I'm not sure anywhere outside of the USA has ever kept Pronghorn antelope successfully?
Surprisingly, pronghorns were bred at Whipsnade in the 1960s - although I have no recollection of ever seeing them.
Maybe they don't like damp climates but they are certainly not restricted to desert/dry areas. They have a wide distribution from Canada to Mexico across several ecosystems. They were recently featured on TV in a series about Yellowstone where it snows for 11/12 months. Quite a few collections in the USA manage to keep them successfully. I'm not sure if Chester would be that interested in them anyway as they have hardly any Nearctic animals.Nor me!
I wonder how long they managed to keep them. I believe they suffer from stress related diseases as they are very nervous, and also respiratory conditions in damp climates, being essentially a desert/dry climate dweller in the USA.
they're not much of public crowd pleasers
They have a wide distribution from Canada to Mexico across several ecosystems. They were recently featured on TV in a series about Yellowstone where it snows for 11/12 months. Quite a few collections in the USA manage to keep them successfully.
a zoo like Chester would probably look for something else than a species like the pronghorn that only zoo geeks appretiate.![]()
Unfortunately, @Pertinax, the numbers of losses even seem to surpass the births in several institutions...
But even Gerenuks (...) are another species prone to damaging themselves too- long slender legs get broken very easily.
I believe Chester would only bother to bring in a new & unusual ungulate species if it was to play a specific role in some particular style of mixed exhibit they had planned, but I cannot think of an example.
Honestly, I don't expect anything out of the ordinary, but rather specimens of a species that already exists in European zoos.
No, the whole point of the discussion is that zoogiraffe said that Chester Zoo would be getting an ungulate which is not seen anywhere else in Europe.That doesn't say much. Whenever such claims are made, chances are high that some zoo you have previously never heard about, in a part of Europe that is hard to find on the map, already kept the species for a while and now wants to give away the offspring.
BTW: maybe it's just a rarely kept subspecies of an otherwisely common species...
How good are Chester's connections to Al Wabra?
Hey, @ashley-h, don't be a spoil sport; if others want to continue guessing, why not let them?![]()
I don't think it snows at all(normally) in Yellowstone from April- November.. I've seen Pronghorn around Yellowstone and they always inhabit the open, treeless areas. I believe their wide distribution is governed by a dryer 'Continental' climate than we have here in Europe with our damp 'maritime' one.
I think Sun is right that they are rather similar to Saiga antelope in that they just do not do well in captivity at all and losses probably equal births just about everywhere.
Regarding Chester's 'mystery ungulate' I agree there is virtually no species which would excite the general public, just maybe a few Zoochatters....