Favorite Zoo Animal Personalities

blospz

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
It was very hard to title this thread and not be misleading. If I put favorite zoo animals most think it was a repeated thread, as we already have one on what our favorite animals are to see when we go to a zoo. But I mean a particular animal at a zoo that you fall in love with because of their personality or maybe because they are just beautiful to see. This thread is inspired by Zoo Story by Thomas French, as his descriptions of certain animal personalities really affected me.

Buffalo Zoo:
* Alejandro, the male Southern Tamandua. I have many favorites at the Buffalo Zoo, and maybe later on I'll add some more. But my all time favorite is this tamandua. I remember not even knowing what a tamandua was and when I posted my pictures online, a friend reminded me what they were called. A year later when I returned to the zoo after becoming a member, I was intrigued to find him anytime I went into the Rainforest. It's not always an easy task as he's nocturnal and has very good hiding spots. The foliage throughout certain seasons can also block a person's view. But when he is active, he's the most adorable and fascinating animal to watch. He goes back and forth looking for ants and climbing all over the place like he's Spiderman. Currently I only catch him when he's napping, but it's always in an unusual, cute position of tucking his head into his arms and body and being shaped as a ball.

Seneca Park Zoo:
* Louise, the Virginia Opossum. Although she is no longer with us, she was a favorite of mine when I worked a summer at the zoo. She's one of the biggest opossums I've ever seen and I instantly fell in love with her face. I enjoyed giving her and her sister enrichment in between shows as I let them out of their crates and walk around backstage in the woods area. I later became a zoo parent and adopted her (providing the zoo money to take care of her...or one of their other animals that need it). I also purchased art her and her sister made during the zoo's art auction as I knew they would the last they'd painted before they both died.
* Dorothy, the White Handed Gibbon. She is my zoo animal adoption for the year. She is almost forty years old, but doesn't show signs of aging. She has the most unique and beautiful song and would sometimes disrupt the stage show, across the way from her outdoor cage, when she called to her mate, Bennett. She is always intrigued with her next door neighbors, the Spidermonkeys. She can be seen a lot in a corner of her exhibit spying on them. She's in control of Bennett, but you'll also catch her being tender to him as she grooms him.
* Blanca, the male African Black Footed Penguin. I got to do a question and answer session when the keepers would feed the penguins. It was real informal and the first half of the summer I was in the crowd looking into the exhibit and having people ignore me. It was decided later that we the interpreters would go into the exhibit with the keepers to seen and answer questions. Anyway, Blanca stood out from the other penguins. When it was feeding time, he was not shy to jump up on the keepers rock and try to snag fish from her. I also remember a time when he waddled over to my rock hoping I might have some fish for him. He was also distinct because he was one of the few penguins that didn't have a ban on their flipper and he always had a cowlick hairdo.
* Pimento, the Matriarch Olive Baboon. She has a distinct look as most of the time she has the tip of her tongue sticking out of her mouth. I always found this endearing and I liked I could pick her out from the troop because of this feature.

Erie Zoo:
* Joseph, the Bornean Orangutan. I've often said despite the cramped exhibit the orangutans have at this zoo, they seem to make the most of it. Because of the close space to visitors, they have grown to love them and are always seen interacting with people. Joseph has no problem getting up to the glass and staring at people. He likes to puker up his lips for a kiss to familiar women, lounging on his back, or playing with his blanket. The whole family seem to be a favorite among the visitors.

Toronto Zoo:
* Chrissie, the Tree Kangaroo. I remember first seeing photos of her and thinking she was one of the most adorable tree kangaroo I've seen. I was thrilled to go to the zoo this summer and be able to see her. I was so glad I returned later on in the day when she was eating her food and find her active.
* Luca, the male Jaguar. I didn't see much of his personality as he was lounging the day I saw him, but one look at that face and it's hard to resist watching him. There's just something about his face that makes him distinct from other jaguars I've seen and so much cuter.

I may think of others later, but I would love to hear other people's favorites.
 
