Amur leopard's Summer travels

amur leopard

Well-Known Member
5+ year member
Hello Zoochat,

This summer I will be doing a fair bit of travelling over several continents, so figured I'd start a thread for reviews of the various zoos I'll have the chance to poke my head into. For a general roadmap of the potential progress of this thread without listing out every zoo in the plans, I'll be moving around a few cities in Korea and Japan in August and then returning to the European mainland for a while in September.

I am writing from South Korea currently, and as such the first institution I will review will be a Korean aquarium, the COEX aquarium in Seoul, which should be up imminently. As well as the above I visited Loro Parque in July so a review of that will go up after all the reviews of Asian institutions.

Look forward to hearing your feedback on what I write and whether my takes on the places are at all controversial.
 
For all of the Asian collections that do not have a comprehensive species list on the forum I will upload a species list taken from my own notes from my visit, but in some cases, there are excellent (and recent) species lists already uploaded by other forum members. One such collection happens to be the COEX aquarium, which has an outstanding species list already uploaded by @Kim Minwoo just here: https://www.zoochat.com/community/threads/coex-aquarium-species-full-list.487509/. I recommend consulting it for some of the more niche species in the aquarium, particularly the endemics. As the list is fairly recent, there have been very few changes since. So, without further introduction:

COEX Aquarium, Seoul, South Korea - 06/08/23

The aquarium is located in the basement of quite a sizeable mall in South-eastern Seoul, connected to the centre of the city by multiple subway lines and bus services. As a result, the entrance fee is quite high, particularly when compared to the significantly cheaper Seoul Zoo further South. The aquarium progresses very gradually downwards through a pretty simple one way system through a number of themed areas.

Greeting the visitor is a small room with cylindrical tanks called the Rainbow lounge. Here is where the odd design and theming kicks in. The entire aquarium is sort of loosely themed on (I think) the Octonauts, a cartoon set underwater. As a result the majority of the aquarium is very much geared to quite a young audience and their families, meaning that a lot of it was perhaps hard to evaluate from a zoological perspective. Having said this, this is also where issues with overstocking and aquarium size started to come into play, with most tanks seemingly just having too many fish for their respective sizes.

Moving on, one comes to what was for me the best part of the aquarium - the Korean native area. As might be inferred, it housed a variety of aquatic species found within the country, including a few nice endemics. A whole series of smaller vivaria housed native frog species and a small tank was home to a Siberian chipmunk. The design was generally nice, with ample vegetation where necessary and tanks generally adequate. A few of the smaller tanks for certain larger fish species were pushing it a bit maybe, but otherwise this was all well done. Following on was a sturgeon and catfish exhibit which was also too small for so many fish.

Then came perhaps the most baffling exhibit I have seen in my life. I'm not sure what the Korean name translates to but the map calls it 'Fish in Wonderland'. The general gist of the exhibit was putting fish inside everyday objects (a postbox, a sink, a bookshelf, a telephone booth etc.). The issue was that the tanks were often far too small, left a lot to be desired in terms of privacy and from my perspective the fish were almost only there as ornaments. This theme recurred in several places further on in the aquarium. The only furnishings to most of the exhibits were little Lego sets depicting various scenes from the aforementioned cartoon I'm guessing. Having said all this, these sorts of wacky exhibits often have some sort of vision behind them, no matter how misguided. However as most of the signage was in Korean and my own grasp of the language is near non-existent, I will withhold from passing absolute judgement on the original idea behind the exhibit and instead focus purely on the objective quality of the tanks.

A slightly redeeming element of the exhibit was a tank for Doctorfish into which visitors could stick their hands. I had a go myself and the one hand that was nibbled on now feels significantly smoother than the other :D. Handwashing facilities were available nearby. Further on was an adequate Black-tailed prairie dog exhibit, although again lacking much in the way of privacy. Moving on swiftly, you come to Amazonia World, a pretty standard South American area. Ignoring some rather odd wax figures the area was fine although again suffered from overstocking. At least 11 arapaimas and a massive Shark catfish were in tank only really adequate for 2 or 3. And so on.

