Where rarities appear or disappear
Whereas Europe has thousands of “zoos” and hundreds of EAZA members, it is a relatively select group where new species are first kept or where species are kept last. When ignoring gained-but-lost and lost-but-gained species there are only 55 zoos where a new species for the continent appeared first. With 68 zoos that were the final zoo keeping a certain species, there are slightly more of those.
The top-3 of zoos showing new species is as follows and isn’t very surprising:
1. Zoo Plzen - 18 species
2. Tierpark Berlin - 9 species
3. Zoo Prague - 8 species
The rest of the top-10 is slightly more mixed:
4. RSCC - 6 species
5. Zoo Leipzig, Chester Zoo * Hamerton Zoo Park - 4 species
6. Best Zoo - 3 species
7. Zoo Wroclaw, Poznań Nowe Zoo, Zoo Zuerich, Zoo Ostrava, Zoo Cologne & de Paay - 2 species
This leaves 41 zoos where 1 new species for the century appeared. As a small note some species appeared (near-)simultaneously in multiple zoos, such as Chacoan mara in De Paay and Best Zoo, so these are double counted.
What is apparent is that this is a mix of the usual suspects of Germany, Poland, United Kingdom and Czechia as well as 2 small private Dutch zoos. If one would make a list of which zoos hold the most rarities, many of these places would pop up too.
@Michal Sloviak Saharan striped weasel were one of many mammal species first kept in Zoo Plzen this century
When looking at zoos that were the last to keep a certain species, the top-3 is the following:
1. Zoo Plzen - 12 species (with another 12 gained but lost species last kept in Plzen)
2. Tierpark Berlin, Twycross Zoo - 5 species
With the top-10 being completed by:
4. Zoo Antwerp, Zoo Berlin, Marwell Zoo, Poznan Nowe Zoo & Port Lympne Wild Animal Park - 3 species
9. Burgers’ Zoo, Zoo Cologne, Zoo Duisburg, Howletts Wild Animal Park, Zoo Krefeld, Zoo Prague, Diergaarde Blijdorp, Zoo Tallinn, Thrigby Hall & Zoo Usti - 2 species
This leaves 50 zoos which were 1 species was kept last before it disappeared.
This list of zoos is much more a mix of the zoos which have a name for rarities now with zoos that used to hold the most diverse collections or ones filled with rarities. Many of the zoos in this list have had a large net loss in terms of species.
@gentle lemur Twycross zoo functioned as a retirement home for multiple very rare primate species this century, including Europe's final Phayre's langur
When looking at years when these species (approximately) appeared or disappeared it is clear that there are less new species appearing in recent years, but also less species disappearing than in recent years:
Year........# gains...........# losses
2000............5......................8
2001............5......................9
2002............6......................5
2003............5......................3
2004............5......................2
2005............5......................5
2006............4......................7
2007............2......................5
2008............14....................2
2009............7......................7
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2010............7......................8
2011............7......................4
2012............5......................3
2013............3......................2
2014............0......................4
2015............0......................4
2016............1......................2
2017............3......................3
2018............6......................3
2019............5......................2
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2020............0......................5
2021............5......................2
2022............1......................2
2023............2......................1
For the period of 2000-2009 there were 58 species gained and 53 lost, whereas for the period 2014-2023 23 species were gained and 28 were lost. It is too easy to say that this means we will inadvertently see a decline in the net number of species, as if one would look for the period of 2016-2023 there would be a net gain of 3 species.
@Daubentoniidae Of all the Todd Dalton imports the smooth-coated otters have been among the biggest success stories
What is apparent from this data though is that in the first part of the century many dead end species were lost, which were set to disappear anyway. This includes many remnants from the days zoos could just import anything without caring whether they could really breed them like Commerson’s dolphin and bald red uakari. The first decade also saw the rise of Zoo Plzen as a place for mammal rarities and was the peak time for Todd Dalton importing numerous species via his RSCC. With those drivers on the gaining and losing site diminished in recent years, there is much more relative stability. In 2023 only zoos in Baden-Wurttemberg actually gained new species with new bats for Zoo Karlsruhe and quokka for the Wilhelma. In the next and final mammal post I will try to look ahead to what might be happening in the future based on what we know from the 1990s and the 21st century.
If you think this post was rather short and lacking more in depth analysis, I am sorry, but I have been rather busy lately and I want to get the mammals finished as soon as possible.
@evilmonkey239 Groundhogs are notorious for making predictions, but can they predict their own future in Europe?