A different nocturne exhibit

dillotest0

Well-Known Member
5+ year member
One of my favourite types of exhibit is that of the Nocturne exhibit. I recall on my two visits to Bristol Zoo in 2017 and 2018, the Twilight World of that zoo was always my favourite in the zoo merely for the sheer number of unusual animals in that exhibit. After its closure, I have yet to see a nocturne exhibit that has quite caught the spirit of that one.
Though in the more recent times, I have also had a sort of hobby of thinking about how I would design animal exhibits myself in fantasy zoo settings. And so I had the thought of portraying some of my ideas of what such a nocturnal exhibit would look like. I decided that the exhibit would not merely be a nocturne exhibit for the sake of being a nocturne exhibit, the 'cookie jar' of a zoo, if you may, but it would serve a purpose within the zoo as a setting. It would display various concepts in regards to adaptation and evolution. And so here are my plans for what I have titled: A Walk Under Twilight.

The area runs off six major concepts - 'Burrowing Terrestrial Animals', 'Nocturnal Arboreal Mammals', 'Blind Animals', 'Nocturnal Birds And Bats', 'Desert and Arid Animals', and 'Nocturnal Animals Close To Home'.

ON ENTRANCE
Upon entering the nocturnal house, the first enclosure noticed is a sizable outdoor quarters for Aardvark. The aardvark has three outdoor enclosures - one which is visible for the public, another that is largely hidden away by rockery, and a smaller pen mainly for medical purposes. To implement good use of musculature into the enclosure, most of the aardvark's food is to be accessed via mock-termite mounds. At certain times of day, feeder insects are let into the aardvark's enclosure, providing food enrichment. The loose dirt which covers the aardvark's enclosure can be dug rather deep, a sufficient depth for a warren. There is a low fence separating aardvarks from visitors, and the aardvarks will also be found inside.
BURROWING TERRESTRIAL ANIMALS
A fairly sizable indoor quarters is provided for the aardvark inside, where it is heated. Much of it is a similar dirt box, but here there also is a larger termite mound for access of food. Nearby are various other animal enclosures - one which has Large Hairy Armadillo, which also has an outdoor enclosure which is off-display. There are four adjoining armadillo enclosures - 2 outside and 2 indoors - the armadillos sometimes rotate between the two. The armadillos are often fed through scatter feeding - to encourage their foraging nature. The window of the armadillo enclosure is not very high - but there is fencing to prevent naughty guests from peering inside. And nearby is another animal which itself has similar habits to the aardvark, but is very much taxonomically distant - the Short-beaked Echidna. The echidna has an outdoor enclosure; but it can only be seen through small openings. The glass is short enough to look over, but not so short that a guest can touch the animal. Sometimes the echidna is taken out for public demonstration, in a display of how it uses its sense of smell to find prey items.
Some nearby signs show what aardvarks, armadillos and echidnas have in common - but what they all have that is different. This is a recurring theme at this nocturne area. Also displayed are a colony of Coruro, whose enclosure is fenced off by glass; with the rockery in enclosure arranged in a terraced manner to simulate their mountainous habitat. They sometimes rotate this with a Long-tailed Chinchilla, with either animal sometimes taking spot in a similar, off-show enclosure.
 
NOCTURNAL ARBOREAL ANIMALS
Guests are then lead into another hall, which is somewhat more foliated. They arrive to a pair of exhibits on either side - where Aye-ayes and Grey Mouse Lemurs are found. The two share the area - with a tunnel connecting the two enclosures. Nearby are several stairs, which take visitors to the second floor - an area specifically for viewing lemurs at a higher level. The visitors are able to have a more intimate experience here - as the fencing for the lemurs here is lower. At the second floor, there are details on the similarities between Aye-ayes and Mouse lemurs - and also details on their natural habitat and conservation.
Back on the first floor, there is another foliated enclosure for Azara's Douroucouli, which is fenced off to a degree that visitors cannot see too much of the forest floor, except for a few small openings - so that guests can have a look at the Common Yellow-toothed Cavy. The enclosures neighbour that of an enclosure for Southern Tamandua and Hoffman's Two-toed Sloth - the two enclosures are connected by a branching system - so sometimes the sloths and tamanduas can walk above the visitors' heads. The cavies can also access the tamandua enclosure through small tunnels under the visitor pathway. And close by is the last enclosure in this section, an enclosure with fences the visitors can look over - for Ring-tailed Cacomistle. Some signs have educational information on why these arboreal animals may lead nocturnal lifestyles, and how they are adapted to do so.
 
