Heard they keep some rare species here, do you have a list? From pictures I've seen of this place, it doesn't paint a flattering picture to put it nicely.
@SusScrofa As far as I know, there's supposed to be an Assam macaque (if it's even an Assam macaque) and a Tonkean macaque (which I have not seen, not sure if it was off-exhibit or if it died).
Signage was absolutely terrible as it didn't specify the species being held in, rather just their genera (which made identification very difficult for some of the primates, mainly a few of their capuchins and macaques). You're honestly better off skipping this place as the facility was very deplorable, and there are much better zoos to visit around the area.
Here's the list I compiled of the species that could be identified, most of which I pulled from a USDA inspection report from December of 2022:
-Chimpanzee
-Bornean orangutan
-White-faced capuchin
-Tufted capuchin
-some other capuchins I could not identify
-Spider monkey (USDA report lists as a Black spider monkey which I highly doubt)
-Crab-eating macaque
-Rhesus macaque
-Japanese macaque
-Tonkean macaque (not seen)
-Assam macaque
-Hamadryas baboon
-Olive baboon (not seen)
-Ring-tailed lemur
-Brown lemur (listed as Red-fronted by the USDA report, but again I wouldn't trust it)
-Domestic goat (not seen)
-Zebu
-Domestic chicken
-Sulphur-crested cockatoo (not seen)
-Hybrid macaw (catalina)
-Military macaw
-American alligator
-Sulcata tortoise
-Red-eared slider
-Cooter (not sure if Florida or Florida red-bellied)
-Boa constrictor
-Burmese python
@Azamat Shackleford Thank you for the list, thats an interesting collection of primates! Too bad they have to be at this dumpy-looking place though....