Species formerly kept in Brazil

It's so interesting to know that some animals that are somewhat common in your native zoos could be much more rarer and exciting in other society.

I only knew about the planned import of an female giant anteater to Batu Secret Zoo from Brazil, even then I had no idea what Indonesia had given to Brazilian facilities. I would guess you guys have any idea regarding that? The report from @Enzo that Brazil once had grizzled tree-kangaroo sounds very interesting, would like to learn more about that story.
 
Time for some bison again!

American bison (Bison bison):
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service donated two buffalo to the Rio de Janeiro zoo in 1966, but I am doubtful if any made it to Quinta da Boa Vista.

CACCEX allowed FZBRS to import American bison from Germany in 1966. Bison were also mentioned in a news report about the park in São Leopoldo a few years later.
i thought that our zoos only had wisent, and rarely american bison.
 
Some old but unmentioned information about antelope in Brazil:

- Along with three giraffes, twenty-one antelope were imported to São Paulo from Italy in 1972. It was unspecified where they came from, but the most likely answer would be Rome, which held a world-class collection of bovids at the time. Among the animals shipped to Água Funda, there were:

- Two gemsbok;
- Two sable antelope;
- Two springbok;
- Three blesbok;
- Three greater kudu;
- Three impala;
- An unknown number of blue wildebeest.

I suppose the zoo's Nile lechwe also came in that shipment. Since there was no name in Portuguese for the species at the time, zoo staff and news reporters referred to them with their Italian name. "Cobo lichi (do Nilo)".

The sable antelope bred at least twice, with the first calf being born in 1975. Another birth happened between 1975 and 1982, which led to a total of four (2.2) individuals in that same year, according to the 1988 International Zoo Yearbook. A male, I believe the original sire, had passed away by 1984 and in the mid 1980s, two were moved to Simba Safari, but both were gone from the park by late 1988/early 1989. I guess they either died or were sent back to FPZSP, as they were still signed in a map from 1988. The 2010 census listed a female still being held at the zoo, most likely backstage, but she was not listed as of 2011.

The 2010 census claimed there was still a female at the zoo, but she had passed away in 2011.

The springbok bred at least once in the early 1980s. When the African Plain was reinaugurated, in the 1990s, they were still signed in the enclosure, but they were gone by the early 2000s.

I have no info on the blesbok, but @David Matos Mendes and I believe the three could have been moved to Belo Horizonte and had their remains donated to the PUC museum of Natural Sciences. There is also a mounted bontebok head the Taubaté Natural History Museum.

The greater kudu have quite a long story. One of the three passed away (or was moved elsewhere) not long after the Antelope Plain (the first version of the current-day African Plain) was inaugurated, in 1973. The remaining couple gave birth to a female to 1975, but the breeding cow did not live much longer, so the already elderly male was left to mate with his own daughter. Before any inbreeding could occur, a balloon fell inside the antelope paddock and the calf, already three years old at the time, got scared and ran into a wall, where it broke its neck. The newly widowed kudu was alone and "in grief", so a crowdfunding campaigned amassed enough money to buy a new female for him. The same year his companion passed away, Bem-vinda arrived from Germany. Both kudus, however, passed away not so long later. A new shot would be given to the species in the 2000s, but in spite of successful births, they had died out by the mid 2010s.

The impala bred quite a few times and were still present in the African Plain by the early 2000s. They, however, probably have nothing to do with the impala held in Itatiba at the same time.

@Chlidonias I found the origin of the nilgai in Brazil. Three were imported to São Paulo from Genoa in 1974 (I guess the calves born from this trio were sent elsewhere, like Sorocaba) and other two were imported to Curitiba from Zurich in 1988. The Curitiba pair was very prolific and gave birth to a few calves, possibly including a female sent to Brusque and a male sent to Santa Inês, in Maranhão. The last nilgai in Curitiba passed away last year.

Lowland nyala and sitatunga were also both present in São Paulo at the time. I have no information on the marshbuck, but I'm sure three (2.1) nyala were moved to Belo Horizonte in 1981, which could have meant the species had left São Paulo for the first time. In Minas Gerais, at least eight calves were born (and I thought Rio was successful with the species). São Paulo somehow acquired a male nyala in the mid 1990s (the most likely answer for that would be RioZoo), but he was gone by the 2000s.

The sitatunga in São Paulo, however, were not the first ones in Brazil, as a male was donated to Rio de Janeiro by the Antwerp zoo in 1948. The nyala in São Paulo would not be the last ones in the country either, as RioZoo imported three (1.2) from Germany in 1991, with the first calf being born in 1993. Other two were born in 1999 and a last birth was recorded in 2002. The last nyala in Brazil was a male born and raised in Rio which passed away in 2016. I was too late when I realized my local zoo had nyala, as I only got to see one in 2018, at the Lisbon zoo.

Scimitar-horned oryx were first held in Brazil in the 1970s. Londrina imported a pair from Hannover in 1976, according to the ISB, but they were "lost, to follow up". What I believe had happened was that both were moved to São Paulo, which also held a couple from the 1970s to the mid-to-late 1980s (the last one passed away between 1986 and 1988).

Twelve scimitar-horned oryxes were imported to Estação Experimental de Terras Secas, in Pedro Avelino (Rio Grande do Norte), from Texas in 1983 (you can see a CITES entry which matches this claim). They were brought to Northeastern Brazil because it was believed they would outperform other livestock in the Caatinga due to their hardiness to semi-arid climates. The experiment, however, failed, and the remaining three antelope, including a female oryx, were sent to Recife in 1988.