Good idea for a thread blospz :)

I normally don't try to get very attached to any zoo animals, but there are a few

Liberty the hippo at Kansas City Zoo - She is active way more than any other hippo I've seen and makes some interesting noises. She also has a cool pink spot on here nose. She was born on the 4th of July (hence the name), and her sister, Labor Day was born around labor day.

Vince the California sea lion at Kansas City - Though 7 sea lions have died in the past few years, Vince has managed to hang on. His antics are quite enjoyable, and he will be joined by two young female sea lions in the spring.
 
All at Chester :D

Puluh - Sumatran orangutan male.
Nayan - Male Asian elephant calf
Tula - Female Rothschild giraffe calf

No particular reasons, just 3 I make sure to see :).
 
All at Taronga:

Luk Chai (Male Asian Elephant Calf): I love his antics and he has the most playful behaviour and look about him.

Kibabu (Silverback Western Lowland Gorilla): More so that he always has a very serious look about him watching over his family but he can be a big giant and the females do chase him.

Bethyl (Female Kodiak Bear): She was one of my favourites ever since I started visiting when I was 3 years old and she seems so frail yet young at heart.

Jantan (Male Hybrid Orangutan): It is very funny watching him with his potato sack and a favourite with my mum.
 
@blospz: Did Buffalo have Alejandro the southern tamandua before the rainforest exhibit opened, or was it a new addition?
 
There are so many for me but I'll just mention the main one I 'grew up with'.

Cynthia the Cereopsis Goose @ WWT Martin Mere.

From my very first visits as a child there was always this big funny looking grey goose with flourescent yellow on it's bill wandering around the paths as if it owned the place. This was Cynthia. I eventually learned her story when I began working at the site. She had been there since the paths and enclosures were being layed out, was there on opening day, and regarded herself in a way as one of the staff. She didn't have the 'right mentality' to pair with another of her kind and the repeated attempts at this by staff over the years always resulted in an unhappy time for whichever poor male of her species she was put into a pen with. She did have a very good motherly instinct however, and over the years was a great foster parent for any number of ducks and geese. It was so comical to see her wandering the paths, getting gates opened for her by bemused visitors so she could enter another area, and behind her could be a trail of ducklings and goslings all believing she were their mother. Clearly Cynthia should have been in one area of the wildfowl collection, but her wandering habits meant you could find her at any random place, looking expectantly at you for a handful of grain. I loved to see her as a visitor and loved to see her as a member of staff. She was a great ally to me if I was taking a tour of unruly school children - any unwary child rushing up to Cynthia would receive a sharp nip around the legs, great for naughty boys in shorts! "If you don't stick with the group, I shall feed you to Cynthia!" I would say.

Sadly Cynthia, who had been at Martin Mere since 1972, died I think around 1995. In her last year she seemed to actually take a mate - a male Nene, or Hawaiian Goose. Charlie was so much smaller than her it was funny to see them together, but he became her loyal and fierce defender taking on the role of leg-nipper if any naughty children ran up to the big grey goose with the marker-pen-coloured beak. Alas Charlie fell foul to a fox that broke in one night, and Cynthia seemed listless without him. She died a little while later and while I was sad - she had been the same age as myself, been there every time I'd visited, and was such a character - I felt comfort in a way that she'd been a good foster mother to so many ducks and geese over the years, and that she'd found a companion in her final year. The scientist in me would try to disregard any anthropomorphism toward the animals I work with, but the part of me that grew up seeing Cynthia will always 'get too involved' in a way. There are many animals that show characters, and it's impossible not to get attached to them. :)
 
Cool idea for a thread I agree!

I have a couple of candidates for you:

Chester Zoo
Xingu & Icana the Giant Otter Pair - what a pair of incredibly vocal characters, they always put a smile on my face.
Nayan the Male Ellie Calf - now he is really developing into a boisterous chap - looking forward to watching him grow
The Cheetah Coalition (Matrah, Burbah, Singah) they are great fun when they forget they are trying to be cool

Knowsley Safari Park
The new Lion Cubs Sam & Shaun - always exploring and developing nice little characters

West Midlands Safari Park
The African Hunting Dogs - what a fascinating pack - I can spend hours sat there in my car with them exploring it surrounding me - they are great!

