Melbourne Zoo Future of Melbourne Zoo 2023 (Speculation / Fantasy)

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I have now realised that that row should be repurposed. Semangka should be moved to the barn and the peccaries to WORZ to breed. Agreed there is no reason to delay the inevitable, or even sacrifice that species for no reason instead of breeding them at WORZ. Could make a great Brazilian tapir exhibit imo, please remind me the other options that have been discussed apart from bongo and okapi

From memory, Okapi were discounted for this area (Peccary Row) due to being too large; with Eastern bongo and Brazilian tapir being the leading ideas. It could potentially suit a small mammal.
 
From memory, Okapi were discounted for this area (Peccary Row) due to being too large; with Eastern bongo and Brazilian tapir being the leading ideas. It could potentially suit a small mammal.
I believe we discussed an African ‘mini fauna’ section where that row is. Some species floated I believe were fennec Fox, cape porcupine, bat eared fox, aardvark caracal and meerkats. We’ve kinda agreed caracals should be used to strengthen WORZ’s crazy for cats argument. Bat eared fox has of course encountered some issues on the import front and the Aardvark would require an IRA, but the rest seem somewhat viable
 
I believe we discussed an African ‘mini fauna’ section where that row is. Some species floated I believe were fennec Fox, cape porcupine, bat eared fox, aardvark caracal and meerkats. We’ve kinda agreed caracals should be used to strengthen WORZ’s crazy for cats argument. Bat eared fox has of course encountered some issues on the import front and the Aardvark would require an IRA, but the rest seem somewhat viable

Yes, I remember that now. Fennec fox, Cape porcupine and Slender-tailed meerkats are the best options. None of these species require much space and could be housed across 2-3 exhibits with porcupine and meerkats sharing an exhibit and a spare exhibit to manage breeding of any of the above.

Caracal are an active larger species. The above space would be perfect for them alone, but multiple species would be the preference of Zoos Victoria.
 
Yes, I remember that now. Fennec fox, Cape porcupine and Slender-tailed meerkats are the best options. None of these species require much space and could be housed across 2-3 exhibits with porcupine and meerkats sharing an exhibit and a spare exhibit to manage breeding of any of the above.

Caracal are an active larger species. The above space would be perfect for them alone, but multiple species would be the preference of Zoos Victoria.
Do you believe caracal would be a genuine possibility at WORZ
 
Do you believe caracal would be a genuine possibility at WORZ

100%. They’re a focus species within the region and well suited to open range zoos as an African grasslands cat. I can certainly imagine Werribee wanting to acquire them in the future.

They have no immediate plans to acquire Caracal, but will surely be continuing to develop their zoo beyond the arrival of the elephants and the acquisition of hyena. They can’t afford to stagnate and Caracal are a logical acquisition that can be easily housed, while engaging the visitors. They’re active and confident cats.
 
100%. They’re a focus species within the region and well suited to open range zoos as an African grasslands cat. I can certainly imagine Werribee wanting to acquire them in the future.

They have no immediate plans to acquire Caracal, but will surely be continuing to develop their zoo beyond the arrival of the elephants and the acquisition of hyena. They can’t afford to stagnate and Caracal are a logical acquisition that can be easily housed, while engaging the visitors. They’re active and confident cats.
Considering they are not overly expensive, it’s a good choice. The public will be expecting new species with these upgrades, and a caracal is a fan favourite that will surely appease visitors until more species are introduced
 
Just in case you guys didn’t see this on the WORZ news thread I will be going to Werribee within the next couple months so lmk what questions I should ask

I’d love to know what progress there’s been with breeding their Southern white rhinoceros. They’ve been attempting to breed their young pair for sometime now without any apparent success.

Also, an estimation of when Brindabella and Pansy (Common hippopotami) are transferring to Monarto. Last I heard, it was the first half of 2023, but it’d be nice to know if this is still the plan.
 
I’d love to know what progress there’s been with breeding their Southern white rhinoceros. They’ve been attempting to breed their young pair for sometime now without any apparent success.

Also, an estimation of when Brindabella and Pansy (Common hippopotami) are transferring to Monarto. Last I heard, it was the first half of 2023, but it’d be nice to know if this is still the plan.
Will do. How many hippos will Werribee have after the transfer
 
It's never happening but I'd love for Giant Pandas to fill one of the exhibits once the Elephants leave for greener pastures :)

I’ve previously been quick to discount Giant panda at Melbourne but for interest’s sake, it’s worth noting that with the elephants departing, Melbourne would be in the unusual position to build a complex capable of holding multiple Giant panda. The failure of captive pairs to breed has often been attributed to zoos holding 1.1 pairs (multiple males are thought to enhance breeding success).

Hypothetically speaking, Melbourne could hold 2.1 across three exhibits - fulfilling this requirement.
 
I dare to dream! :rolleyes:

It’s one hell of a hypothetical as I don’t believe China would loan more than one pair to Zoos Victoria, but thought it was something interesting to mention nonetheless. It would certainly be interesting to have two holders within the region and they’re realistically the only species that would surpass the elephants in terms of visitor appeal.
 
Since sun bears and asiatic black bears are getting phased out of the us it presents as a unique opportunity. W Rizz still better though

Its regrettable more initiative wasn’t taken to export sun bears from the North American breeding programme while they were still young (they have a mostly elderly population).

Sasa at Wellington carries the twin gene, so it’s important not to let that disappear from the captive population.
 
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