Next you come to the Marine Touch lab, an exhibit which stood out along with the endemics area. The area shows a laboratory area, with various tanks and flasks showing cultures of Artemisia at consecutive life stages, anemone and jellyfish growth, signage about relationships between anemonefish and the anemones, and for some reason a couple of passable exhibits for tortoises. It maybe wouldn't stand out at a more standard aquarium but in this case it was a welcome respite from the strange theming and lego bricks in fish tanks. Unfortunately the issues weren't done there however, as next up was the Mangrove and Beach area. The very first exhibit was a tiny, shallow tank for 3 Green sea turtles and various other fish. This was easily the worst exhibit in the whole place and made all the sourer by the fact that a larger, deeper tank opposite only housed much smaller fish and a further even larger tank housed stingrays that were of the right size to be mixed with the turtles. Here's to hoping the turtles find a better home, whether in the aquarium or outside it.

Beyond that is the 'Coral Gallery' an exhibit that is exactly as advertised in that the fish are in tanks with frames for paintings around them, as if in an Art Gallery. I couldn't decide whether this was another blatant case of displaying the fish as ornaments or an attempt to convey the beauty of these fish by displaying them in this way. In other words, whether it was a Scutes Family Gallery or a MOLA, said in no particular order to hopefully avoid resurfacing any such debate :P. Moving on, you come to the Ocean Kingdom, your bog standard ocean tank. Here the issue is depth and overstocking (again!). I've seen figures like 'over 100 sharks' thrown around on the internet about this exhibit and it sure feels that way. Massive numbers of Sand tigers, Blacktips, Sandbars, Nurse, Zebra etc. plus many individuals of about three stingray species, groupers, guitarfish and a massive school of some species of sardine-sized fish in a pool about 4 and a half metres deep at the deepest point makes for a very crowded tank. Several of the Sand tigers also had massive bellies - no clue why but I can't imagine some of the sharks haven't tried snacking on the hundreds of small fish circling the tank. There are a couple of large viewing windows with a seating area and a pair of walkthrough tunnels through both this tank and another for a variety of stingray species. Here the shallow depth of the pool is even more apparent.

Around the corner were the two individuals that were for me the primary (and admittedly very nearly only) objective of the visit. A pair of African manatees reside in a tank which is borderline in size and lacks and sort of privacy. Photo-taking was hard as the glass is curved and not particularly clean and lighting is far from ideal, but the main issue is that it is hard to imagine that the manatees are at all stimulated in the exhibit, an unfortunate reality that is echoed in the adjacent Harbour seal tank to a lesser extent. Either way I was of course happy to see the species, though the circumstances dampened things a little.

Finally there were a few jellyfish tanks with multicoloured lighting, a series of tiny and barren Axolotl tanks with the various colour morphs and an admissible Humboldt penguin exhibit with for some reason a fish tank within it?

In summary, the COEX Aquarium is clearly quite a strange place, at least from my perspective having only seen European (and one North American) aquaria. I don't want to make sweeping judgements on the vision behind the place or jump to any preemptive conclusions on the design, but for me it didn't work and from an objective point of view, overstocking was a recurring problem, as was tanks being somewhat too small for the number and size of inhabitants. It didn't really feel especially cohesive although again the language barrier may have influenced this. However, there were a few positives to be drawn in that there was no shortage of innovation and interesting ideas coming out of the place, but execution for me was lacking.

And that is that with this review. I recognise this all sounds quite harsh and disparaging but the good news is that the next review will draw far more positives once I've visited the institution a second time. Looking forward to hearing any feedback or answering any questions, and photos of select exhibits should be up in the gallery in due course.
 
Thanks for your great review of the COEX Aquarium and the photos are bonkers! Fish in traffic lights, a sink, a bookshelf, a telephone booth, etc., is awkward and weird. It's similar to how a few zoos have snakes and lizards living in tiny terrariums with decorative plates and giant mugs. It appears that the animals are simply ornaments to be viewed, with little thought given to husbandry concerns. It also sounds as if the manatees and sea turtles have awful exhibits, which is likely the case for most of the animals at this bizarre facility. Nevertheless, I really enjoyed reading about this aquarium and I'm looking forward to more of your reviews. :)
 
I never like these inside mall aquarium because they almost always feel crammed and out of place. COEX is definitely an average mall aquarium, not the best but also far from the worst. The price does very much make sense and its a common theme throughout this part of the region (zoos cheaper, aquarium more expensive), as can be seen from the various Tokyo zoos and aquariums.
I guess its the CMZ of aquarium now.
 