It's hard singleing out 'favorites' like Javan Rhino said as I agree with his list too but I tried to keep it to 'big characters' :D
 
Ooh, interesting. :) I'd say...

Marwell:
I guess it'd have to be Ernesto the male giant anteater. He's been my favourite animal at the park since he first arrived five years ago, can't quite put my finger on it but I guess it's just cos he's so unique in zoological terms. And he's been through a bit of a rough ride; you can see clearly see a scar in his forehead where his 'girlfriend' Arica who turned about to male overpowered him in a fight and jabbed him with his thumb claw between the eyes!
Others would be Mieke the oldest female okapi, an incredibly calm lady who I developed a liking for when I got to enter her stall and stroke her on my keeper day, and at the other end of the scale the youngest one Hazina, who can never really decide whether you're worth coming up to or running away from. :p And then there's Rooney the Black Wildebeest bull: He just stares, no grunts or charges; just stares straight into you. xD

New Forest Wildlife Park:
The young red foxes Woody and Jessie without a doubt; really bouncy and entertaining to watch, the latter gaining global fame (OK, sort of) in this incident. ;)
 
Being from Cincinnati, obviously I have to go with Emi the Sumatran Rhinoceros as my all time favorite. She really became like a local celebrity and I think people really began to become connected to her. I would never miss a chance to see her, and now that she is no longer with us my visits just don't seem the same.

Now that she is gone, I'd have to go with Ipuh and Suci, her mate and daughter.

Besides those that I have stated already, Bodhi and Beco the Asian Elephant calves at the Columbus Zoo are also some of my favorites.

Damisi, one of the Columbus Zoo's female Okapis, is also a favorite of mine. She just looks so different from other okapis. Her body is darker than most Okapis, but the most noticable difference is her dark face. There is hardly any white on her face at all.
 
Any news about what they plan for these two, or breeding the female?

Who would they breed the female with? Is Harapan Suci's brother? If they can find mates, brilliant. I can only see 3 options though with 1 seemingly more likely.

1) They go to great cost (and likely criticism) by importing a new female (and maybe, while they are at it, a few others to get a decent gene pool). However, the cost/success ratio was not brilliant with the last import if I remember, so they may not think it's worth it?

2) Take all remaining S. rhinos back to Indonesia and release them into the wild. Great publicity, great option, I would imagine great cost though.

3) They keep what they have as a tool for research/education etc and they can tell a story and raise awareness. When they unfortunatly die, they will just disappear from captivity (not something I'd like to see, my favourite option is #1 so we can try and get a greater population, and hopefully outside of America as well, though somehow I doubt it).
 
Who would they breed the female with? Is Harapan Suci's brother? If they can find mates, brilliant. I can only see 3 options though with 1 seemingly more likely.

1) They go to great cost (and likely criticism) by importing a new female (and maybe, while they are at it, a few others to get a decent gene pool). However, the cost/success ratio was not brilliant with the last import if I remember, so they may not think it's worth it?

2) Take all remaining S. rhinos back to Indonesia and release them into the wild. Great publicity, great option, I would imagine great cost though.

3) They keep what they have as a tool for research/education etc and they can tell a story and raise awareness. When they unfortunatly die, they will just disappear from captivity (not something I'd like to see, my favourite option is #1 so we can try and get a greater population, and hopefully outside of America as well, though somehow I doubt it).

Harapan is indeed Suci's brother. Harapan or "Harry" was Ipuh and Emi's last calf.

I can't see Cincinnati shipping their rhinos back to Indonesia. They've become the symbol of the zoo and are among the most popular animals at the zoo.

The only real options I can see for Cincinnati would be #1 or #3. I'd love to see them import more rhinos and expand the rhino exhibits further down Wildlife Canyon, but again, would they chance it? The zoo has not publicly disclosed anything about the state of the rhinos. Though, I'd say Suci and Ipuh aren't going any where any time soon.
 
