Thanks for the information, it will be a shame if the Brolga has died - not many of those left in Europe now.
I also failed to spot the Aye aye in its enclosure.
I also failed to spot the Aye aye in its enclosure.
Oh my gosh really?! Time for an aye aye stake out when I visit next week!![]()
Great to hear! Shame my job is slightly too far to get to the zoo and back during lunchbreak though![]()
I am told there is now a duiker in with the okapis...
Walked up to the zoo on my lunch-break and saw the (female?) aye-aye, quite active.
Very fortunate since she has been quite shy, I'm at the Zoo on Wed or Fri, hope I have the same success as you
she was fingering it quite a lot (for want of a better word...)!
From Facebook;
They're back!
After enjoying a staycation at London’s partner site in ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, the red-faced spider monkeys have returned to London and into a brand new pad in the Rainforest Life exhibit.
A lot of zoo visitors think Sulawesi Macaquea are baby Gorillas anyway.
From Facebook;
They're back!
After enjoying a staycation at London’s partner site in ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, the red-faced spider monkeys have returned to London and into a brand new pad in the Rainforest Life exhibit.
Excellent news, if unexpected! Hopefully this means the Francois langurs will also return.
Where in the Clore are they located? I would imagine they'd need quite a large exhibit space.
Common sense would dictate the macaques move into a renovated Casson, thus creating a mini "Islands."