Seoul has two major zoological institutions - COEX and the Seoul Grand Park Zoo. And as we've already covered the former, here's a review of the latter.

Species lists for each section below, species of interest bolded, signed but not seen italicised.

Seoul Grand Park Zoo 04/08 and 07/08 (two separate visits)

Seoul Zoo is the first zoo on the Korean peninsula, founded in 1909 during the period of Japanese rule. The zoo suffered during the Second World War during which many of the animals were killed by the Japanese army or starved when the zookeepers were forced to leave. Originally the zoo was located at the site of an old palace (also destroyed during Japanese rule) but was relocated to the Grand park area in 1984 to give more space and to rebuild a replica of the Changgyeongwon Palace formerly situated there. The zoo has endured a multitude of escapes and accidents, with varying levels of accountability. However since its reopening in the mid-eighties it has maintained a fairly steady growth and the zoo I visited this week showed definite signs of a will to improve and renovate in the less modern areas.

The Grand Park as a whole is a collection of a few different parks, of which one is the zoo. Unfortunately, the zoo is also the park furthest from the subway station, at around 15-20 minutes walk along a very pleasant path. This process can be sped up by purchasing tickets for the Elephant tram, a service that for around 1500 won (about 1 GBP) takes you around to the zoo in a couple of minutes. The zoo itself is great value for money, with an adult ticket only 5,000 won (3.50 GBP). My visits were both on desperately hot days, so for the first day in particular there were very few people relative to normal visitation numbers from what I’ve heard and seen. But only sharing the park with a couple of hundred other visitors had its perks despite the at times overwhelming heat. The area is set in a very mountainous zone, a factor that makes for tremendous views from many areas in the park but also means that combined with the immensity of the park (25 minute walk from end to end) you leave quite exhausted.

The review will not progress in the same manner as the aquarium review. Instead I will borrow the concept used by @aardvark250 of covering the good, the bad and the ugly (and the excellent as there was some of that too in some areas). However as I don't particularly want to end another review with a negative outlook, I'll be going from ugly to excellent :). Pictures of the exhibits are already up so I recommend opening the media page and reading in conjunction with the images, photos of the animals will be up in due course.

Ugly

The zoo is 40 years old and unfortunately some of the enclosures are really starting to look it. The Pumas and Jaguars are kept in a horribly small cage. The only good thing I have to say about this exhibit is that at least there's a bit of privacy via a little bit of furnishing. The less said the better, but suffice to say these exhibits should absolutely be the next on the list for redevelopment.

The Oriental Pavilion is in a very similar boat in large parts. The pavilion holds a rather odd lineup of species - a bunch of macaque species, crocodiles, gibbons but also Royal pythons and Yellow anacondas. I don't know when the building was built but I sincerely hope it's also a remainder from the 80s as almost none of it is any good. There are outdoor exhibits for only two of the five macaque species and none of the gibbon species within the pavilion. These outdoor exhibits are themselves miserable and tiny cages for the macaques. Not a good look at all. The inside is very functional for the most part. The majority of the exhibits are below a big Beauval-type glass dome. Gibbons are housed in thin cages which in fairness rise to an impressive height. However, it is far from a good home for the primates, and the macaques have a similar situation indoors. A Chinese giant salamander (a smaller one at least) is in a tank around the right size for a Hynobius sp. At the very least the rest of the inhabitants of the pavilion generally have passable exhibits, though not without glare issues and lack of furnishings. All around another one that should be slated for demolition.

Ugly zone species lists:

Puma, Jaguar

Oriental Pavilion: Toque macaque, Rhesus macaque (I think, signage was poor here), Crested macaque, Northern pig-tailed macaque, Crab-eating macaque, Lar gibbon, Yellow-cheeked gibbon, Siamang, Striped hyena, European beaver, Indian star tortoise, African spurred tortoise, Korean ratsnake, Steppe ratsnake, Corn snake, Milksnake sp., Kingsnake sp., Yellow anaconda Royal python, Reticulated python, New Guinea crocodile, Giant Asian pond turtle, Green tree python, Green iguana, Burmese python, Chinese giant salamander.

