Zoo Animals Populations that will Expand in the Future

the Ethiopian Mountain Vipers were all illegally obtained from Ethiopia with fake documents, and sold on to zoos and private keepers. It is covered in the book about animal smuggling Stolen World by Jennie Erin Smith.
 
I am listing almost all birds because I've been reading a lot of bird Regional Collection Plans lately.

Populations set to increase:
African crowned eagle- interest is rising
Harpy eagle- imports can still occur and we're breeding them with a lot more success now.
Steller's sea eagle- high interest, upgraded to PMP.
Hooded vulture- same as above
White backed vulture- breeding has just started up again
Lappet faced vulture
California condor*
Hawaiian hawk
Madagascan buttonquail- founders likely available, easy to breed, unique bird from unique region
Whooping crane*
Black crake
Kagu- international breeding programs in place, has gone from two zoos to five in the US in the last few years
Hawaiian coot- acquire founders
Hawaiian gallinule- acquire founders
Laysan teal- breeding well
White winged duck- same as above
Painted stork- upgraded to PMP, has been added to 3-4 zoo's collections in the last few years
Milky stork- only two zoos have it on display (San Diego and Audubon). Most of the US population is kept at the Audubon Species Survival Center (separate facility from zoo). Imports from Singapore are being discussed as of a few years ago, not sure if that went anywhere.
Storm's stork- quit flight restricting birds (looking at you, Fort Worth). Discuss getting more founders and trade genetics with Asian and European zoos with the species
White-bellied tree pangolin- thanks to recent imports and the Pangolin Conservation organization, there are now probably about 20 in the US.

Species with an *: they can become more common in US zoos now because the USFWS has become much more lenient with letting zoos exhibit non-releaseable and non-breeding animals.
 
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the Ethiopian Mountain Vipers were all illegally obtained from Ethiopia with fake documents, and sold on to zoos and private keepers. It is covered in the book about animal smuggling Stolen World by Jennie Erin Smith.

Chlidonias, sometimes that's a good thing for the sake of ex situ conservation of animals, that like vipers, would florish in captivity. The same thing was the case for Fiji banded (and Fiji short-crested) iguanas, when the Fiji Government declared that none of the oversea Fiji banded iguana was legally exported (info from Wikipedia), but smuggled.
 
@Pertinax, thank you for info. 60 geladas in UK would make some 30% of the total European population!

@savetheelephant, yes I knew that there is ban for export of wild animals from Ethiopia, but I thought maybe such ban was imposed in latter years (like for example in mid 1990s, and not in 1970s or in 1980s).

@jayjds2, I am so happy that San Diego zoo managed to breed Ethiopian mountain viper. They can now florish in captivity (and particularly if population goes managed to include also animals from the current 3 holding zoos in Europe (Czech R., France and Sweden). It seems that reptiles are less (adversely) affected by inbreeding and are more plastic regarding this, in comparassion with mammals for example.
 
Chlidonias, sometimes that's a good thing for the sake of ex situ conservation of animals, that like vipers, would florish in captivity. The same thing was the case for Fiji banded (and Fiji short-crested) iguanas, when the Fiji Government declared that none of the oversea Fiji banded iguana was legally exported (info from Wikipedia), but smuggled.

Smuggling is never good for conservation. A good ex-situ conservation programme links with in-situ work and by relying on smuggling that becomes a lot harder. Next to that is the ethical component of just taking animals from a country/community without its permission which is something we should avoid. Good conservation does include working with the local people and government. Even when that is very difficult.
 
Expectedly, one snake that will (most probably) expand in zoos in near future is of course,
Ethiopian mountain viper :)
great, given the fact that San Diego zoo already produced 7 babies and there is 4 holding zoos in US, and 3 in Europe, who hopefully keep unrelated animals to those in the US.

Other, Mangshan pitviper.
 
Smuggling is never good for conservation. A good ex-situ conservation programme links with in-situ work and by relying on smuggling that becomes a lot harder. Next to that is the ethical component of just taking animals from a country/community without its permission which is something we should avoid. Good conservation does include working with the local people and government. Even when that is very difficult.

Maybe I have not expressed at my best.
I guess many zoo animals have origin from founders who were smuggled, and if that not happened, nowadays we would not have so much diverse (and self-sustainable) zoo animal populations. Sometimes the Governments are not making right decisions imposing export bans. I don't thought on smuggling on a large scale (or smuggling of youngs after killing their mothers or fammilies), but just periodical additions. Surely zoos would accept, let say, one or two smuggled, drills or geladas or every other animal and will not try to return them in the wild, just because they were smuggled.

Nevertheless, I agree with you that good conservation should involve working with local people and governments even when that is difficult - edited post.
 
I think the only people who would genuinely try to argue that smuggling animals is for a good cause are private keepers of, especially, herptiles and birds...
 
I think the only people who would genuinely try to argue that smuggling animals is for a good cause are private keepers of, especially, herptiles and birds...

Yes surely. But when such animals reach to private keepers, they end also in zoos, and zoos of course would accept them, as probably was the case with Fiji banded iguanas (of course that zoos (responsible one) would never smuggle an animal, but would obtain such from private keeper).

I remember reading a news of even recent smuggling of New Zealand endemic geckos in Germany I think. Do you have any info about such thing?
 
Nikola Chavkosk said:
I remember reading a news of even recent smuggling of New Zealand endemic geckos in Germany I think. Do you have any info about such thing?
yes, the endemic reptiles of NZ, notably the geckoes and tuatara, are probably regularly smuggled out of the country - few people get caught and even fewer get any real punishment by the law.

It is disgusting, and anybody who supports animal smugglers should be shown (first-hand) exactly how those animals are treated and the state they arrive in - the "lucky" ones who survive the smuggling that is.
 
