Paris Zoological Park Species List
Patagonia
Vicuña, Darwin's Rhea
Guanaco, Patagonian Mara, Greater Rhea
South American Sea Lion, South American Fur Seal
Humboldt Penguin
Puma
Southern Pudu
------------------------------
Patagonia is a short but sweet area that basically acts as the zoo's marine animal section. There's a really nice, open space for the vicuña, guanaco, maras and rheas to comingle. The sea lion/seal and penguin pools are quite deep, and even though there's slight glare on some of the underwater viewing panes, there's ample viewing opportunities at these exhibits. The inclusion of puma is a unique touch, and the pudu space is short but sweet. Overall a 7/10, maned wolf would be a nice addition to this section.
Africa/Sahel-Soudan
Southern White Rhinoceros, Grevy's Zebra, Red Lechwe, Southern Ground Hornbill
African Lion
Roan Antelope
Addax
Kordofan Giraffe, Mhorr Gazelle, Vulturine Guineafowl
Kordofan Giraffe, Greater Kudu, Mhorr Gazelle, Red-Necked Ostrich, Marabou Stork, Grey Crowned Crane
Guinea Baboon
Greater Flamingo, Little Egret, Cattle Egret, African Spoonbill, Hamerkop, Common Redshank, Spur-Winged Lapwing, Black-Winged Stilt, Pied Avocet, Abdim's Stork, Northern Bald Ibis, Glossy Ibis, Speckled Pigeon, White-Cheeked Turaco, Squacco Heron
Meerkat, Bat-Eared Fox
-------------------------
The foliage grew in and enveloped what was once a desolate landscape into a sea of grass and bush. A legitimate masterclass in zoo landscaping. The antelope enclosures had nice height variation/design quirks, the rhinos had a decent setup with the zebras and the lechwe. The lion exhibit.... is kind of underwhelming. I get why the zoo went away with the moated lion habitat, but I do think there are possibilities as far as making the lion habitat much more exciting. The main giraffe savanna is the highlight, seeing a whole herd of mhorr gazelles here made me miss Moira Abby the gazelle in Philly all the more. Paris' giraffe herd is genuinely impressive, and it is an amazing feat how they renovated the entire zoo with the giraffes and a single hippo still residing at the zoo. The baboons were ridiculously active, the meerkat and bat-eared fox exhibit was short but sweet, and the aviary.... I have to see this exhibit again in the summer when everything's lush but even then, this was a legitimate highlight. This was genuinely one of the finest aviaries I've ever seen, although the only other aviaries I have for reference are Antwerp's buffalo aviary and the Scripps Aviary. Genuinely well-done.
Europe
Yellow-Bellied Toad (juvenile) (NOT SEEN)
Horned Viper (juvenile)
European Green Toad (juvenile) (NOT SEEN)
Majorcan Midwife Toad (juvenile) (NOT SEEN)
European Pond Turtle, Common Roach
Marsh Frog
Cane Toad
Pool Frog (NOT SEEN)
American Bullfrog
European Tree Frog
Slime Mold
Common Starfish
Ocellated Lizard, Hermann's Tortoise
Ladder Snake
Asp Viper
Nose-Horned Viper
European Crayfish
Unsigned Tank
Violet Rose Chafer, French Stick Insect
Eurasian Otter (NOT SEEN)
Griffon Vulture, Egyptian Vulture, Black Kite
Iberian Wolf
Wolverine (NOT SEEN)
European Lynx (NOT SEEN)
--------------------
Although this zone had legitimate highlights (e.g. vulture aviary and some neat design ideas), it was a bit of a dud. The otters had a nicely designed stream with some clunky rockwork... except there were no otters to romp around the exhibit. The vivarium had some nicely designed tanks in an otherwise austere and unsettling concrete hallway. The blob/slime mold exhibit was an interesting concept. The wolf exhibit had a nice running stream but was otherwise underwhelming, the wolverine exhibit was incredibly large... if only I saw wolverines on my visit!
The lynx exhibit was OK.
Amazon-Guyana
Chacoan Peccary, Crested Screamer
Bush Dog
Jaguar
Lowland Tapir, Capybara
Woolly Monkey
Guianan Brown Capuchin
Hyacinth Macaw (indoors/outdoors)
Green Vine Snake
Emerald Tree Boa, Dyeing Poison Dart Frog
Green Iguana, Ocellate River Stingray, Common Pleco, Leopard Pleco
Green Basilisk, Colombian Black Tegu
Goliath Birdeater
Amazon Tree Boa
Kokoe Poison Frog, Dyeing Poison Dart Frog
Brazilian Rainbow Boa
Horsehead Grasshopper (juvenile)
Mata Mata (juvenile)
Black-Legged Poison Dart Frog (tadpoles/juvenile)
Leafcutter Ant
Green Anaconda (NOT SEEN), Mata Mata, Geoffroy's Side-Necked Turtle, Cutter's Blue-Eye Cichlid, Lowland Cichlid, Wolf Fish (Hoplias malabaricus)
Six-Banded Armadillo (can primates enter this exhibit?)