The only real options I can see for Cincinnati would be #1 or #3. I'd love to see them import more rhinos and expand the rhino exhibits further down Wildlife Canyon, but again, would they chance it? The zoo has not publicly disclosed anything about the state of the rhinos. Though, I'd say Suci and Ipuh aren't going any where any time soon.

Thanks for the info :). I would imagine it would be a much better chance of seeing more if more zoos get interested (which I think is most needed). 4 or 5 places put the money to import, say, between 10-20 then we could have a good population going. I wouldn't know which zoos would be best, but I would suggest all-American for now so that the population is easier to move around between institutes.
 
Favourite Zoo Animal Personalities

Secret Squirrel -- was Cynthia the Cereopsis at Peakirk in her early days? I remember visiting there in the late 60s, perhaps very early 70s, and seeing notices on pen gates 'don't let the grey goose out'. This was a very people-oriented female Cereopsis in the fairly small walk-through area by the old decoyman's house.
 
Both the Bronx and Los Angeles Zoos held Sumatran Rhinos for a period of time, but Cincinnati has had the best luck with them. If the decision was made to import more Sumatrans into the US, I think it would be best to start with just a few. Those few would be shipped to Cincinnati since they've had the best luck with keeping them alive and of course, breeding them. If the import is successful and the animals survive, then maybe other zoos could take notes on what procedures and exhibiting styles worked well in Cincinnati, and then start importing a few more. I wouldn't import a large number of them at once, just to see the risks and how the animals cope. The last thing the species needs for a number of viable adults to die at once. You also must consider the Indonesian government. Would they allow numbers of Sumatran Rhinos to be exported out of the country? There is a limited number of these animals that would be available, and it is probably best for the animals to be bred in captivity in an area similar to where hopefully animals will be reintroduced.

We'll just have to wait and see what the future holds for this wonderful species and it's state in captivity.
 
Both the Bronx and Los Angeles Zoos held Sumatran Rhinos for a period of time, but Cincinnati has had the best luck with them. If the decision was made to import more Sumatrans into the US, I think it would be best to start with just a few. Those few would be shipped to Cincinnati since they've had the best luck with keeping them alive and of course, breeding them. If the import is successful and the animals survive, then maybe other zoos could take notes on what procedures and exhibiting styles worked well in Cincinnati, and then start importing a few more. I wouldn't import a large number of them at once, just to see the risks and how the animals cope. The last thing the species needs for a number of viable adults to die at once. You also must consider the Indonesian government. Would they allow numbers of Sumatran Rhinos to be exported out of the country? There is a limited number of these animals that would be available, and it is probably best for the animals to be bred in captivity in an area similar to where hopefully animals will be reintroduced.

We'll just have to wait and see what the future holds for this wonderful species and it's state in captivity.

Yup :). I was assuming that now Cincinnati has had relative success the other places could use what they have learnt from holding the ones they've had so far as a guideline on proper husbandary/exhibit design etc. But I agree, maybe a little more knowledge is needed before they risk any more imports.
 
Exactly :) We should probably get back on topic before this turns into a topic about Sumatran Rhinos.

I forgot one in my other post! Lars the male Turkmenian Markhor at the Columbus Zoo. After hearing the story of how he escaped into the Amur Tiger exhibit, I've really taken an interest in him and make sure to see him when I visit.
 
Cincinnati Rhinos.

Exactly :) We should probably get back on topic before this turns into a topic about Sumatran Rhinos.

That is my fault ;)as I asked about the current situation with the remaining two Sumatran Rhinos at Cincinnati after you named 'Emi' as a zoo favourite.

As we have several 'Sumatran Rhino' threads please don't hesitate to post in them if you have any updates. A lot of people on here are very interested in this species and what Cincinnati can do now, since Emi has died, in order to continue breeding with them.

Back now to 'Zoo Favourite Animal Personalities'.....
 
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