Bad

Wasn't too sure where to put this one really but one little cage very nearly tipped the balance towards ugly. The Tropical birds pavilion is another old building (think World of Birds-style on the outside) except as opposed to the Oriental Pavilion they've actually done some nice things. There's definitely good ideas here - you have a walkthrough aviary with various turacos and parrots viewable from two levels, another nice little walkthrough predominantly for Budgerigars and some other nice ideas scattered around the place. This scattering is also unfortunately present in the species list, with the lineup seemingly completely random and uncoordinated. Glossy starling in with Monk parakeets and Budgies, Violet turacos and a Catalina macaw... While I don't mind a bit of continent-mixing, it was a bit much. They'd do well to try and rearrange a bit to make things a bit more cohesive. There are not so good elements of course - almost everything is indoors for starters, so that obviously limits things slightly. But with ample sunlight from skylights, I wish there was a bit more of an effort to introduce some natural substrate and try and grow some vegetation. Some of the smaller aviaries in particular are just too barren. The biggest blackmark for me, and I have no idea if this is a temporary or longer term thing was a Ring-necked parakeet in a minuscule cage within a much larger aviary. It made no sense to me and I hope it finds a better home.

I questioned whether to put the Marine Pavilion here, but it's at the better end of this category I guess. There isn't much to say - it's a series of about six to eight identical pools for Pinnipeds. They're all pretty small and though I couldn't accurately gauge depth they didn't look too great in that respect either. They're nothing shocking though, at least not for me.

Also adding on the flamingo lagoon, which isn't really bad per se but they all appear pinioned and it isn't particularly nice.

Bad zone species lists:

Tropical Birds Pavilion: Common hill myna, Greater glossy eared starling, Violet turaco, Red crested turaco, Rufous hornbill, Green winged macaw, Blue and yellow macaw, Monk parakeet, Rainbow lorikeet, Coconut lorikeet, Budgerigar, Cockatiel, White cockatoo, Citron crested cockatoo, Salmon crested cockatoo, Australian king parrot, Eclectus parrot, Scarlet macaw, Victoria crowned pigeon, Sun conure, Ring necked parakeet.

Marine Pavilion: California sea lion, Spotted seal, South American sea lion, South American fur seal, Harbor seal.

Flamingo lagoon: Lesser flamingo, Greater flamingo, American flamingo, Chilean flamingo.

Every exhibit from now on had good elements at the very least or was just ok. The difference between the high end of bad and low end of good is purely arbitrary and so this is now officially the ok zone.

Ok

The South American Pavilion was less a show of mediocrity than a mix of some dare I say very good and some bad. Bearing in mind the outdoor exhibits for anteaters, capybara, tapir, guanaco and maybe more are currently under construction/renovation, the South American area is currently just this building. It is quite the building. You enter and are immediately faced with a stretch of about 70 metres worth of caging which loops around almost the entire house. It's most distinctive feature however is the fact that the cages rise to about 15-20 metres in height and are viewable from two levels, ground and 'tree' level. There is no vegetation, just a bunch of caging, wooden swings, stairs, logs, buckets, platforms, tires, hammocks, you name it. It isn't pretty, nor is it naturalistic, but it is functional and I honestly kind of love it. In these cages are capuchins, spider monkeys, coatis, toucans, sloths (not all together but in various mixes). Looping around you come to separate pools for some of the largest crocs I've ever seen (salties) and Dwarf crocs, plus additional pools for snapping turtles and pig-nosed turtles. None of these are great, all quite shallow, all viewed from above and completely barren. On the very very edge of the less good end of mediocre for sure. Similar story with the next few exhibits for anacondas. Then come a few more exhibits which the sloths can venture into, an excellent exhibit for armadillos, a good substrate-filled exhibit for an invisible echidna (can always tell if it's a good echidna exhibit by whether you find the animal) and a Radiated tortoise-sloth mix which I found odd but fun. Overall, some very good bits, some not so great bits.

The Australian Zone was really quite pedestrian and non-descript other than a few Wallaroos which I wasn't exactly expecting. The paddocks were find for most, just wish there was a bit more privacy and protection from direct sunlight in places.

Similar story for the deer, although all of these paddocks had indoor stables and better protection. Species list was nice as well, with Barasingha and Sambar as well as two subspecies of sika deer present. In fact almost all of the hoofstock unless otherwise stated were in paddocks which were fine, often quite green and spacious. Sable antelope exhibit may have had a few too many individuals in it for the space available though. Otherwise zebra, giraffe, eland, etc. all fine. I'll list all the hoofstock other than those in good (or maybe in excellent?) just below.