Cuvier's Dwarf Caiman, Red-Bellied Piranha, Banded Leporinus
Linne's Two-Toed Sloth, Military Macaw, Sun Parakeet, Blue-Throated Piping Guan, Yellow-Knobbed Curassow, Scarlet Ibis, Roseate Spoonbill, Black-Necked Stilt, Striated Heron, Sunbittern, Black-Spotted Barbet, Chestnut-Bellied Seed-Finch, Blue Grosbeak, Lazuli Bunting, Painted Bunting, Rose-Breasted Grosbeak, Black-Headed Grosbeak
(Note: Madagascar birds also comingle with Amazon/Guyana birds)
Antillean Manatee, Arapaima, Black Pacu, unsigned cichlid, unsigned Ripsaw Catfish
Guyana Caiman Lizard
White-Faced Saki, Red Titi, Pied Tamarin, Linne's Two-Toed Sloth
Giant Anteater
Toco Toucan
-------------------------
The species list is phenomenal, and this area is where I saw some design highs and design lows. All the animals had ample room, and seeing my first bush dogs was a genuinely fun experience. The peccary and tapir exhibits were understandably bare, however the tapir space especially gave off MAJOR Elephant Odyssey vibes. Not in a terrible way, but in a noticable way. The jaguar exhibit was quite nice... save for the HORDE of screaming kids that came and went. Poor thing's just trying to sleep. The actual greenhouse had some genuinely fantastic exhibitry, although this is both where the modern architecture angle both succeeds and fails. It succeeds with an incredibly vast tropical greenhouse and one of the deepest manatee/freshwater fish exhibits I've ever seen, (my other point of reference is EPCOT's manatee tank and that tank is incredibly depressing), and kinda falls flat with some otherwise nice terrariums for herptiles embedded inside black boxes that can only be described as... austere. There was one terrarium for vine snakes and tree boas/dyeing poison dart frogs that had some artwork on the side... genuinely, more of that please! It is also odd that the giant anteaters are all-indoors, though they do at least have ample room. I'd need to see the foliage grow in as well for the intended exhibitry to fully shine. A mix of genuine highlights and some genuinely good modern architecture and utterly pretentious modern architecture.
Madagascar
Rodriguez Flying Fox, White-Winged Ibis, Red Fody, Madagascar Teal, Greater Vasa Parrot
(Note: Amazon/Guyana birds also comingle with Madagascar birds)
Straw-Colored Fruit Bat, Black Lemur (NOT SEEN)
Greater Bamboo Lemur
Panther Chameleon (NOT SEEN)
Malagasy Tree Boa, Tomato Frog
Spider Tortoise, Madagascar Girdled Lizard
Malagasy Ground Boa, Mantidactylus
Madagascar Giant Day Gecko
Blue Green Chromis, Bristle-Tail Filefish, Bluestreak Cleaner-Wrasse, Magnificent Sea Anemone, Longhorn Cowfish, Red Sea Sailfin Tang, Ribbon Eel, Giant Anthelia, Foxface Rabbitfish, Longspine Porcupinefish, Blue-Eyed Hermit Crab (Calcinus laevimanus), Caulastrea echinulata, Chocolate Surgeonfish, Two-Spined Angelfish, Scarlet Cleaner Shrimp, Pacific Cleaner Shrimp, Yellow Finger Coral, Copperband Butterflyfish, Pacific Orange-Spine Unicornfish, Maxima Clam, Mushroom Coral, Sea Goldie, Blue Tang, Globular Sea Urchin, Leaf Plate Montipora, Yellowtail Clownfish, Yellowbar Angelfish, Blue Sea Star, Sea Star (sign is way too blurry no thanks to my camera)
Fossa
White-Belted Ruffed Lemur (NOT SEEN)
Ring-Tailed Lemur, Crowned Lemur
Radiated Tortoise
Crowned Sifaka
-------------------------
Probably the most ambitious zone designwise. An overall decent execution of a dry forest and rainforest in a temperate environment, the rare lemur species are a genuine highlight, and the lemur islands were actually quite nice. The fossa viewing was tad awkward (especially when I noticed it was in a branch ABOVE the glass viewing area), but that was nothing compared to the crowned sifaka viewing. I had to put my hand above my phone camera as a makeshift visor, the glare was that bad on the indoor dayroom.
-------------------------
Overall, a genuinely well-rounded collection in some generally nicely designed habitats!
