Spec. Zoo Design questions

Got a reverse scenario: what species would work in a 330-370sqm habitat (under uk guidelines)

what species would work in a 1,900sqm habitat with fairly dense forest (under uk guidelines). I thought about Persian leopards but might be a bit small for them and wrong biome

fiinally, what species would work in a 220sqm habitat (under uk guidelines)

looking for mammals
1st Exhibit - Meerkats, Crested Porcupines, etc.
2nd exhibit - European Lynx, Wolverine, Red River Hog, Wild Boar, etc.
3rd exhibit - Fennec Fox, mongeese, Patagonian mara, Degu, agouti, etc.
 
1.Is it doable to hold Red Wolves in Canadian facilities, I don't know whether the US allows them to be exported
2. What is the lowest degree of Celsius that Monke Parakeet and Thick-billed Parrot can be displayed outside I know that in New York they can be displayed outdoors during winter
 
Last edited:
What is the lowest degree of Celsius that Monke Parakeet and Thick-billed Parrot can be displayed outside I know that in New York they can be displayed outdoors during winter
If there's a heatable house that the birds can enter at every time they could be displayed outdoor at about 7 C°
 
If you use LED lamps in a nocturnal house using a reversed day/night cycle, can you have live plants in a nocturnal house?
 
For zoos in Nevada, does the NAC 503.110 apply to them? Are they bound to have the restriction of importing and possessing the animals on the list?
 
For zoos in Nevada, does the NAC 503.110 apply to them? Are they bound to have the restriction of importing and possessing the animals on the list?

No, read the legislation. There's literally a section stating ZAA and AZA are exempt with appropriate permits.
 
What species are rare/nonexistant in the US (captivity) but have a realistic/high chance of being imported/sent to the US? The only species that I could think of is the quokka (the only 2 facilities with quokkas outside of Australia acquired them in the last 5 years with LA zoo having a high chance of acquiring them next)
 
In a very large enclosure, how big of a group of Cape fur seals can you have? Additionally, what would the ideale gender ratio be?
 
As far as a traditional, city-zoo type setting goes; what are some crowd-pleasing African megafauna that could do well with such a smaller, savanna-type enclosure?

Being a 0.5-acre large exhibit; very large animals like giraffes and white rhinos, alongside ungulates considered to be “flighty” by nature will not work in this scenario.

Furthermore, could having an enclosure this large be feasible enough to support a tall, aviary-like setup?
 
As far as a traditional, city-zoo type setting goes; what are some crowd-pleasing African megafauna that could do well with such a smaller, savanna-type enclosure?

Being a 0.5-acre large exhibit; very large animals like giraffes and white rhinos, alongside ungulates considered to be “flighty” by nature will not work in this scenario.

Furthermore, could having an enclosure this large be feasible enough to support a tall, aviary-like setup?
Antwerp‘s Buffalo Aviary is 2250m² big, so you could definitely have an aviary-like enclosure.
My idea would be an aviary housing Nile Lechwes, Cape Buffalos, Eastern Crested Guineafowl, African Comb Duck, Cape Teal, African White-backed Whistling Duck, Speckled Pigeon, Dusky Turtle Dove, Hartlaub‘s Turaco, Black-winged Stilt, Crowned Lapwing, Spotted Thick-knee, Abdim‘s Stork, Hadada Ibis, African Spoonbill, Western Cattle Egret, Madagascar Pond Heron, Hooded Vulture, Rüppell‘s Vulture, Crowned Hornbill, Lilac-breasted Roller, Green Woodhoopoe, Red-and-yellow Barbet, Magpie Shrike, African Golden Oriole, Common Bulbul, Wattled Starling, Red-winged Starling, Superb Starling, Spotted Palm Thrush and Red-billed Buffalo Weaver
 
@Paul.Haerle, that’s a start, and I like the avian selection especially.

As for the mammals, would it be too risky to cohabitate something as large as a zebra with the majority of these birds?

I ask this because I’m planning for a rather unconventional mix by most standards, even for a savanna-type aviary.
 
Probably, maybe blue wildebeest and impala would be nice. But like in Zoo Antwerp the mix with Cape buffalo would work great too.
 
Back
Top