Red hartebeest were also held also held in São Paulo in the late 1970s. A few were imported from Germany in 1976, and the first Brazilian calf was born a year later. A few were transferred to Sorocaba, including one in 1984. Kongoni were still in Quinzinho by 1995, when a birth happened at the zoo.
Sitatunga are off the list. 1.3 were sent to Itatiba in 2024 via Zoo Schmiding.

The last nilgai in São Paulo was a male born in Curitiba which died in 2004. There was also a female in 1999, but ZIMS has no records of this animal, possibly because it was the last remnant of the 1974 import.

São Paulo did acquire more impala and kudu after the 1972 import.
A pair of each was acquired from Dvur Kralove in 1990. The impala bred five (3.2) calves between 1994 and 2001, while the kudu bred sixteen calves between 2000 and 2007. The last impala, a male born in 1997, died in 2015, while the last kudu, a female born in 2007, died in 2013.

Their Thomson's gazelles (1.2) were imported from a place called IERAS in 1992. Seven (1.6) calves were born between 1992 and 2002. Their final animal, a female born in 1999, died in 2012.

São Paulo sent all four (2.2) of their red hartebeest to Sorocaba in 1984. Six females were born in Quinzinho between 1984 and 1995, but all calves died young. The last recorded kongoni in Brazil passed away in 1998.

The last sable antelope in Brazil was a male born in São Paulo in 1991. It died in 2011.

São Paulo also held royal antelope. A male born in 1976 (most likely the sole birth to happen in Brazil) hit the world longevity record for the species when it died in 1987.

Harnessed bushbuck; Arabian, dorcas and Soemmerring's gazelles were at Vila Isabel in the 1910s. Cape greater kudu were also present in the 1890s, while a "coronata" antelope was held there in the 1900s. Does anyone have any idea of which species this "coronata" belongs to? I am guessing it's a subspecies of common duiker.

I thank @David Matos Mendes for much of this info. Thank you @Velas for posting about the sitatungas in Itatiba.
 
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Sitatunga are off the list. 1.3 were sent to Itatiba in 2024 via Zoo Schmiding.

The last nilgai in São Paulo was a male born in Curitiba which died in 2004. There was also a female in 1999, but ZIMS has no records of this animal, possibly because it was the last remnant of the 1974 import.

São Paulo did acquire more impala and kudu after the 1972 import.
A pair of each was acquired from Dvur Kralove in 1990. The impala bred five (3.2) calves between 1994 and 2001, while the kudu bred sixteen calves between 2000 and 2007. The last impala, a male born in 1997, died in 2015, while the last kudu, a female born in 2007, died in 2013.

Their Thomson's gazelles (1.2) were imported from a place called IERAS in 1992. Seven (1.6) calves were born between 1992 and 2002. Their final animal, a female born in 1999, died in 2012.

São Paulo sent all four (2.2) of their red hartebeest to Sorocaba in 1984. Six females were born in Quinzinho between 1984 and 1995, but all calves died young. The last recorded kongoni in Brazil passed away in 1998.

The last sable antelope in Brazil was a male born in São Paulo in 1991. It died in 2011.

São Paulo also held royal antelope. A male born in 1976 (most likely the sole birth to happen in Brazil) hit the world longevity record for the species when it died in 1987.

Harnessed bushbuck; Arabian, dorcas and Soemmerring's gazelles were at Vila Isabel in the 1910s. Cape greater kudu were also present in the 1890s, while a "coronata" antelope was held there in the 1900s. Does anyone have any idea of which species this "coronata" belongs to? I am guessing it's a subspecies of common duiker.

I thank @David Matos Mendes for much of this info. Thank you @Velas for posting about the sitatungas in Itatiba.

You're welcome my friend! Kudos for you and David for this excellent and very rich update about the previous hoofstock collections in our zoos!

Didn't know abour the story about this Royal antelope, curious to see that SP holds another animal record on its history as a zoo!
 
- Rio imported three Himalayan black bears from Asia in 1950, along with an Indian sloth bear.
- São Paulo got theirs from Montevideo. As they bred, their cubs were spread across Brazil, including a female transferred to Rio in 1970.
- Belo Horizonte obtained a female from the Moscou Circus in 1988.

Ted, the last bear in São Paulo, and Geny, the circus bear from Belo Horizonte, were loaned to Rio, as a desperate breeding effort, in 1988.
Hello.

- The Indian sloth bear died in 1956. The skin and skull are both at the National Museum.
- There is a mounted Wolf's mona monkey at the museum inside the Cascavel zoo.
 
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It's so interesting to know that some animals that are somewhat common in your native zoos could be much more rarer and exciting in other society.

I only knew about the planned import of an female giant anteater to Batu Secret Zoo from Brazil, even then I had no idea what Indonesia had given to Brazilian facilities. I would guess you guys have any idea regarding that? The report from @Enzo that Brazil once had grizzled tree-kangaroo sounds very interesting, would like to learn more about that story.
Sorry for the late reply. I have no idea about giant anteaters being shipped to Indonesia. I am actually more curious about the species being shipped into Brazil.
 
Hello.

- The Indian sloth bear died in 1956. The skin and skull are both at the National Museum.
- There is a mounted Wolf's mona monkey at the museum inside the Cascavel zoo.
Hello. The Indian sloth bear in Rio de Janeiro was a female.

Gray wolves and white-nosed coatis have also been held in Belo Horizonte.
 
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