Patagonia
Vicuña, Darwin's Rhea
Guanaco, Patagonian Mara, Greater Rhea
South American Sea Lion, South American Fur Seal
Humboldt Penguin
Puma
Southern Pudu
------------------------------
Patagonia is a short but sweet area that basically acts as the zoo's marine animal section. There's a really nice, open space for the vicuña, guanaco, maras and rheas to comingle. The sea lion/seal and penguin pools are quite deep, and even though there's slight glare on some of the underwater viewing panes, there's ample viewing opportunities at these exhibits. The inclusion of puma is a unique touch, and the pudu space is short but sweet. Overall a 7/10, maned wolf would be a nice addition to this section.
Africa/Sahel-Soudan
Southern White Rhinoceros, Grevy's Zebra, Red Lechwe, Southern Ground Hornbill
African Lion
Roan Antelope
Addax
Kordofan Giraffe, Mhorr Gazelle, Vulturine Guineafowl
Kordofan Giraffe, Greater Kudu, Mhorr Gazelle, Red-Necked Ostrich, Marabou Stork, Grey Crowned Crane
Guinea Baboon
Greater Flamingo, Little Egret, Cattle Egret, African Spoonbill, Hamerkop, Common Redshank, Spur-Winged Lapwing, Black-Winged Stilt, Pied Avocet, Abdim's Stork, Northern Bald Ibis, Glossy Ibis, Speckled Pigeon, White-Cheeked Turaco, Squacco Heron
Meerkat, Bat-Eared Fox
-------------------------
The foliage grew in and enveloped what was once a desolate landscape into a sea of grass and bush. A legitimate masterclass in zoo landscaping. The antelope enclosures had nice height variation/design quirks, the rhinos had a decent setup with the zebras and the lechwe. The lion exhibit.... is kind of underwhelming. I get why the zoo went away with the moated lion habitat, but I do think there are possibilities as far as making the lion habitat much more exciting. The main giraffe savanna is the highlight, seeing a whole herd of mhorr gazelles here made me miss Moira Abby the gazelle in Philly all the more. Paris' giraffe herd is genuinely impressive, and it is an amazing feat how they renovated the entire zoo with the giraffes and a single hippo still residing at the zoo. The baboons were ridiculously active, the meerkat and bat-eared fox exhibit was short but sweet, and the aviary.... I have to see this exhibit again in the summer when everything's lush but even then, this was a legitimate highlight. This was genuinely one of the finest aviaries I've ever seen, although the only other aviaries I have for reference are Antwerp's buffalo aviary and the Scripps Aviary. Genuinely well-done.
Europe
Yellow-Bellied Toad (juvenile) (NOT SEEN)
Horned Viper (juvenile)
European Green Toad (juvenile) (NOT SEEN)
Majorcan Midwife Toad (juvenile) (NOT SEEN)
European Pond Turtle, Common Roach
Marsh Frog
Cane Toad
Pool Frog (NOT SEEN)
American Bullfrog
European Tree Frog
Slime Mold
Common Starfish
Ocellated Lizard, Hermann's Tortoise
Ladder Snake
Asp Viper
Nose-Horned Viper
European Crayfish
Unsigned Tank
Violet Rose Chafer, French Stick Insect
Eurasian Otter (NOT SEEN)
Griffon Vulture, Egyptian Vulture, Black Kite
Iberian Wolf
Wolverine (NOT SEEN)
European Lynx (NOT SEEN)
--------------------
Although this zone had legitimate highlights (e.g. vulture aviary and some neat design ideas), it was a bit of a dud. The otters had a nicely designed stream with some clunky rockwork... except there were no otters to romp around the exhibit. The vivarium had some nicely designed tanks in an otherwise austere and unsettling concrete hallway. The blob/slime mold exhibit was an interesting concept. The wolf exhibit had a nice running stream but was otherwise underwhelming, the wolverine exhibit was incredibly large... if only I saw wolverines on my visit!
Amazon-Guyana
Chacoan Peccary, Crested Screamer
Bush Dog
Jaguar
Lowland Tapir, Capybara
Woolly Monkey
Guianan Brown Capuchin
Hyacinth Macaw (indoors/outdoors)
Green Vine Snake
Emerald Tree Boa, Dyeing Poison Dart Frog
Green Iguana, Ocellate River Stingray, Common Pleco, Leopard Pleco
Green Basilisk, Colombian Black Tegu
Goliath Birdeater
Amazon Tree Boa
Kokoe Poison Frog, Dyeing Poison Dart Frog
Brazilian Rainbow Boa
Horsehead Grasshopper (juvenile)
Mata Mata (juvenile)
Black-Legged Poison Dart Frog (tadpoles/juvenile)
Leafcutter Ant
Green Anaconda (NOT SEEN), Mata Mata, Geoffroy's Side-Necked Turtle, Cutter's Blue-Eye Cichlid, Lowland Cichlid, Wolf Fish (Hoplias malabaricus)
Six-Banded Armadillo (can primates enter this exhibit?)