I really like the arboreal and burrowing animals that you have in here but if I was doing something like this I would add more creatures like the Binturong, Meerkat, Royal Antelope, Civets, Mongooses, Potto, Bushbabys, Lorises, Madagascar jumping rat, Badger, Bandicoot, Bilby, Catfish, Eastern woolly lemur, Flying Squirrel, Firefly, Cockroach, Genet, Honey Badger, Night Heron, Whip por will, Nightjar, Nighthawks, Opossums, Possums, Rat Kangaroos and the centerpiece would be 4 360 degrees exhibits with 3 with lighting that looks like it’s the early morning and they are home to Capercaillie, Wild Turkey and Mouse deer but the final one is going to be the most breathtaking and interactive and it’s going to be interactive with guests trying to find the animals but also learning about how these animals depend on us and there will be speakers playing Scottish music and the animals that guests are looking for are the critically endangered Scottish wildcat but there would also be displays of prehistoric nocturnal creatures like Haplocherius, Shuvia, Leeellyanasaurus, cynodonts, and many others.
 
I really like the arboreal and burrowing animals that you have in here but if I was doing something like this I would add more creatures like the Binturong, Meerkat, Royal Antelope, Civets, Mongooses, Potto, Bushbabys, Lorises, Madagascar jumping rat, Badger, Bandicoot, Bilby, Catfish, Eastern woolly lemur, Flying Squirrel, Firefly, Cockroach, Genet, Honey Badger, Night Heron, Whip por will, Nightjar, Nighthawks, Opossums, Possums, Rat Kangaroos and the centerpiece would be 4 360 degrees exhibits with 3 with lighting that looks like it’s the early morning and they are home to Capercaillie, Wild Turkey and Mouse deer but the final one is going to be the most breathtaking and interactive and it’s going to be interactive with guests trying to find the animals but also learning about how these animals depend on us and there will be speakers playing Scottish music and the animals that guests are looking for are the critically endangered Scottish wildcat but there would also be displays of prehistoric nocturnal creatures like Haplocherius, Shuvia, Leeellyanasaurus, cynodonts, and many others.
Well then.....
I do find such an idea rather overwhelming myself....
A good handful of those animals aren't even nocturnal methinks....
But each to their own I guess.
 
Oh okay what do you mean by methinks and I understand if it’s overwhelming but that’s just what I would do if I did something like this because like when people think of nocturnal animals people in my opinion just think of living animals and not the prehistoric animals that were nocturnal but even though it’s overwhelming I wouldn’t add all of the animals but I would totally add Scottish wildcat.
 
BLIND ANIMALS
An opening in a synthetic tree-trunk, in the side where there is a small enclosure for Pygmy Slow Loris, leads the visitors to an area where it is completely dark, except for a lightened pathway. On the way to other animals, there are signs explaining how some animals do not experience light at all - and so cannot be described as diurnal or nocturnal.
Guests are then led by this ethereal pathway to a glass-fronted aquarium for Mexican Blind Cave-fish. Nearby, an interactive display where there are hidden pressure plates gives guests an idea of how the fish sense their environment with pressure-sensitive organs.
And nearby there is a display of a burrow for Damaraland Mole-Rats, and another for Naked Mole-rats. In a similar manner, there is a display of magnetic fields in a surrounding area, with educational material on how mole-rats are able to detect magnetic fields with what little vision they have.
NOCTURNAL BIRDS AND BATS
...Which leans nicely into another display where there are a few species of nocturnal bird. The enclosure of the Northern Brown Kiwi is shared with Tawny Frogmouth, and the animals also have access to a slightly smaller offshow area, as well as an outdoor area which outside winter months is typically covered with tarp so to darken it. Another enclosure, also with outdoor access is for Northern White-faced Scops Owl - a bird sometimes used for demonstration. Nearby display shows various factors why birds as different as owls and kiwis are both nocturnal - how scops-owls, frogmouths, and kiwis all feed on insects - but have all evolved different strategies to feed on them.
In this area there is an entrace to a bat area - where there is a walkthrough enclosure for Egyptian Fruit Bat, as well as glass-lined enclosures for Common Vampire Bat and Greater Mouse-faced Bat. An educational display nearby shows bats as a testament to mammalian diversity [of which they constitute much of that diversity]; with the feeding habits [fruit, blood and insects respectively] being used to exalt said diversity. The bats all have off-show roosting areas to use when the house goes into 'daylight' mode.
 
In this area there is an entrace to a bat area - where there is a walkthrough enclosure for Egyptian Fruit Bat, as well as glass-lined enclosures for Common Vampire Bat and Greater Mouse-faced Bat.
Do you mean greater mouse-eared bat or greater mouse-tailed bat?
 
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