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red river hog

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Free-roaming: Blue-and-yellow Macaw, Blue-throated Macaw, Military Macaw, Red-and-green Macaw, Red-fronted Macaw, Scarlet Macaw

OASIS

1. Tammar Wallaby, Coscoroba Swan, Indian Spot-billed Duck, Redhead, Spotted Whistling-Duck
2. Giant Anteater
3. Rhinoceros Iguana
4. Black-necked Swan, Canvasback, Chiloe Wigeon, Eurasian Wigeon, Orinoco Goose, Red-crested Pochard, Rosy-billed Pochard
5. Reeves’s Muntjac, Mozambique Tilapia
6. North Sulawesi Babirusa, Mozambique Tilapia
7. Nene, Mozambique Tilapia, Shortnose Gar, Western Mosquitofish
8. Australian Wood Duck, Barnacle Goose, Plumed Whistling-Duck, Redhead, Red-breasted Goose, Rosy-billed Pochard, Yellow-billed Duck

DISCOVERY ISLAND

1. Black-faced Kangaroo, Red Kangaroo, European White Stork, Lappet-faced Vulture
2. Lesser Flamingo

Otter Grotto:
3. Asian Small-clawed Otter

4. Giant Pangasius, Western Mosquitofish
5. Cotton-top Tamarin, Yellow-footed Tortoise
6. Asian Black Tortoise
7. Collared Brown Lemur, Ring-tailed Lemur, Rosy-billed Pochard, Yellow-billed Duck

AFRICA

Kilimanjaro Safaris:

1. West African Crowned-Crane

Little Ituri Forest:
2. Okapi
3. South-central Black Rhinoceros
4. South-central Black Rhinoceros
5. Eastern Bongo, Greater Kudu, Saddle-billed Stork

Safi River:
6. Nile Hippopotamus
7. Nile Hippopotamus, Pink-backed Pelican
8. Nile Crocodile

Savanna:
9. East African Eland, Eastern White-bearded Wildebeest, Hartmann’s Mountain Zebra, Masai Giraffe, Sable Antelope, Sanga Cattle
10. African Wild Dog / Spotted Hyena
11. Mandrill
12. African Bush Elephant
13. African Bush Elephant
14. Greater Flamingo
15. Bontebok, Ellipsen Waterbuck, Southern White Rhinoceros, Common Ostrich
16. Cheetah
17. Cheetah
18. Southern Lion
19. Southern Warthog

Magadi Glen:
20. Goat

Gorilla Falls Exploration Trail:

1. Peters’ Angolan Colobus
2. Okapi, Yellow-backed Duiker

Research Center:
3. Eastern Spiny Mouse
4. Naked Mole-Rat
5. Pancake Tortoise
6. Kenyan Sand Boa
7. African Bullfrog
8. Common Emperor Scorpion
9. Angolan Python

10. African Jacana, African Olive Pigeon, African Pygmy-Goose, African Spoonbill, Black Crake, Black-cheeked Lovebird, Blue-bellied Roller, Bruce’s Green-Pigeon, Crested Coua, Great Blue Turaco, Green Woodhoopoe, Hamerkop, Marbled Duck, Northern Carmine Bee-Eater, Purple Starling, Racket-tailed Roller, Red-and-yellow Barbet, Ring-necked Dove, Snowy-crowned Robin-Chat, Speckled Mousebird, Tambourine Dove, Taveta Weaver, Violet-backed Starling, White-headed Buffalo-Weaver, Blue Mbuna, Electric Yellow Cichlid
12. Nile Hippopotamus, Blue Mbuna, Electric Yellow Cichlid
13. Meerkat
14. Grevy’s Zebra
15. Western Lowland Gorilla
16. Western Lowland Gorilla

RAFIKI’S PLANET WATCH:

Affection Section:
1. Goat, Sheep
2. Donkey
3. Goat
4. Cattle, Sheep

Conservation Station:
1. Komodo Dragon
2. Corn Snake, Eastern Ratsnake, Gopher Tortoise
3. Puerto Rican Boa
4. Goliath Stick Insect
5. Desert Ironclad Beetle
6. Cameroon Red Tarantula
7. Thorny Devil Stick Insect
8. Brazilian Salmon Pink Tarantula
9. Common Emperor Scorpion
10. Giant Desert Hairy Scorpion
11. Spiny Leaf Insect
12. Derby’s Flower Beetle
13. African Giant Millipede
14. Amazon Sapphire Pinktoe Tarantula
15. Rusty Millipede
16. Giant Dead Leaf Mantis
17. Discoid Cockroach
18. Mexican Fireleg Tarantula
19. Henkel’s Leaf-tailed Gecko
20. Desert Rosy Boa
21. Common Blue-tongued Skink
22. Kleinmann’s Tortoise
23. Vietnamese Pond Turtle
24. Pancake Tortoise
25. Chinese Crocodile Lizard
26. Common Flat-tailed Gecko
27. Solomon Islands Skink
28. Puerto Rican Crested Toad
29. Argentine Horned Frog
30. Oviedo Fire Salamander
31. African Bullfrog
32. Two-toed Amphiuma
33. Vietnamese Mossy Frog
34. Colorado River Toad
35. Dyeing Poison Dart Frog
36. Golden Poison Frog

