I've had a few emails asking me to talk about some North American zoos that I've visited, and since the Oregon Zoo thread has generated discussion I've decided to also include one on the San Francisco Zoo. It works out well having zoobeat members from all over the world!
This zoo is only average, and not even close to being at the top of my list of 35 zoos, aquariums and wildlife parks that I've been to. It contains about 1,000 animals (organized mainly by geography), including a male Baird's Tapir that should appeal to some people on this website. However, there are a few notable enclosures that deserve to be mentioned. I visited it last summer and was impressed with these newer exhibits.
1- A 3-acre African Savanna exhibit that has giraffes, zebra, kudu, oryx, ostrich, marabou stork, african craned crowns, and a couple of other bird species. This is a top-notch enclosure, as the public walkway splits the exhibit in half and allows for close viewing of the animals. It was just built a few years ago.
2- The Lemur Forest is also a fairly new, excellent enclosure. There are ring-tailed, white-fronted, black and white ruffed, red ruffed, black and recently mouse lemurs all in the same exhibit. They each have separate, smaller enclosures with tiny wire tunnels that are elevated to about head height. The lemurs can run from their own exhibit to the much larger forest that can hold all 6 different species at once. There is a boardwalk that arches around the forest, and this combined with the African Savanna is the best that the zoo has to offer.
3- A brand new enclosure that I haven't seen is "Grizzly Gulch", a 1 acre exhibit that looks fantastic and houses a couple of grizzly bears.
4- Their 5 koalas have a decent little forest to slumber in, and it's always a thrill for North Americans to check out these tiny marsupials.
5- A colony of between 50-60 Magellanic penguins is entertaining, and the exhibit was constructed in the mid-eighties and holds up fairly well.
There are many older exhibits that badly need an influx of cash. The lion house is ancient, the hippo pool is barbaric, the polar bear and spectacled bear grottoes are very typical of old-style zoos, and the elephant exhibit was so bad that in 2005 the zoo decided to not hold them anymore strictly based on the health of the animals. I believe that there are now about 13 zoos in North America alone that have either stopped containing elephants or have announced that they are phasing them out of their collection. This includes prominent zoos such as the Bronx Zoo (phase out), Detroit, Philadelphia, Alaska and San Francisco.
This zoo is only average, and not even close to being at the top of my list of 35 zoos, aquariums and wildlife parks that I've been to. It contains about 1,000 animals (organized mainly by geography), including a male Baird's Tapir that should appeal to some people on this website. However, there are a few notable enclosures that deserve to be mentioned. I visited it last summer and was impressed with these newer exhibits.
1- A 3-acre African Savanna exhibit that has giraffes, zebra, kudu, oryx, ostrich, marabou stork, african craned crowns, and a couple of other bird species. This is a top-notch enclosure, as the public walkway splits the exhibit in half and allows for close viewing of the animals. It was just built a few years ago.
2- The Lemur Forest is also a fairly new, excellent enclosure. There are ring-tailed, white-fronted, black and white ruffed, red ruffed, black and recently mouse lemurs all in the same exhibit. They each have separate, smaller enclosures with tiny wire tunnels that are elevated to about head height. The lemurs can run from their own exhibit to the much larger forest that can hold all 6 different species at once. There is a boardwalk that arches around the forest, and this combined with the African Savanna is the best that the zoo has to offer.
3- A brand new enclosure that I haven't seen is "Grizzly Gulch", a 1 acre exhibit that looks fantastic and houses a couple of grizzly bears.
4- Their 5 koalas have a decent little forest to slumber in, and it's always a thrill for North Americans to check out these tiny marsupials.
5- A colony of between 50-60 Magellanic penguins is entertaining, and the exhibit was constructed in the mid-eighties and holds up fairly well.
There are many older exhibits that badly need an influx of cash. The lion house is ancient, the hippo pool is barbaric, the polar bear and spectacled bear grottoes are very typical of old-style zoos, and the elephant exhibit was so bad that in 2005 the zoo decided to not hold them anymore strictly based on the health of the animals. I believe that there are now about 13 zoos in North America alone that have either stopped containing elephants or have announced that they are phasing them out of their collection. This includes prominent zoos such as the Bronx Zoo (phase out), Detroit, Philadelphia, Alaska and San Francisco.