i know about the indoor problem, i forgot that the mini nocturnal section was in the middle of it. i really miss the african wild dogs in new england, and i think it would be a good species for that area, iirc its the african section
I agree. Really, for me it's less there are species I want a specific zoo to keep, and more just species I wish were present in the region. The following list is species I wish were present in New England Zoos. Whether it's one of the Zoo New England facilities, Roger Williams, Mystic, or one of the smaller zoos, I don't really care, but there're a lot of awesome species nobody in the region keeps.
- Orangutans, it's a shame that there are only two great apes in the region, with one of the two being a few elderly chimps at Southwicks. It'd be great to see all three genus of great apes represented by someone taking on either orangutan species.
- Maned Wolves, African Wild Dogs, Dhole- no, I do not expect all three of these. However, there isn't much for large canid representation in New England, with just Roger Williams' red wolves and Stone's mexican greys. Ideally, there would be a third species present somewhere in the region.
- Langurs, these are fascinating primates and some of the only Asian monkeys prevalent in the AZA. I don't care if it's francois' or silvery leaf, but it would be nice to be able to see one of these species in New England.
- Japanese Macaque, Gelada- both of these primates are large, attractive, and cold tolerant. It's a shame they aren't present in New England, since they are some of the few primates that can be kept outside year round.
- Klipspringer, adorable little antelopes that should be way more common than they are.
- Generally more ungulate representation- we do have some ungulates in New England, but as a whole this group is not well represented. Southwicks is probably the best place to go for ungulates, followed by Roger Williams, but the ungulates present in New England are primarily just the common species that can be seen at plenty of places. I'd love to see a New England zoo take on Roan Antelope, Nyala, Kudu, Transcapian Urial, Chinese Goral, Duikers, Impala, Springbok, I could keep listing, but the point is just more ungulates- of any species!
- Okapi, yes, an ungulate, but one I felt was worthy of extra recognition since they are so unique, and a species was the potential to be popular if marketed properly.
- Clouded Leopards, Pallas' Cat, Sand Cat, Black-footed Cat, in general just more feline representation. Plenty of places have lions, servals, snow leopards generic tigers, the three native cat species, but it'd be nice to see some other species become present in New England. Especially these four since cloudeds are absolutely gorgeous, pallas' are cold tolerant, and the other two are utterly adorable.
- More Penguin representation, only two penguin species present in the region. It'd be nice to see one or two other penguin species be present as well, this one very well may happen relatively soon depending on which species Roger Williams chooses to get.
- More bird representation in general, species doesn't matter to me as much as birds getting more prominently featured does. Franklin Park and Buttonwood Park Zoos are excellent bird-wise, and Roger Williams holds its own as well, but it'd be nice for some other zoos to step up their bird game, and even for the three zoos I mentioned above to look into some new species when possible. Especially zoos like Capron, Roger Williams, Franklin Park, that have rainforest exhibits that don't seem at capacity, it'd be nice for them to consider what options there are for increasing the bird collection.
- More cold tolerant small birds, more specifically it'd be nice to see some bird species that can be kept outside year-round as well. We do have some in New England (bald eagles, asian crane species, etc.) but it would be nice to see some zoos add some more supplemental aviaries with red-billed blue magpies, himalayan monal, cabot's tragopan, and other more weather-tolerant birds.
- More reptiles, just in general it'd be nice to see some zoos step up their reptile game, pretty much only some of the most common species are present in New England zoos, and it'd be great to see some more zoos exhibit a greater diversity of reptiles.
I could probably go on with more species as well, but those are some of the big groups I'd like to see represented in New England.