Fairly pedestrian Red panda exhibit here too, with an overhead pass between two outdoor exhibits being the only thing of note. Also here is Stork Village, a small grouping of glass aviaries for various storks, ibises and spoonbills. Particularly of note here are the Saunders's gulls. The aviaries are fine, nice and tall with only one viewing window for each aviary and pine trees planted around the other sides for privacy. They're nothing special but they're quality exhibits for the species exhibited.

The Bear area very nearly made it to good but for the Sun bear housing, which I would say is well below par, being quite small and seemingly the only water available on hot summer days being rainwater in a gutter on the side of the exhibit. I'm not sure what the plan is with Sun bears but really they should be going in the newly vacated former American black bear exhibit which is much larger and nicer. The other bear exhibits are essentially converted grottos which give the bears ample space and are complete with pools, shaded areas and a waterfall, all of which came in conveniently for them during the heatwave when I visited. There's also a small run of the mill ASCO exhibit on the side.

Coyotes and wolves are exhibited in also quite nice exhibits, ample privacy and good furnishing. It was nice to see Coyotes as these are few and far between in Europe, particularly given they were very active.

Ok Zone species lists:

South American pavilion: Capybara, Tufted capuchin, Geoffroy's spider monkey, Linnaeus's two-toed sloth, Ring tailed coati, Six banded armadillo, Short beaked echidna, Toco toucan, Saltwater crocodile, Bengal slow loris, Dwarf crocodile, Yellow anaconda, Alligator snapping turtle, Pig nosed turtle.

Australian Zone: Southern cassowary, Common wallaroo, Emu, Red kangaroo, Eastern grey kangaroo.

Deer enclosures: Barasingha, Red deer (maybe hanglu?) Pere David's deer, Sambar, Fallow deer, Yakushima sika deer, Ezo sika deer, Hog deer.

Hoofstock exhibits and adjacent enclosures: Himalayan tahr, Mouflon, Dall sheep, Nubian ibex, Barbary sheep, Sable antelope, Common eland, Bactrian camel, Dromedary, Przewalski's horse, Fennec fox, Meerkat, Gemsbok, Plains zebra, Giraffe.

Red panda

Stork village: Oriental stork, African sacred ibis, Saunders's gull, Scarlet ibis, Grey crowned crane, Eurasian spoonbill.

Coyote, Grey wolf (maybe ssp. chanco?)

Bear exhibits: Asian small-clawed otter, Ussuri brown bear, European brown bear, Asiatic black bear, Sun bear.

Indian peafowl

Good

The Nocturnal Area I found to be quite well done - every species had a sizeable darkened indoor exhibit and a large outdoor exhibit, with sufficient furnishings and privacy. Naked mole rat was one of the most extensive glass tunnel and box networks I've seen and it was all quite well done. Fruit bat exhibit was closed for renovation when I visited though.

The Large Herbivores Pavilion and associated outdoor exhibits is a lot better than I thought it might be. The inside of the pavilion itself isn't great, with indoor holdings fairly basic, so hopefully the animals aren't all cooped up there in the winter. However the outdoor exhibits, particularly for the elephants, are outstanding in my opinion. Every outdoor exhibit is spacious, has shaded areas, some privacy, lots of different viewpoints at sometimes varying elevations. Other than the elephants they're fairly standard, but the latter exhibit introduces an idea I haven't actually seen at any other zoo. The elephants have a pretty large normal outdoor paddock, but what truly sets it apart is a small but signifcant patch of dense forest penned in by a large gate. I don't know quite how often the elephants are let into this small patch of forest but I understand it is fairly frequent. I know there are sensible reasons for forested elephant exhibits not being commonplace, but it was striking for me that I was surprised that Asian elephants (a primarily forest-dwelling species...) had a patch of forest to themselves in a zoo. I would to love to see the concept at least trialed in Europe, as I think it could be really stimulating for the animals. For an excellent picture of the animals enjoying this forest, please see this image by @JAMESTHEGREAT - hope he doesn't mind my linking his photo but post-visit it made me smile.

