Well, we have a hint as to what is being done in the jaguar exhibit

The park has updated a new version of the map to their website, and the spot where the jaguar exhibit is (Number 33 on the map) now marks that you can find
Persian leopards (
Panthera pardus tulliana)! I hope the renovations really accommodate the enclosure to be suitable for leopards, to house leopards proper climbing structures are a must-have. I really hope the indoor housing is brand new too! Which seems to be the trend as of recently.
The park hasn't said anything so we might learn something new sooner or later, the closest thing I have found on the news mentions an
"adaptation on the jaguar exhibit". This post also mentions the
upgrade of the elephant facilities, which will be done for 2025, the already discussed crocodile house, and a new one, as for what they mention the lion exhibit will receive some renovation (Hopefully their indoor housing). This whole ordeal will cost 15 million euros.
El Gobierno invertirá más de 30 millones en Cabárceno y Alto Campoo
https://parquedecabarceno.com/wp-co...za-de-cabarceno-web-junio-2024-compressed.pdf
Similar to how I noticed the arrival of the leopards last year through an update of the map on the park's website (rather sad news now in retrospect), the same has happened this year with a new map update.
On the second page of the PDF showcasing the map a few changes can be noticed, some of which are rather exciting! This is what can be observed:
- We can discard the idea of the African wild dogs being housed in the lynx exhibit, as the new map and
this article posted by the park itself reaffirm that they will be housed in their originally planned exhibit (point 11b in the map), between the wallabies and the upper part of the baboon exhibits.
- As for the lynx exhibit (point 13 in the map), it will soon or later obtain a new inhabitant, a new species for the park; the
Iberian lynx (
Lynx pardinus)! The idea of welcoming Iberian lynxes to the park is an exciting one, I won't deny it, but I've been critical of this enclosure in the past and I still stand with the idea that it's not the ideal way of exhibiting felids (It's basically a pit with a grassy bottom and a large rock in the middle). At the same time after seeing Iberian lynxes for the first time back in January and realizing how small they are, and taking into account they live in more open environments compared to their northern counterparts I feel like the enclosure can be more suitable for them than for northern lynxes. I've been told that vegetation has been planted in the form of some low shrubs and the indoor facilities have been completely renovated, I'm not 100% convinced about the inclusion of this species in the park but I guess we will have to wait for the animals first to arrive and then I will judge the setup accordingly.
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The future of the short-lived leopard enclosure has been determined, as it will now house Spotted hyenas (
Crocuta crocuta) (point 33 in the map). As sad as the whole leopard situation has been I feel like this is a best-case scenario, I don't know if the remaining leopard is still at the park. As for the hyenas, this is a wonderful upgrade, for the last 10 or more years the hyenas were relegated to a side exhibit next to the cheetahs that was basically inaccessible to visitors because of its location and despite the enclosure not being small in size for the clan the park housed it was a far cry from what they used to have (basically their current enclosure plus the entire cheetah exhibit, it was once all connected). The population got lower and lower as the hyenas got older and older until we were left with what we have now, a single female that was thought to be the last of its species to be housed at the park. Their soon-to-be-new enclosure is bigger and has access to trees and a water point, it's way safer to house hyenas than big cats and it offers good views for the visitors, these are wonderful news and I hope the park ends up welcoming a large group of hyenas as it once did.
- Outside the map, a new species has been added to the animal lineup in the website;
Seonae's viper (
Vipera seoanei). Back in the 90's the species was housed at the reptile house, and it seems to have returned. It's a good inclusion to the park as an endemism of the northern Iberian peninsula.
Parque de la Naturaleza de Cabárceno park map PDF
Víbora de Seoane - Parque de la Naturaleza de Cabárceno