Cuvier's Dwarf Caiman, Red-Bellied Piranha, Banded Leporinus
Linne's Two-Toed Sloth, Military Macaw, Sun Parakeet, Blue-Throated Piping Guan, Yellow-Knobbed Curassow, Scarlet Ibis, Roseate Spoonbill, Black-Necked Stilt, Striated Heron, Sunbittern, Black-Spotted Barbet, Chestnut-Bellied Seed-Finch, Blue Grosbeak, Lazuli Bunting, Painted Bunting, Rose-Breasted Grosbeak, Black-Headed Grosbeak
(Note: Madagascar birds also comingle with Amazon/Guyana birds)
Antillean Manatee, Arapaima, Black Pacu, unsigned cichlid, unsigned Ripsaw Catfish
Guyana Caiman Lizard
White-Faced Saki, Red Titi, Pied Tamarin, Linne's Two-Toed Sloth
Giant Anteater
Toco Toucan
-------------------------
The species list is phenomenal, and this area is where I saw some design highs and design lows. All the animals had ample room, and seeing my first bush dogs was a genuinely fun experience. The peccary and tapir exhibits were understandably bare, however the tapir space especially gave off MAJOR Elephant Odyssey vibes. Not in a terrible way, but in a noticable way. The jaguar exhibit was quite nice... save for the HORDE of screaming kids that came and went. Poor thing's just trying to sleep. The actual greenhouse had some genuinely fantastic exhibitry, although this is both where the modern architecture angle both succeeds and fails. It succeeds with an incredibly vast tropical greenhouse and one of the deepest manatee/freshwater fish exhibits I've ever seen, (my other point of reference is EPCOT's manatee tank and that tank is incredibly depressing), and kinda falls flat with some otherwise nice terrariums for herptiles embedded inside black boxes that can only be described as... austere. There was one terrarium for vine snakes and tree boas/dyeing poison dart frogs that had some artwork on the side... genuinely, more of that please! It is also odd that the giant anteaters are all-indoors, though they do at least have ample room. I'd need to see the foliage grow in as well for the intended exhibitry to fully shine. A mix of genuine highlights and some genuinely good modern architecture and utterly pretentious modern architecture.
Madagascar
Rodriguez Flying Fox, White-Winged Ibis, Red Fody, Madagascar Teal, Greater Vasa Parrot
(Note: Amazon/Guyana birds also comingle with Madagascar birds)
Straw-Colored Fruit Bat, Black Lemur (NOT SEEN)
Greater Bamboo Lemur
Panther Chameleon (NOT SEEN)
Malagasy Tree Boa, Tomato Frog
Spider Tortoise, Madagascar Girdled Lizard
Malagasy Ground Boa, Mantidactylus
Madagascar Giant Day Gecko
Blue Green Chromis, Bristle-Tail Filefish, Bluestreak Cleaner-Wrasse, Magnificent Sea Anemone, Longhorn Cowfish, Red Sea Sailfin Tang, Ribbon Eel, Giant Anthelia, Foxface Rabbitfish, Longspine Porcupinefish, Blue-Eyed Hermit Crab (Calcinus laevimanus), Caulastrea echinulata, Chocolate Surgeonfish, Two-Spined Angelfish, Scarlet Cleaner Shrimp, Pacific Cleaner Shrimp, Yellow Finger Coral, Copperband Butterflyfish, Pacific Orange-Spine Unicornfish, Maxima Clam, Mushroom Coral, Sea Goldie, Blue Tang, Globular Sea Urchin, Leaf Plate Montipora, Yellowtail Clownfish, Yellowbar Angelfish, Blue Sea Star, Sea Star (sign is way too blurry no thanks to my camera)
Fossa
White-Belted Ruffed Lemur (NOT SEEN)
Ring-Tailed Lemur, Crowned Lemur
Radiated Tortoise
Crowned Sifaka
-------------------------
Probably the most ambitious zone designwise. An overall decent execution of a dry forest and rainforest in a temperate environment, the rare lemur species are a genuine highlight, and the lemur islands were actually quite nice. The fossa viewing was tad awkward (especially when I noticed it was in a branch ABOVE the glass viewing area), but that was nothing compared to the crowned sifaka viewing. I had to put my hand above my phone camera as a makeshift visor, the glare was that bad on the indoor dayroom.
-------------------------
Overall, a genuinely well-rounded collection in some generally nicely designed habitats!
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