I've checked - it seems that Mogo doesn't have blackbuck or common marmoset, and Adelaide doesn't have common marmoset.
Okay, thanks for this
I've checked - it seems that Mogo doesn't have blackbuck or common marmoset, and Adelaide doesn't have common marmoset.
following the death of their previous generic tiger in July (Jabiru96's post above) - National Zoo Bengal tiger Bakkar dies - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) - National Zoo now has two males from Dreamworld:National Zoo and Aquarium no longer holds hybrid tiger.
The male Dora was imported to WPZ from Nagoya Zoo (Japan) in 2003. A female named Kua was imported from San Diego Zoo (USA) in 2006 but died at Tar
onga in 2007 before being moved on. A new female, Amala from Oklahoma City Zoo (USA), was imported in 2009. The first (only) breeding was a male calf born in October 2015.
interesting, all the Taronga press releases I've seen say they obtained him in 2003. However I just checked the studbook and he actually arrived at Taronga Zoo from Nagoya in October 2001. Oddly they (Taronga) just gloss over in their media that the rhino was at Taronga Zoo for almost two years before being moved to Western Plains.I remember Dora was at Taronga in May/June 2002 and stayed until the new exhibit was ready at western plain. It was definitely 2002 not 2003 that I saw him. Same exhibit that poor Kua was later in then the male Black Rhino and now the Zebras.
interesting, all the Taronga press releases I've seen say they obtained him in 2003. However I just checked the studbook and he actually arrived at Taronga Zoo from Nagoya in October 2001. Oddly they (Taronga) just gloss over in their media that the rhino was at Taronga Zoo for almost two years before being moved to Western Plains.
I know i just dont get it. Why wouldnt they want to get the facts out there. I'd be pretty dam excited in their shoes to have a Greater One Horned Rhino on display.
I would say that the black crested and white-cheeked came under the same name - crested gibbon Hylobates concolor until the split. Occasionally I have seen Silvery, Pileated, Agiles and Mueller's as subspecies underneath Hylobates lar, but it is pretty rare to lump so many distinct spp together. Otherwise you would be correct.hey were these the identified species of Gibbons up until the what late 1980s? I know that the zoos use to only identify certain species or something so I assumed these ten might have been the ones. Obviously I'm aware of species now identified as different and also subspecies but I wondered if this below would have been what that era considered the Gibbon species?
Agile Gibbon
Mullers Grey Gibbon
Black Crested Gibbon
Silvery Gibbon
Hoolock Gibbon
Pileated Gibbon
White-Handed Gibbon
White-Cheeked Gibbon
Kloss's Gibbon
Siamang