The Primate Building was an old building that housed Mandrills, South American monkeys, Lemurs, and Gibbons. It had indoor exhibits and outdoor cages. The building was demolished in 2014 and replaced by Creekside.
So can anyone help me with the worldwide captive aye-aye population? I've made a start on the European population, but would like some help with finishing it off and maybe also adding the Japanese and USA populations too?
Here's what I've got so far for the European population:
London (1.1.1)...
Some species of Lemur.
The day I went, the guests were especially insufferable; they made so much noise that all the lemurs just hid in the trees! >:C
This walk-through enclosure includes black and white ruffed lemurs, red ruffed lemurs, ring-tailed lemurs, crowned cranes and sulcata tortoises in the summer.
A newly formed protected park in Madagascar has been created.
The park stretches over 1,438 square miles (372,470 hectares) of rainforest in northeastern Madagascar and contains 20 of the island’s 103 lemur species, including the red-ruffed lemur and the silky sifaka.
This is Madagascar's...
Is the lemur pictured here a sifaka?, the paper calls it a white-legged lemur a name i have never heard used.
White-legged lemur calls razor-sharp stone forest home | The Sun |News