A Buffy-Headed Capuchin has been born:
New arrival for our Capuchin group! - ZOO NEWS - Colchester Zoo
New arrival for our Capuchin group! - ZOO NEWS - Colchester Zoo
I am curious about the chimp group. They chimps all seemed to be ?? mmmm I don't want to say poor condition as I am not a vet or have much experience with chimps but most of them were not exactly pictures of health. Are they all old? What is the story of the brown chimp?
Does anybody know how many mandrills there are in the group, and what genders they are roughly? All I know is that two years ago it was 21, and that they received a new male this year.
Wow! Are there any drill groups of such a size in Europe?!
Nowhere near as many, no - to my knowledge the largest groups are at Tierpark Hellabrunn, Dvur Kralowe and Osnabruck, all of which hold around 7 individuals total.
Nowhere near as many, no - to my knowledge the largest groups are at Tierpark Hellabrunn, Dvur Kralowe and Osnabruck, all of which hold around 7 individuals total.
Gosh, that really is a size difference! Do you reckon there may ever be an attempt to make a bigger group?
Seems like some crossed wires vis a vis drills and mandrills.
I mentioned somewhere else recently- there's no reason Drills couldn't be kept in larger groups like Mandrills, but the current stock is so much smaller, leading to a slower increase. Also, as groups do increase, there is a demand from would- be new holders who hive off any excess animals to form new groups (e.g. Port Lympne females to Munich not so long ago) so the groups are prevented from expanding too rapidly. Without such movements of animals, Pandrillus in Africa have a group of 100.
It would be good to see larger groups building up in our zoos too- with only (is it) 2000 or so recently estimated in the wild, they need a larger reserve zoo population.
It is also important to maintain the genetic diversity in the zoo population by allowing as many males to breed as possible. This means restricting the number of females in each group and replacing the breeding males every few years.
Alan
They are 2 females from Cotswold Wildlife Park,who are in due course going to replace them with a pair of European Wolves!Two new Wolves arrived yesterday bringing the total number to three.