mix. Your hunch about the turtle is also correct, alligator snappers might end up clashing with the catfish. I'm only aware of them being mixed with fish that dwell in the mid to upper levels of the tank.Are there any specific problem species (Though I assume it's the turtle)