ZSL Whipsnade Zoo Whipsnade Updates

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the new bull is hoovie from dublin and is 9yrs old. they are hoping to breed him with both lola and nigna.
if i remember correctly, hoovie's mother was killed by a member of public throwing something into the pool and she ate it. something in my mind is saying it was a tennis ball but i may be making that up....

a. So Whipsnade have the son.

b. That's correct and it was a tennis ball.

I don't know if Dublin replaced her- they are listed as 2.1 but it may be an out of date listing.
 
Rhinos of Nepal building

2 calves in a year thats great news.

Was there any building work taking place at Whipsnade?

Maybe they should think about modifying the 'Rhinos of Nepal' building now to make it more user-friendly?
It seems to me from the Gallery as if both female rhinos have had their new calves back in the old sheds and yards- is this because they're nervous of the young calves with the watermoats in the new house? I can't think of any other reason.

Does that mean there is just the young female (and maybe the bull at bathtime) using that big new house at present?

I do like the new house a lot but the design seems to have its shortcomings- not only will the adult females still(?) not go in the water, but now it seems the water moats in all three stalls make it unsuitable for maternity use also. One 'dry' stall without access to water might be a useful adaptation?
 
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??? They only have two adult females. The firstborn daughter 'Asha' must still be far too young to breed yet (three years old?)

My summation is correct and states otherwise: she will be 4 years of age by this December and potentially may breed to the adult male. Some Indian rhino cows have been documented at calving at ca. 4.5 years of age.
 
My summation is correct and states otherwise: she will be 4 years of age by this December and potentially may breed to the adult male. Some Indian rhino cows have been documented at calving at ca. 4.5 years of age.

Okay, I see what you mean. But I doubt they will breed from her quite that soon. They left getting a bull (Jaffna) over from Basel for the two original females until they were way over ten years old( far too long I'll agree)
 
Maybe they should think about modifying the 'Rhinos of Nepal' building now to make it more user-friendly?

I think they must do this to if they want to have 3 breeding females.
If they only intend to keep 2 females, the present arrangement is adequate for the adult trio plus their offspring - although I think a yard beside the new house might be valuable to complement the 3 paddocks.
I don't think it would be too difficult to modify the ramps in the new house, and perhaps to make one of the pools shallower so that it would be safer for a calf.

Alan
 
I am fairly certain that Dublin obtained a young female hippo as a companion for Hoovie after the death of his mother .
 
Whipsnade/Dublin Hippo connection

just found this... so it seems hoovie is a whipsnade descendant.

Very interesting.

I've tracked the Whipsnade/Dublin Hippos connection with the help of a Prague Zoo studbook as follows. Confusingly two different 'Henry's are involved;

Whipsnade's breeding pair Henry & Belinda arrived there in 1950 (aged two)
Henry fathered 24(!) calves at Whipsnade, some by his own daughter Wendy who was born in 1967(including the female Wanda/Linda that went to Dublin) but 14 of those DNS. (Henry died in 1993, Belinda in 1995.) Its remarkable how many Hippo births are of calves that die almost straight away- in zoos everywhere.

Dublin-have had several different hippos, including a couple of males also born at Whipsnade Zoo,(they died) but the relevant ones are;
male Tom/Henri from Rotterdam (born in Amsterdam)
female Wanda/Linda from Whipsnade (born Whipsnade 1974 Henry x Wendy)

This pair bred several times at Dublin but some calves DNS. Others went to Longleat and Woburn. Hoover/Hoovie(9) was the last that survived.

After Linda's death from swallowing the tennis ball Dublin acquired the young female Heidi from Basel Zoo. She has bred once (in 2006), but it was a DNS. Fathered by the old male Henri.

So Hoover/Hoovie is a direct descendant of Henry/Belinda. With him gone to Whipsnade, Dublin still have(?) a pair- the old male Henri and younger female Heidi.

The same SB also lists West Midlands with 11 Hippos- largest group in Europe, but with no male at all- the last was 'Garfield' which died in 2006.
 
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I don't think it would be too difficult to modify the ramps in the new house, and perhaps to make one of the pools shallower so that it would be safer for a calf.

Alan

I agree- the present arrangement of vacating the House for the old sheds and yards when the females have small calves seems pretty ridiculous to me. I fear cost may prohibit changes being made though?
 
it seems whipsnade do have issues with design, yesterday i was talking to the african animal keeper as he was cleaning out nigna and lola's pool, they have to sweep the water out as the drains were built on a upwards slope............genius! lol
 
it seems whipsnade do have issues with design, yesterday i was talking to the african animal keeper as he was cleaning out nigna and lola's pool, they have to sweep the water out as the drains were built on a upwards slope............genius! lol

I think that sort of thing is common in a lot of Zoos.

I think I would prefer to see Whipsnade just with the common hippos now. As it is they can never have all 3 on show in the indoor area- unless the Pygmies' pool becomes available to them. One will always be hidden behind and I think you'll find that's still quite primitive!
 
yes they have flora any taipon (not sure if spelling is right.)
the woman doing hippo talk said they are hoping to have all 3 on display. i really dont see how that will work tho.
 
don't common hippos live in groups in the wild, so wouldn't they be able to give the three of them access to the big pool and then all the back areas to? or will the male have to be kept separate from the girls?
 
They're herd animals so there's no problem having them all together outdoors. The indoor exhibit area is scarcely big enough for three hippos though- hence my suggestion about using both indoor pools for common hippo. I'm not even sure the old area behind the exhibition House has a pool but I presume there must be one of sorts.
 
from what i understand they have a "wallow" out the back.
i have some photos i took at the weekend when the common hippo pool was being cleaned out and the girls were allowed back in while it was filling up to give you an idea of size i shall try to upload them....
 
from what i understand they have a "wallow" out the back.

That's interesting. Whipsnade have been keeping Common Hippos almost ever since they opened, but until recently you could never see them indoors! Their indoor 'shed' at the back of the outdoor enclosure has been unchanged since certainly the 1950's, probably longer still. There may have been some changes to it when it was linked up to the new house though.
 
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from this pic it seems there is a wallow as they both have "tide marks" and they had been kept out the back all morning whilst cleaning was being done.
it was on here that i read they had a wallow.
 
They definitely look like they have been wallowing somewhere!

Whipsnade have 6 asian rhinos currently. An Adult male is called Hugo (b. 2002). They have two older adult females from Nepal (b. 1996) called Behan and Beluki. Behan has had two calves both at Whipsnade, Asha (female, born 31/12/2006) and Ajang (male b. 31/08/2010). Beluki has had two calves too (Rap a male, who was born in 2007 and had moved to West Mids) and a female calf born a couple of weeks ago who doesn't have a name yet!
 
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