The Okapi Lisala Li died in the last year. Cincinnati only has 1.1 okapi. Also, Lisala Li only had one male calf, Mweka, who only lived a year (2000-2001). Her most recent calf, Kuvua, a female born in 2008 still resides at the zoo.
Thanks for the information on the okapis. I knew that Lisala Li had died, and I thought that I had put "Lisala Li's daughter". I guess I was in such a rush to get out the door I didn't! What I didn't know was who exactly the male was. I was told by a docent that their male was Lisala Li's son. I guess I was misinformed then!
@Cinzoo man - Thanks for the update!It'll be interesting to see what becomes of the area.
-Have you seen the new Tayra cub yet? I haven't heard if it's been out on exhibit yet. It was born about the same time as the young Binturong.
Ive only seen one tayra
do you know if the duiker will be with the okapi?
-The male must be the only one on exhibit then. The female and young must still be off-exhibit.
-I don't know if the duiker will be going back on exhibit with the Okapis or not. As far as I know, they only have a single male Yellow-backed Duiker, and he's been off-exhibit longer than the Okapis have. It's likely that he is getting older and just chooses to stay inside. Back when the zoo had several Yellow-backed Duikers, the duikers used to lived with bongos.
I was just looking at the animal list on the Zoo's website and I noticed a few changes. The lions are now listed as "African Lions", not "White Lions" and the "Yellow-Backed Duiker" has been added. I wonder if it will be placed in the abandoned emu exhibit down in the Wildlife Canyon.
Really, I never noticed the duiker on the website before. Sometimes I wonder how well-kept the list is. They don't list sugar gliders, still have feathertail gliders listed, there is no mention fo the emu, etc. It's kind of hard to know the true inventory of animals when it appears to be so many discrepencies.
The zoo's lions were donated to the zoo by Siegfried and Roy and are 'white' lions. That is why the lion exhibit is/was (I'm not sure if it still is) called "Siegfried and Roy's White Lions of Timbavati". The zoo currently holds a pair of brothers and a mother and daughter pair. The two pairs of lions rotate to prevent breeding, since white lions, like white tigers, are horribly inbred. I'm glad that the zoo is now listing them as African Lions instead of 'White' Lions, as this better promotes wild lions and wild lion conservation.
The Large-spotted Genet is not currently on exhibit. Seeing how it has remained on the website, I suspect that it will be going back on exhibit sometime. Perhaps it will go on exhibit in the previous galago exhibit in Jungle Trails?