Taronga Zoo now has 1.3 together in a single group, male Bobo and females Elke, Meili and Noel. Tam Dao and Keo-co have been sent to other zoos.
Do you know where Tam Dao and Keo-co have been sent to?
No sign of any interest in the langurs from other Australian collections?
i like the way one species ahs the white sideburns and spiky hairdo and the other has the white eye mask and nose and pointy beard. Personally I think it would be great if all the zoos got on board with both species and also other langurs eg the red shanked looks amazing too.
Agree. Surely Australasia could cope with managing populations of two beautiful rare primates that fit most big zoos masterplans ie. Asian rainforest.
Agree. Surely Australasia could cope with managing populations of two beautiful rare primates that fit most big zoos masterplans ie. Asian rainforest. When you consider that Hanumans, Purple-faced and Silvered langurs/leaf monkeys were all kept reasonably successfully for many years it is a pity that the likes of Melbourne and Perth (two collections that have traditionally had diverse primate collections) at least haven't come on board.
Doucs would be a pipe dream, but I suspect that if given a real go they would do well in warmer Australian climates. Better than Europe anyway. Year round fresh browse for a start.
Taronga Zoo now has 1.3 together in a single group, male Bobo and females Elke, Meili and Noel. Tam Dao and Keo-co have been sent to other zoos.
In conflicting information, a different volunteer told me today that Keo-co is still at Taronga (off-display), although she wasn't sure if Tam Dao was. I think I might have to ask an actual keeper next time for 100% confirmation.
Agree. Surely Australasia could cope with managing populations of two beautiful rare primates that fit most big zoos masterplans ie. Asian rainforest. When you consider that Hanumans, Purple-faced and Silvered langurs/leaf monkeys were all kept reasonably successfully for many years it is a pity that the likes of Melbourne and Perth (two collections that have traditionally had diverse primate collections) at least haven't come on board.
Doucs would be a pipe dream, but I suspect that if given a real go they would do well in warmer Australian climates. Better than Europe anyway. Year round fresh browse for a start.