I'm not entirely sure where this thread's proper home would be, but here goes. The main reason I'm making a separate topic from the Smithsonian National Zoo News thread is because I don't want to fall into the trap of speculating in a news thread. The short of it is, National Zoo will renovate the Cheetah Conservation Station area, which is where the zoo's African collection predominantly resides. I'm personally curious what a "better diversity in birds and hoofstock" would entail; I'd imagine stuff like secretary birds and helmeted guineafowl would make sense along with the requisite ostrich, vultures and ground hornbill. I'm also curious about what hoofstock could be added alongside the existing collection - if I remember correctly, the site is big enough for larger species like addax, scimitar-horned oryx, sitatunga and Grevy's zebra - but would it be out of the question to expect stuff like bongo or even okapi? Maybe some more gazelle species or bringing back scimitar-horned oryx...
Ramble over, I'm hoping whatever they do, it's gonna be good. (And idiot-proofed in a more clever way, that mesh barrier in front of the cheetahs is pretty clunky.)
Ramble over, I'm hoping whatever they do, it's gonna be good. (And idiot-proofed in a more clever way, that mesh barrier in front of the cheetahs is pretty clunky.)