Also here are the African carnivores. There are small renovations underway in both their indoor pavilion area and the upper viewing to their enclosures so it's hard to gauge exactly how good the exhibits are but particularly the lions have a nice and large space, with good viewing opportunities from the ground as well as an elevated window in a cafe.

Talking of carnivores, the Asian carnivore exhibits are similarly good. Seeing abandoned cages very similiar, if not worse than those for pumas and jaguars covered above, I suspect these were the former homes of the cats in question. Now the leopards are in four or five very nice enclosures connected by overhead walkways, with multiple levels, ample furnishing and lots of height to climb. They're nothing massively special, but they cover all the bases and are pleasant for both the visitor and the cats. Exact same story for all the other species - tigers have several exhibits with waterfalls etc. It's all very consistently good.

Finally the Large Waterfowl Aviary is a massive circular aviary of around 90m in diameter for a bunch of waterfowl, storks, cranes and so on. Lots of water features etc. but the most telling thing was just how far the birds could fly continuously. A couple of storks in particular seemed to enjoy this feature of the exhibit.

Good exhibits species lists:

Nocturnal area: Northern raccoon, Aardvark, Kinkajou, Crested porcupine, Naked mole rat, Egyptian fruit bat.

Large Herbivores Pavilion
: Asian elephant, Southern white rhino, Cape buffalo, Asian water buffalo (signed as wild, almost certainly domestic surely) European bison, Watusi, American bison.

African Carnivores: Lion, Cheetah, Spotted hyena

Asian Carnivores: Yellow throated marten, Siberian tiger, North Chinese leopard, Amur leopard cat, Eurasian lynx, Asian badger.

Large Waterfowl Aviary: Black swan, White stork, Demoiselle crane, Sarus crane, Bean goose, Red crowned crane, White naped crane, Canada goose, Whooper swan, Easter white pelican, Swan goose.

Excellent

The Raptor Area is probably the best I've seen. Massive, tall aviaries for every species, lots of hiding spaces, so much height and live trees in most of the enclosures. Most notably absolutely giant aviaries for Cinereous vulture and White tailed eagle, the latter having a large pine tree in the middle of it. The height, the natural greenery and the (sometimes maybe a bit too much, particularly for the Tawny owls) space make this an absolutely top drawer area for these birds.

Around here is the Insectarium. This building’s name is a bit misleading as in fact it holds an impressive range of invertebrates as well as a number of both native and exotic amphibians. Each room had a clear focus, with one room for beetles, another for aquatic invertebrates (diving beetles, water scorpions and shore crabs for example, not jellies) Signage was also excellent, with both scientific and common names listed (though there were occasional lapses in this regard such as the listing of a few vivaria as housing ‘Theraphosidae sp.’. Other than this, the house also contained cabinets full of old invert specimens, reams of educative material on the walls and an outstanding attention to detail with the theming, making it particularly accessible to children. The pictures I've uploaded really don't do the place justice. The house finished off with a large greenhouse supposedly for butterflies, although a somewhat gaping design flaw may or may not have contributed to the apparent lack of the latter within the exhibit. However the lack of butterflies was made up for by the amphibian vivariums scattered along the path through the well-planted hall. The vivariums were generally on the small side but well furnished to the extent that spotting the frogs took a great deal of persistence (some never showed themselves). From someone who has one of the best insect houses in Europe essentially on their doorstep, I was deeply impressed by the Insectarium and it definitely outstripped London’s in some ways.

Excellent zone species lists:

Raptor area: Andean condor, Tawny owl, Harris' hawk, Cinereous vulture, Bateleur, White-tailed eagle, European eagle owl.

Insectarium (by room):

Giant stag beetle, Dorcus titanus castanicolor
Little stag beetle, Dorcus rectus rectus
Rhinoceros beetle, Allomyrina dichotoma (and larvae)
White spotted flower chafer, Protaetia brevitarsis seulensis
Japanese stag beetle, Dorcus hopei binodulosus

Axolotl, Ambystoma mexicanum (both black and white)

Guppy, Poecilia reticulata
Japanese giant water bug, Appasus japonicus
Red clawed crab, Chiromantes haematocheir
Kurobenkeigani, Chiromantes dehaani
Chinese water scorpion, Ranatra chinensis
Japanese water scorpion, Laccotrephes japonensis
Diving beetle sp., Cybister brevis

Genji-botaru (firefly), Aquatica lateralis

Two spotted cricket, Gryllus bimaculatus
Superworm, Zophobas morio

Jungle centipede, Scolopendra subspinipes
African giant millipede, Archispirostreptus gigas
Asian forest scorpion, Heterometrus petersii
Theraphosidae sp.

