Personally, I think Twycross is a massive net consumer of extremely rare wildlife and constantly seems able to acquire species other collections would give their eye tooth for, only to house them in very average enclosures until they gradually die out without much or any breeding success. For this reason, I think they should build on their 100% success rate with Asian elephants (I know it's only been two so far

) and the few other species they have done well with, and stop keeping animals they don't have success with. That was the attitude at places like howletts, if an animal didn't thrive or breed, they wouldn't just leave them to grow old, they'd find a new home for them and try something else.
Bear in mind that the 100% success rate was entirely to Chester Zoo's credit. What we have been saying all along is that after returning to Twycross on their confirmed pregnancies and the uneventful and successful rearing of both calves, they did not wish to invest in housing a bull nor did they send on the cows once more to Chester for re-breeding. The net end result has been that one of the breeding cows is now considered post reproductive (it makes you want to tear your hair out ...) and for the other they are discussing and discussing whether they should opt for AI or not. It remains a failed breeding policy.
On top of that they cannot even establish a stable herd structure and have had to remove one of their female calves to Whipsnade because she was becoming unmanageable under free contact ...! Accepted policy within the Asian elephant EEP - and now followed by most participating zoos - is to assign those zoos unwilling to establish a separate bull holding facility for breeding as non-breeding locations that will only receive elderly post-reproductive females to house. A second option to house a group of young bulls (as an increased number of calves leaves the younger bulls to move on between 6-8 years of age as happens in the wild) is out of the question given Twycross's negative stance on elephant bulls. A third option to send on related females to breeding situations (one could have imagined that with Karishma Minbu would have followed her) was also not followed. In other words within the EEP Twycross has a very peculiar position.
I wish they would alter their elephant breeding policy once and for all. Twycross cannot now play the waiting game with the only elder cow still deemed fit to breed till a next or a next year, she should fall pregnant at the earliest possible date (at 24/25 both cows are already at risk from their reproductive system shutting down simply by virtue of them not giving birth every 5-6 years).
Similarly, the situation with gorillas is equally bleak. A new proven silverback should already have been in residence at Twycross for the younger group and a more hands on policy would have seen the older non-breeding females at Twycross given over to a proven breeder or sent on to a gorilla collection with a proven track record like Howletts ....
What I cannot get my head around is the fact that by simplying adjusting their breeding policies somewhat, they would achieve much more productive results and give their groups of gorillas and elephants an added dynamic (both for the individuals and zoo visitors coming to awe at them). And ..., we all know that both elephant calves and gorilla babies are a huge drawcard to any zoo. It would bring in much needed cash.
Instead the zoo is now investing in this multi-million cash of a Visitor Center, whilst most animal enclosures still remain to be upgraded! I think that is a great missed opportunity! Imagine what 10-12 million euros would have done to establish a world class great ape exhibit for gorillas, bonobos and orang utans, a state of the art breeding facility for rare gibbon species and leaf-eating primates. Imagine theming Twycross Zoo around SE Asian rainforest exhibitry and species (which they have now thankfully partially put into operation by building a longhouse - alas though without any concurrent major animal exhibits added) and added on Malayan tapirs, anoas, babirusas, clouded leopards and fishing cats, an African Congo habitat with added river hogs and okapis, an Asian lion terraces .... with blackbuck and chinkara gazelles, South American Amazonia with Callitrichines, woolly monkeys, howlers, spiders and capibaras, south American tapir .... MMMMM, I must be dreaming ....
