How are the giraffe and elephant exhibits? I think they are both quite new?
Monkey Island: Monkey Island: see a lively bunch of 11 Japanese macaques on arguably the first bar-less monkey exhibit in North American surrounded by water and a beautiful landscape.
How about Detroit's Baboon Island which opened a year or more earlier?
The Cincinnati Zoo certainly deserves the right to be rated the 3rd greatest zoo in America. People, you may judge the exhibits, but is that what its all about? No, its about conservation, which the Cincy zoo leads the world in (most things).
The Cincy zoo is the only place breeding Tayras and is the bearcat capital.
WTF to people criticize this it is the 3rd most beautiful exhibit at the zoo; its spacious, great tree that has secrets in it (look at the video), and they play around a lot, and the moat isn't deadly at all, I've seen them go so close up to that you might think that they will fall easily. Hello, they are part of the largest species of apes.
*Artificial Insemination is not dangerous. In fact for Sumatran Rhinos, it would probably be safer than natural breeding.
*Clouded Leopard AI has been done successfully before at the Nashville Zoo in 1992.
*And have the zoo's clouded leopards' bred?
Well that's just not true as at least Prague Zoo (Czech Republic) and Kerzer's Papiliorama (Switzerland) are also breeding tayras. And having 1.1.1 binturongs doesn't make a place "the capital" of them as many zoos have more than that.
One thing that the exhibit obviously lacks is some sort of overhead cover, preferably a canopy (although camouflage nets or similar can achieve the same effect) as gorillas are forest dwelling animals that need cover to feel secure.
The Cincinnati zoo is the Lemur capitol in North America with 3 species, Ring-tailed, Black-and-white ruffed, and Eastern Lesser Grey Bamboo lemurs: says the Director of the zoo, Thayne Maynard.
The zoo was the first to exhibit an Aye-aye in 1993
You know people I tried to make a good reputation for the zoo, but you are making me fail at it
You also say that I criticize people's opinions, sooo let me have mine
What I am criticizing is you tossing clearly wrong facts around and being unable to accept other peoples' points of view. That is what this kind of forum is all about! Discussions based on facts and sharing each others views and ideas. Not just sending out anything and expect everybody to just agree.
@Toddy, I would agree except having observed gorillas in this exhibit for years, I feel that they are quite at ease, use the entire space, relate well with each other. Perhaps the 360degree protection and the high walls accomplish the same thing. Were the same exhibit design twice as spacious perhaps it would be a different matter.
I am not changing my mind about the aye-ayes, and I'm not coming up with these facts.
I am not changing my mind about the aye-ayes, and I'm not coming up with these facts.
and"The zoo recently added to its collection an aye-aye, an animal that hasn't been on display here since 1993"
"It's been 18 years since the zoo had an aye-aye, and Cincinnati was the first U.S. zoo to display one. Now it has one again - a 6-year-old female obtained from the Duke Lemur Center at Duke University."
Interesting comments @Zooplantman. I guess I got lost in the idea of overhead cover (as I tend to do with gorilla exhibits, just like I do with climbing frames in orang-utan exhibits) and forgot that the walls might provide the same kind of security. I will trust your judgement here as you obviously have spent more time at this exhibit than I have!
Well thank-you... I have also seen how gorillas that lack cover act and where they congregate in an exhibit. This one simply works differently on that matter