Yes surely. But when such animals reach to private keepers, they end also in zoos, and zoos of course would accept them, as probably was the case with Fiji banded iguanas (of course that zoos (responsible one) would never smuggle an animal, but would obtain such from private keeper).

I remember reading a news of even recent smuggling of New Zealand endemic geckos in Germany I think. Do you have any info about such thing?

Zoos do have the responsibility to check the origin of their animals and taking in smuggled animals is unacceptable. Also the offspring of smuggled animals should not be taken in by zoos except on request of the competent authorities. The problem is that things get a lot murkier in due time and after several generations of breeding, but we have to acknowledge that for every established species there are several that do not get established. And that for every individual that gets to reproduce there are numerous that died often in horrible conditions.
 
A single zoo breeding Bitis parviocula doesn't guarantee that the species will "flourish" on the long run; if at all, it's the private (and moreover, the commercial) breeders who will take care of reproducing this species ex-situ (hopefully without going for morphs, scaleless mutations etc., but unfortunately also with a lot of false labelling regarding the actual origin of specimens).
Inbreeding depression can also be an issue in reptile husbandry, btw.
The problem Nikola tries to allude to might be that zoos seem to let others do the "dirty" work these days when it comes to acquiring new species, as specimen collection excursions are a thing of the past for most zoos. However, once someone else manages to obtain specimens or even establish a breeding population of a species new to captivity (usually in regard to anything but the charismatic mammalian megafauna), after a while zoos will get specimens from there (either by confiscation or by buying specimens from the commercial animal trade). If the original collector had all the right papers, it's all nice and legal (or is it?); but illegal acquisitions do occur, as illustrated by the aforementioned examples of Bitis parviocula or Brachylophus fasciatus. And this isn't a new thing, as the historic example of the reintroduction of the Alpine ibex illustrates.
Steinbock: Geraubt und gerettet - Beobachter
Is illegal animal smuggling therefore "Ok" if it might help ex-situ conservation? Nope.
But one might demur that the bureaucratic unreasonableness and lack of practical flexibility (and no, this is no euphemism for "baksheesh") in some countries with species that could benefit from selective professional ex-situ breeding (among many others, I'm looking at you, Brazil, and you, Guatemala, in regard to your lovely Helodermas...) rather fosters illegal animal smuggling instead of offering legal options. And this is certainly not restricted to wildlife and conservation; I've heard of reasonable scientists of federal institutes smuggling samples in and out of Brazil only to avoid the local red tape...
As for Carl Jones' hope that China will lose its grip on Giant Pandas (or Golden snub nosed monkeys-just ask LA Zoo...): not in the next years to come, given how much profit the "Panda industry" generates.
@DDCorvus: it's a noble thought, but it would deter most zoos from obtaining anything without a studbook, such as most fish, invertebrates, reptiles etc. And since only a not too vocal minority is aware that most larger sharks in public aquaria are commercially WC or that pretty much all Fiji iguanas outside Fiji are illegal, and even less of them care, zoos will have no incentive to change anything about that (unless they get fined, as SDZ employess were.)
 
yes, the endemic reptiles of NZ, notably the geckoes and tuatara, are probably regularly smuggled out of the country - few people get caught and even fewer get any real punishment by the law.

It is disgusting, and anybody who supports animal smugglers should be shown (first-hand) exactly how those animals are treated and the state they arrive in - the "lucky" ones who survive the smuggling that is.

I've yet to encounter a smuggled tuatara in a collection outside of NZ, and I know some people who would add them to their collections if there was any chance whatsoever.

As for the latest Naultinus gecko incident: the two specimens were returned to NZ via Cologne zoo last year.
http://www.bfn.de/0401_pm.html?tx_ttnews[tt_news]=5408
 
A single zoo breeding Bitis parviocula doesn't guarantee that the species will "flourish" on the long run; if at all, it's the private (and moreover, the commercial) breeders who will take care of reproducing this species ex-situ (hopefully without going for morphs, scaleless mutations etc., but unfortunately also with a lot of false labelling regarding the actual origin of specimens).

Batto I think this is a right time to ask you, do you know for any breeding of Ethiopian mountain viper that occured in European zoos (in Sweden for example?, as it appears that Sweden is one of the hot spots in Europe in regards to diversity of captive venomous snakes). And what is the situation in private breeding sector - is this species well established?

And thanks to explanations.
And I don't liked to wrote that zoos are letting dirty job on private individuals, but that periodical smuggling of few individuals can be a benefit for a ex situ captive population, when the Governments are not allowing that. I think it is a matter of time till the Bothrops insularis appear in Europe (in zoos, as it may be already present in private breeders).
 
And I don't liked to wrote that zoos are letting dirty job on private individuals
:confused::confused:

I doubt that "periodical smuggling of few individuals" can be a benefit; changing the conservation politics of the states in question for the greater good, now that'd be a benefit.

I know of recent breedings of Bitis parviocula in Europe, among others in CZ, Germany and Scandinavia. Yeah, there are some good breeders out there in Sweden, but also in other European countries (NL, CH..)
The species is not yet well established, and specimens still score high prices on the market; however, their number does seem to grow and thus, prices are slowly decreasing. But don't get your hopes up; they're still pricey, and they are a Bitis species. So nothing for a newbie reptile keeper...;)
 
But don't get your hopes up; they're still pricey, and they are a Bitis species. So nothing for a newbie reptile keeper...;)

Thanks for info.

And :) I will be happy if just there is a well established captive population; from Bitis, probably I will start (if ever) with B. nasicornis.
 
Not an optimal species to start with...and in general not a very good species for public display purposes.
 
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