I had no idea that Elegant Crested Tinamous were kept in captivity! I've only ever seen a Little Tinamou.
The Little Tinamou I saw was at the Dallas World Aquarium. It was a few years ago, so I don't know for sure if they still have them. I only saw one, not sure if they had more than one. I sure hope so!
he has kept many individuals of another species of deepwater (or at least deep-ish water) squid for about half a year - raised from eggs - maybe broad squid? I can't quite remember the species and I couldn't find it in a (brief!) search but broad squid sounds right. If he tried again with baby giants he would probably have more success now than he did before.thanks Chlidonias for the reminder. You are of course right, O'Shea caught and kept a baby ("paralarval") giant squid for a very short period – as far as I know, only some hours. Doubt they would have impressed most people when it comes to their size as they were more "tiny" than "giant", but nevertheless quite a remarkable feat by an extraordinary scientist.
on Futurama Professor Farnsworth has a coelacanth tank. I tried to find a clip on youtube but there isn't one. But I did find a snippet on Dinofish which said the the richest man on the Comoros is building a house with a two-story concrete tank off the side which he is going to put a coelacanth in. I'm not sure how rich you need to be to be the richest man on the Comoros though....coelacanth would be cool to see.
I believe the Elegant Crested Tinamou is really the only one in public zoos but many private zoos have other tinamou species though I can't give you specifics.
~Thylo![]()
I had no idea that Elegant Crested Tinamous were kept in captivity! I've only ever seen a Little Tinamou.
I've been thinking about this for a while now and a couple of species I would like to see are:- linsangs* of any species, otter civets, hairy-nosed otters, African golden cats, marbled cats and pampas cats.*
*I'm aware of specimens within their native range but none in the more developed world. (Possibly poor wording but it's the best I can come up with at the minute!)
Can't argue much with that listfrustratingly, three of those have been in the UK within my lifetime, and two of the others were in Europe until the early 1980's!
Linsangs are a least concern species, so I don't see why they would need to be pulled into captivity. Not all species have been evaluated, but I think they are doing just fine in the wild. If they are doing so well in the wild, why pull them into captivity for the sake of conservation?
Not to mention that linsangs can already be found in captivity in some places.
~Thylo![]()
Hence the asterix and footnote!![]()
Umm... the word is asterisk. The word you used was a gaulish character from a couple of thousand years ago.
As for linsangs and other 'least concern' species - sometimes there are things researchers can only learn from watching captive animals, especially so with nocturnal species.
some things get ingrained at an early age and take forever to get over. I was a fan of the cartoon strips as a youngster!![]()