Ligers, Zonkeys and other hybrids

Well, he is right it looks there are pure bred white tigers in India. But at the cost of massive inbreeding...
 
I found some notes I had made about my only visit to Southam Zoo , probably not long before it closed . Amongst the many big cats there were two which I believed to be jaguar x leopard hybrids , showing characteristics of both . I think I may have some photos of the visit somewhere but cannot remember pictures of these cats .

Can anybody else shed more light on this , I wonder .

( there was a leopard in a cage with no safety barrier which had been de-clawed )
 
there were ligers in the heythrop (england oxfordshire) but i know they are no longer there (it has been mentioned in a heythrop thread i think)
 
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I believe that eden ostrich world in penrith kept a grevy's zebra x shetland pony hybrid, until it closed in 2011. Does anyone know of the current where-abouts of the animal in question?
 
Ligers, Zonkeys...

The correct term for any Zebra x horse or donkey is Zebroid; enough of this zony/zonkey/zeedonk rubbish!
 
Zebroid simply means one of the parents was a zebra. Names like zeedonk and zonkey are meant to denote whether the zebra was dam or sire.

:p

Hix
 
Ligers, Zonkeys....

All crosses between a Zebra & something else are Zebroids, further qualified by the exact cross. So, the [now dead] hybrids at Colchester Zoo would be Plains Zebra x Donkey, but still Zebroids.
 
Swan x Goose= Swoose.

One of the most interesting and rare hybrids I have come across recently is the Dorset 'Swoose'- a genuine Swan x (chinese-type) Goose which lives, or did live, on the river Frome in Dorset. (It is usually at Wool, just down the road from Monkeyworld.) This is an authenticated cross, rather than a miscellaneous goose x goose hybrid which are quite common. It was (wild) hatched in 2004 and there are photos of it as a baby with its parents, as well as adult. I saw it in 2011 but do not know if it is still alive now.
 
Another zoo I know of has just aqcuired a new white lioness under the guise that she was 'ousted' by her pride and needed rescuing...?!:confused: (not that they just wanted a shiny new attraction for the public)Does anyone have any data to support this 'ousting' of females from captive prides? I've searched scholar many times and found nothing!
 
Ligers, Zonkeys...

I've looked for the Swoose in recent months & can't find it. Parents were Domestic [Greylag x Chinese] X Mute Swan.
 
I have recently come across pictures of teh swoose, I have to admit I was quite surprised!

This hybrid must have two of the most diverse parents of any hybrid?

Ligers parentage are both Leo Swans and geese are not as closly related. are there other examples of very different parents creating hybrids?

Just reading over the previous comments, if a white lion and a white tiger did cross breed, would the resulting ligers be white? I dont think so as the white gene in the tiger parent would not line up with the white gene in the lion. The liger would be recessive for both mutations, but not white.
 
I have recently come across pictures of teh swoose, I have to admit I was quite surprised!

This hybrid must have two of the most diverse parents of any hybrid?

I believe it is pretty unique, and there have been very few(authentic) records previously. I saw it on land and its body, feet and neck are all very Swan-like. Vocally it has(had?) a very weak goose-type honk.

It was, I think, the only hatchling of the nest.
 
I've looked for the Swoose in recent months & can't find it. Parents were Domestic [Greylag x Chinese] X Mute Swan.

I've been four times and only saw it the first time (early 2011). But I believe it was sometimes on the Piddle or a bit further upstream or downstream than its usual haunt. But I have had no reports of it since October 2011.
 
Ligers

I'm fairly sure you would get white Ligers from a white parent of each species.
 
Here is a list of hybrids bred in britain and the first locations and dates

Sugar glider x squirrel glider, London zoo 1931

Brush tailed bettong x Eastern bettong, London zoo 1874

swamp wallaby x agile wallaby, London 1968

African bush elephant x asian elephant, Chester zoo 1978

brown lemur x mongoose lemur, London zoo 1857

Black lemur x brown lemur, London Zoo 1899

black-and-white ruffed lemur x Red ruffed lemur, London zoo 1972

common marmoset x silvery marmoset, London zoo 1932

common marmoset x black pencilled marmoset, Jersey 1966

Geoffrey's spider monkey x brown spider monkey, Twycross 1973

vervet monkey x rhesus macaque, London 1873

green monkey x tantalus monkey, Chessington 1975

Crab-eating Macaque x Southern Pig-tailed Macaque, london zoo 1860

Crab-eating Macaque x Mandrill, london 1878

Rhesus Macaque x Cherry-crowned Mangabey, paignton 1925

Rhesus Macaque x Southern Pig-tailed Macaque, chester 1966

Bonnet Macaque x Rhesus Macaque, london 1846

Toque Macaque x Bonnet Macaque, London 1860

Yellow Baboon x Olive Baboon, Chessington 1969

Hamadryas Baboon x Olive Baboon, London 1961

Hanuman Langur x Capped Langur, london 1912

Phayre's Langur x Spectacled Langur, Twycross 1966

Pileated Gibbon x Moloch Gibbon, Bell Vue 1956

Sumatran Orang-utan x Bornean Orang-utan, Chester 1968

more soon
 
lion x tiger, unknown location and date

jaguar x leopard, unknown location and date

leopard x puma, " " " "

small-spotted genet x blotched genet, london 1859

small-spotted genet x pardine genet, London 1885

indian grey mongoose x egyptian mongoose, Edinburgh 1961

Canis lupus Linnaeus x Dingo, London 1841

American Black Bear x Brown Bear, london 1859

Brown Bear x polar bear, unknown

Brown Bear x Asian Black Bear, Chessington 1938

South African Fur Seal x Californian Sealion, Bell vue 1913

Somali Wild Ass x Chapman's Zebra, London 1911

Somali Wild Ass x Mountain Zebra, London 1911

Przewalski's Horse x Kulan, woburn 1909

Syrian Wild Ass x Somali Wild Ass, London date unknown

Quagga x Domestic Donkey, owston park 1830

Chapman's Zebra x Mountain Zebra, London 1915

Mountain Zebra x Kiang, Knowsley 1830s

White-lipped Peccary x Collared Peccary, London 1864

Bactrian Camel x arabian camel, London 1880

Alpaca x Guanaco, Bristol 1843

Mule Deer x White-tailed Deer, London 1865

Axis Deer x Hog Deer, Whipsnade 1942

Axis Deer x European Fallow Deer, unknown

Red Deer x Père David's Deer, Woburn 1906

Wapiti x Mule Deer, London 1865

Sika x Sambar, Woburn 1890s

Indian Muntjac x Reeves' Muntjac, Woburn 1850s

Philippine Spotted Deer x Philippine Deer, London 1871
 
The most interesting historical crosses mentioned were the macaque and mangabey/mandrill. All of the others seemed to be much closer relatives.
 
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