Dreamworld Dreamworld News

zooboy28

Well-Known Member
There is no news thread for Dreamworld (a theme park on the Gold Coast, with a collection of native animals as well as a number of tigers and cougars), so I'm starting one with this piece of news from yesterday:

Bushfire forces Dreamworld evacuation - staff, visitors and animals evacuated from the theme park, although there was no damage to the park in the end, and it reopened today.

Article and photos here: Bushfire forces Dreamworld evacuation Local Gold Coast News | goldcoast.com.au | Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia

FIREFIGHTERS will continue to battle a large bushfire burning dangerously close to Dreamworld throughout the night after the Gold Coast theme park was forced to evacuate thousands of guests this afternoon.

The fire broke out at about 1.30pm and consumed about four hectares of bushland behind the Coomera property.

Thick smoke quickly smothered the area, casting an eerie pall over the park and the M1.

Seven thousand people were evacuated from Dreamworld at about 3pm after park management determined the threat posed too much of a risk.

The animals in its zoo, including its famous tigers, were also moved to a safe location, a Dreamworld spokeswoman said.

``We evacuated for the safety of guests, staff and the animals,'' the spokesman said.

``They will not be allowed back in today but we are just working out when they will be allowed back in.''

She said Dreamworld would update people using its social media accounts.

As at 7pm, firefighters reported the blaze was still burning but under control. About 10 crews are on scene doing backburning.

Scientific crews are also on scene monitoring atmospheric smoke levels and dangers to the community.

The bushfire is posing a `low to moderate' threat to property.

Shortly after the evacuation, Dreamworld announced on its Facebook account that it was a `precautionary' evacuation and the fire was not currently threatening the park.

At about 6pm, Dreamworld then posted that the park would reopen for normal operation tomorrow.

Many guests took to social media to demand a refund on their ticket while others quickly retorted that they should be grateful the theme park acted quickly in the interests of safety.

Dreamworld is also home to the Big Brother house.
 
Three Lumholtz Tree Kangaroos have arrived at Dreamworld!

Full story and photo here: Tree Kangaroos arrive at Dreamworld | Zoo Aquarium Association

Dreamworld was hopping in August with the arrival of three Lumholtz Tree Kangaroos from the Atherton Tablelands in Far North Queensland. Maggie, Csi and Mindy arrived after their flight from the Tree Roo Rescue and Conservation Centre in Malanda. This has been a four year project that has finally come to fruition....
 
There is no news thread for Dreamworld (a theme park on the Gold Coast, with a collection of native animals as well as a number of tigers and cougars), so I'm starting one with this piece of news from yesterday:

Bushfire forces Dreamworld evacuation - staff, visitors and animals evacuated from the theme park, although there was no damage to the park in the end, and it reopened today.

Article and photos here: Bushfire forces Dreamworld evacuation Local Gold Coast News | goldcoast.com.au | Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia

Anyone know where to or how the animals were evacuated? I imagine its not easy to find housing for tigers at short term notice ;)
 
from the article, Dreamworld has five adult animals now (2.3) and they aim to have nine adults. There's a photo on the link as well (in Sunbear12's post).

Animal handlers at a Gold Coast theme park are hopping with joy after a brand new joey popped its head from the pouch of a shy Lumholtz's tree kangaroo.

Mindi is one of three females in Dreamworld's breeding program, which began almost two years ago.

"It's the first Lumholtz tree kangaroo born into the Australasian captive management program," Dreamworld wildlife supervisor Alana Legge said.

It was the second pairing of Mindi with father Csi that achieved a successful result.

A health check earlier this year revealed a tiny joey had ascended to the pouch.

"We are just so excited about this joey," Ms Legge said.

The breeding animals are sourced from the Tree Roo Rescue and Conservation Centre at Malanda in far north Queensland.

They are animals that have been struck by cars or attacked by dogs and are unsuitable for release back into the rainforest.

"These animals have got injuries like blindness so they can't be released into the wild," she said.

"Dreamworld and other institutions have created this breeding program so we can share how amazing these animals are with the public ... many of [whom] don't even know what a tree kangaroo is."

The Lumholtz is one of two tree-climbing kangaroo species in Australia.

Beside dog attacks and car strikes, habitat destruction is another major problem facing tree kangaroos in the wild.

The sex of the yet-to-named joey is not yet known.

Ms Legge said it would likely stay close to mum.

"The joeys spend a particularly long time with their mothers.

"The joey is going to need to learn what different foods to eat and how to get around in the trees, so she'll be with mum for about two years," she said.

There are two males and three females in the breeding program, funded by the Dreamworld Wildlife Foundation.

The aim is to increase the number of adult tree roos in the park to nine.

Dreamworld staff said the joey's father, Csi, lives in a separate enclosure and would play no parenting role.

"They are solitary in the wild and the males can fight aggressively with the other males and females, and they are dangerous too around the joeys," Ms Legge said.

"So it's only the mother and the joey in those small family groups that you'll find together out in the wild."

The joey's arrival coincides with Tree Roo Awareness Week, which ends on Sunday.
 
Queensland Parks and Wildlife were breeding captive Lumholtz's in Townsville at Pallarenda in the 1990s.

Wildlife Habitat has had births in recent years as well.
 
it is just the usual press release jargon. Every new animal imported to or born at almost any zoo is invariably "vitally important" or "genetically valuable", no matter how useless it actually is.
 
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