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

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I’m just not sure if there will be the space close to the city. Fisherman’s bend is a nice choice, but I doubt that would be a suitable location for a Sea Life centre. There’s no space in Spotswood too, but I was thinking maybe a little further west in Altona? There’s a fair amount of open space there right next to the sea. It would give Zoos Vic a location right in between Melbourne and Werribee too. Or, I guess they could consider a location along the Eastern suburbs? Just not sure there will be the space for such a location without them having to go to far away from the city.

Something could be setup in Queenscliffe where the Fisheries display as, that would then encompass ZV, Sealife, Fisheries and the existing Deakin Uni Research facility as well, would be an incredible educational opportunity.
 
That was Isobella and she was their adult breeding female! :p They are a rather small crocodile species. Also, they can be aggressive to one another so it’s better to keep them solitary. Especially if the zoo wishes to breed them.
Really? I actually meant they should be an outdoor enclosure and a centrepiece, not overshadowed or an accessory where they have been housed previously
 
Melbourne aren’t phasing them out. Last time I talked to a keeper they hoped to acquire a female but didn’t have much options as a fair bit of the world population are descendants of Luzon.

The Water Treatment Plant does take up a fair bit of space which annoys me. It’s located where the former Bison enclosure was, so it’s a decent sized area and could be used for another Tapir enclosure (if Melbourne ever went the route of breeding Brazilians).
Is the water treatment plan actually necessary? If so is there any chance they could destroy it
 
Something could be setup in Queenscliffe where the Fisheries display as, that would then encompass ZV, Sealife, Fisheries and the existing Deakin Uni Research facility as well, would be an incredible educational opportunity.

That's a reasonable location but is a fair distance from the city. A facility in and around Geelong though be a good idea. Especially as it would be right next to the actual ocean, not the bay.
 
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Really? I actually meant they should be an outdoor enclosure and a centrepiece, not overshadowed or an accessory where they have been housed previously

They were one of the main attractions within the Reptile House for a while, and still are to an extent. An outdoor enclosure would be difficult as well, as the Melbourne weathers too cold for them.
 
They were one of the main attractions within the Reptile House for a while, and still are to an extent. An outdoor enclosure would be difficult as well, as the Melbourne weathers too cold for them.

This is exactly what I was going to say unfortunately reptiles are a lot harder to keep outdoors than mammals and birds. Especially reptiles from tropical climates. As previously stated, the only one that can be housed outdoors in Victoria without supplemental/very expensive heating are American Alligators which I can’t see ZV acquiring anytime soon aside from maybe at Kyabram.

Just a side note, I am a private reptile keeper so hence my interest and experience with them.
 
This is exactly what I was going to say unfortunately reptiles are a lot harder to keep outdoors than mammals and birds. Especially reptiles from tropical climates. As previously stated, the only one that can be housed outdoors in Victoria without supplemental/very expensive heating are American Alligators which I can’t see ZV acquiring anytime soon aside from maybe at Kyabram.

Just a side note, I am a private reptile keeper so hence my interest and experience with them.

That's the thing they'd have to assess re. exotic reptiles, the costs of housing them versus the return for the zoo. I for one will be interested to see whether interest is sustained in Auckland Zoo's False gharial, which are housed inside a tropical dome and would be highly expensive to maintain.

Initial interest has been strong, but they've only been on display for four months.
 
How difficult would it be to import xenarthrans to Australia? As far as tamandua, giant anteaters and two-toed sloths go - IDK about armadillos and whether they'd be of any ecological concern.

There’s currently no IRA, but there’s no particular reason one couldn’t be approved, with these species then added to the live import list. They’d greatly enhance the South American precinct of any zoo.
 
How difficult would it be to import xenarthrans to Australia? As far as tamandua, giant anteaters and two-toed sloths go - IDK about armadillos and whether they'd be of any ecological concern.
I’d love to see all those species, and you may have noticed me spreading love for them throughout the chat;). On thing that confuses me though is if we wanted to import Aardvark, would they have to be in a separate IRA to everything else despite being the only member of its family
 
I’d love to see all those species, and you may have noticed me spreading love for them throughout the chat;). On thing that confuses me though is if we wanted to import Aardvark, would they have to be in a separate IRA to everything else despite being the only member of its family

Aardvarks aren't from the same family as those aforementioned species.:)

Also, isn't this thread getting a little too long? I thought there was a rule that mods wanted threads capped at 1000 posts and we've now well exceeded that.
 
Also, isn't this thread getting a little too long? I thought there was a rule that mods wanted threads capped at 1000 posts and we've now well exceeded that.

When the original chat reached 1000 replies, I made a seperate chat titled Future of Melbourne Zoo 2. The mods then split the chat into 2022 and 2023, so I’ll let them decide if they want to split the thread again as it continues to grow.

The nonsense thread is 2000 replies and counting, so they may let this thread get a bit bigger before splitting again.
 
Aardvarks aren't from the same family as those aforementioned species.:)

Also, isn't this thread getting a little too long? I thought there was a rule that mods wanted threads capped at 1000 posts and we've now well exceeded that.
I’m aware. That’s why I stated it’s the only member of its family. My confusion is whether it needs an IRA if it’s one particular species, or if they can just add it to the import list with little issue
 
Bit of a shame because that means they are very unlikely. I doubt the government would conduct an IRA for a singular species

Not unless the zoo particularly pushed for it. Though it’s for a single species, the process could still be complicated as there’s little to no precedence for importing them re. biosecurity.

The Bovid IRA covered a multitude of species, but was regarded as a simple IRA.

Certainly hippopotami and giraffidae IRAs are greater priorities right now.
 
Sorry, I meant they will be planned. They will no doubt give the elephants time to become acclimated before breeding them. Point is, the fact they elephants can be bred will no doubt increase membership numbers, on top of the fact they are moving to WORZ. I just don’t see any way profits don’t increase, which means it’s possible that the full masterplan will be achieved, including hyenas, porcupines, expansions and the sky safari

Thinking more about it, I can imagine Werribee implementing a six year birth interval between the current cohort of calves and the next cohort - with these calves born around 2028.

Under this plan, the youngest females would be six years of age and more of a help than a hindrance in rearing the next cohort of calves, not to mention learning maternal skills in the process; while Roi-Yim, the only bull calf, could transition out of his natal herd at this age (something I wouldn’t recommend for a five year old bull with no peers),

Long term, Werribee may breed the females on rotation - two on, two off; but the next breeding rotation can include a maximum of three cows, so the preferred formula would likely be for all three to breed at once. Dokkoon, then aged 35 years old, would be breeding for the fourth and probably final time.
 
Potential Succession Plan for Werribee

This is one of many ways they could ensure succession in their herd, optimising social dynamics and allocation of resources; while ensuring the reproductive health of cows in the herd.

Six year gap

2028
: Dokkoon (1993), Num-Oi (2001) and Mali (2010)

Three year gap

2031: Num-Oi (2001) and Mali (2010)

Three year gap

2034: Aiyara (2022) and Kati (2023)

Three year gap

2037: Num-Oi (2001) and Mali (2010)

Three year gap
 
Didn’t want to cloud the Australasian Hyena population thread, but @Swanson02 mentioned Monarto may be importing some Kudu from South Africa. Do you guys think that WORZ, Amon g other zoos would entertain housing them. If Dubbo are making a Serengeti exhibit some woodland antelope could add some much needed variety imo
 
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