zoogiraffe
Well-Known Member
Keep forgetting to post this,but the Damara Zebra's left the collection late 2011,they went to Axe Valley Bird and Animal Park.
Yes domestic Reindeer!!Have they been replaced with anything zg?
Keep forgetting to post this,but the Damara Zebra's left the collection late 2011,they went to Axe Valley Bird and Animal Park.
That doesn't sound a very positive/suitable move. Is this the place in Devon? I have seen photos- it looks very ramshackle and in some shots a sea of mud.![]()
My thinking too, but on my visit to Blackbrook lots of that was also a sea of mud so not suitable for the reindeer either!
Probably unfair to pick out Axe Valley for being muddy- most zoo paddocks are at this time of year. Interesting that these Zebra were only at Blackbrook a comparatively short time. Reindeer might be suited better climatically if its a cold place.
That doesn't sound a very positive/suitable move. Is this the place in Devon? I have seen photos- it looks very ramshackle and in some shots a sea of mud.![]()
Why didn't the zebra move to Yorkshire Wildlife Park instead of going to Axe Valley?Were they purchased or donated?
I believe that YWP have Chapman's Zebras. Blackbrook's ex Zebras were Damara.
The Burchell's zebra was thought to have been hunted to extinction. However Groves and Bell concluded in their 2004 publication that "the extinct true Burchell's zebra" is a phantom. Careful study of the original zebra populations in Zululand and Swaziland, and of skins harvested on game farms in Zululand and Natal, has revealed that a certain small proportion shows similarity to what now is regarded as typical "burchellii". The type localities of the subspecies Equus quagga burchellii and Equus quagga antiquorum (Damara zebra) are so close to each other that the two are in fact one, and that therefore the older of the two names should take precedence over the younger. They therefore say that the correct name for the southernmost subspecies must be burchellii not antiquorum. The subspecies Equus quagga burchellii still exists in KwaZulu-Natal and in Etosha.
I don't know what anyone else thinks, but I rather doubt if there are many purebred Plains Zebras of any subspecies within the UK. I would be very interested to be told otherwise.
Marwell publishes the studbook for both Grevy's zebra and Hartmann's mountain zebra. Does anybody know if there is a studbook for the various sub-species of plains zebra?
Where did the plains zebra that were formerly at Blackbrook come from? They certainly did not look typical Damara zebra to me.
They were only at Blackbrook a little over a year.
In one of the small 'snapshots' in the article, one of the females does appear to have unstriped legs but difficult to see properly from the angle. Perhaps it was the male which had the untypical fully striped legs.
I'm not sure if there is studbook for Plains Zebra- possibly not if it isn't classified as viulbnerable/endangered etc and not part of a managed EEP programme.
Regarding purity of Plains Zebras in the UK;
I believe the Bristol- Blackpool-Manor House Zebras are pure Damaras.
" " Colchester's are probably pure Damaras.
I believe Marwell's are pure Chapman's although the original import included one Damara mare but whether her blood is in the current group I do not know.
I think Cotswold's are pure Chapman's(they at least look like it).
Which other zoos have Plains zebra and which types are they?