ASIA

Maharajah Jungle Trek:

1. Komodo Dragon
2. Lion-tailed Macaque
3. Black Tree Monitor
4. Large Flying Fox
5. Solomon Islands Skink
6. Water Buffalo, Bar-headed Goose

Birds of the Royal Forest:
7. Asian Cotton Pygmy-Goose, Asian Fairy-Bluebird, Black-collared Starling, Blue-crowned Laughingthrush, Chestnut-backed Thrush, Collared Finchbill, Common Emerald-Dove, Crested Partridge, Edwards’s Pheasant, Falcated Duck, Galah, Golden-crested Myna, Great Argus, Green Imperial-Pigeon, Green Junglefowl, Hooded Pitta, Metallic Starling, Mindanao Bleeding-Heart, Northern Masked Lapwing, Nicobar Pigeon, Pied Imperial-Pigeon, Pink-eared Duck, Red-billed Leiothrix, Ring-necked Dove, Tawny Frogmouth, Victoria Crowned-Pigeon, White-breasted Woodswallow, White-eared Sibia, White-rumped Shama

Feathered Friends in Flight:

Hadada Ibis
Kea
Roseate Spoonbill
Domestic Pigeon
Trumpeter Hornbill
Pied Crow
Chicken
Verreaux’s Eagle-Owl
Brown Rat
Northern Raven
Yellow-headed Amazon
Marabou Stork
West African Crowned-Crane
Southern Bald Eagle
Blue-throated Macaw
Toco Toucan
Andean Condor

Kali River:

1. Siamang
2. Northern White-cheeked Gibbon
3. Red-billed Blue-Magpie

DINOLAND, USA:

1. American Crocodile
2. Abdim’s Stork, Asian Forest Tortoise
 
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7. Nene, Mozambique Tilapia, Shortnose Gar, Western Mosquitofish
4. Giant Pangasius, Western Mosquitofish
5. Cotton-top Tamarin, Yellow-footed Tortoise
Pretty sure those mosquitofish you saw were wild. Also, I thought the tortoise was Red-footed?
 
No Tiger anymore?
Yes, sorry they are Sumatrans should be right before the aviary in Asia.

No blackbuck, either?

The kea in the bird show must be a recent addition. Did it have a trained role or just fly out at the end? When I went last March, they still had their harpy eagle come out for the finale.
I didn’t see any blackbuck on my visits in December or February. The Kea came out right at the beginning with the ibis and pigeons.

Have the springbok left?
I didn’t see any in December or February.

Pretty sure those mosquitofish you saw were wild. Also, I thought the tortoise was Red-footed?
I assumed they were put in as food for the catfish. It’s possible they switched the tortoises, but on my recent visit they were definitely Yellow-footed.

Also, don't they hold south-central black rhinoceros?
Are they Eastern? I thought I read somewhere on ZC that they were the South-Central subspecies.
 
I assumed they were put in as food for the catfish

Or there for mosquito control purposes.

It's part of the bird show. Trained rats run across stage when the handler says that because they have birds of prey they don't have any rats. Is that joke not used in European bird shows? I don't think I've ever seen a bird show that doesn't do this.

Conversely I've never seen or even heard of this joke - and I've seen quite a number of bird/raptors included shows at different zoos.
 
Or there for mosquito control purposes.



Conversely I've never seen or even heard of this joke - and I've seen quite a number of bird/raptors included shows at different zoos.
Excepting Milwaukee every zoo bird show I have ever seen has this joke included in it - I've seen quite a few as well. Maybe I've just been weirdly lucky (or unlucky, idk). I'm curious to hear from others on this.
 
The kea in the bird show must be a recent addition. Did it have a trained role or just fly out at the end? When I went last March, they still had their harpy eagle come out for the finale.
Note that they have multiple versions of the bird show with different species rotating in/out in some cases. Prior to my visit last year, I watched a few videos of the bird show to see what species I could expect, and even videos posted relatively close together had some differences in the species line-up. For one example, an andean condor and a marabou stork both filled the scavenger "slot" in different versions of the show. It should be the same thing with a few different corvid species as well. Possibly a few others I can't remember off hand.
 
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