Five Sisters has bred a litter of striped skinks, one of which is albino.
Strachan the albino skunk kicks up a stink - Edinburgh Evening News
Strachan the albino skunk kicks up a stink - Edinburgh Evening News
Five Sisters has bred a litter of striped skinks, one of which is albino.
Strachan the albino skunk kicks up a stink - Edinburgh Evening News
When i went earlier in the year the Kinkajou was off show as it kept escaping from its enclosure.Has anyone been to this zoo? Looks like they have kinkajous in a nocturnal section. There's a website but not a lot of detail on it.
I assume that the five sisters management are able to exhibit such an amazing collection of small mammals because they are independent of BIAZA or any charitable trust and see no ethical barrier to buying from private keepers. There are very few avenues into the british zoo population these days for species now largely in private hands, hopefully the civets and springhare will breed well and start to show up at some of the bigger collections once again.
Yes and no. If a zoo want to obtain something, it usually will if it can do so without attracting negative publicity. Also these days so many species move around without being bought/sold, certainly the charitable zoos don't really have any budget to purchase stock in the way they would have done a few decades ago. I think today it is avoided where possible, and as staff, in some zoos, you are encouraged to avoid revealing how animals entered and left the collection unless it was as part of a breeding programme between zoos. Domestic stock are a whole different matter.