Razorback musk turtle, Sternotherus carinatus
Boreal digging frog, Kaloula borealis
Seoul pond frog, Pelophylax chosenicus
Korean large brown frog, Rana uenoi
Black spotted pond frog, Rana nigromaculata
Japanese tree frog, Rana japonica
White’s tree frog, Litoria caerulea
Cane toad, Rhinella marina
Brazilian horned frog, Ceratophrys aurita
Tomato frog, Dyscophus antongilii
Budgett’s frog, Lepidobatrachus laevis

Conclusion

And that is it for what is now a pretty long review! Hopefully it was fairly engaging throughout. Seoul Zoo is a place full of innovation, of good ideas, of bad ideas, of excellent exhibits but also just as many bad exhibits. The bad exhibits are going to be present in any zoo at some point - what matters is what the zoo does about it, and how fast. At the time of my visit, there was ongoing construction in at least eight different areas of the zoo. While I maybe didn't get to see everything due to this, it is a very welcome sight in the context of a zoo where there is much to be done. Many bad zoos sit on what they have, choosing to ignore or neglect unsuitable exhibits. Seoul Zoo is not one of those, and from my perspective is almost aggressively proactive in its approach to renovation. This year it's the primates that receive a (much needed) new pavilion and outdoor area, but next year it might be the pumas/jaguars or the Oriental Pavilion given the rate at which these changes are made.

Another element I think I should mention is the Native Species Breeding Centre, an area that is currently offshow but looks like it may well be viewable to the public before long - it is essentially a fairly intensive breeding facility for eight endangered Korean species: Seoul frog, Reeves' turtle, Long-tailed goral. Black faced spoonbill, Hill pigeon, Korean red fox, Eurasian otter and Amur leopard cat. These facilities are far from pretty but their do the job and I understand they've had some success in breeding these species.

Either way, Seoul Zoo is clearly a zoo showing its intention to move towards bigger and better, and that is just as well since the zoo is absolutely massive. If the zoo manages to fix up the exhibits that I mentioned at the top of the post and maintains those towards the bottom, I hope it might then become one that is mentioned in the same breath as the best in Asia.
 
Last edited:
Thanks for your great review of the COEX Aquarium and the photos are bonkers! Fish in traffic lights, a sink, a bookshelf, a telephone booth, etc., is awkward and weird. It's similar to how a few zoos have snakes and lizards living in tiny terrariums with decorative plates and giant mugs. It appears that the animals are simply ornaments to be viewed, with little thought given to husbandry concerns. It also sounds as if the manatees and sea turtles have awful exhibits, which is likely the case for most of the animals at this bizarre facility. Nevertheless, I really enjoyed reading about this aquarium and I'm looking forward to more of your reviews. :)

Thanks for the kind words, much appreciated especially coming from such an experienced reviewer. It is a really odd place and I have no idea what their vision for the future looks like, so in all honesty I probably won't revisit ever unless some serious change takes place. In spite of it all, I'm glad I went, and not only for the manatees.
I never like these inside mall aquarium because they almost always feel crammed and out of place. COEX is definitely an average mall aquarium, not the best but also far from the worst. The price does very much make sense and its a common theme throughout this part of the region (zoos cheaper, aquarium more expensive), as can be seen from the various Tokyo zoos and aquariums.
I guess its the CMZ of aquarium now.

You're right about the malls, especially on busy days the corridors are heaving and space is limited for the animals as well as any expansion. It felt like it had much less going for it than the zoo half an hour Southwest. The aquarium prices make sense, but the juxtaposition between the zoo (the much better insitution) at 5,000 won and the aquarium at 33,000 won was worth noting I thought.
 
Last edited:
Seoul has two major zoological institutions - COEX and the Seoul Grand Park Zoo. And as we've already covered the former, here's a review of the latter.

Species lists for each section below, species of interest bolded, signed but not seen italicised.

Seoul Grand Park Zoo 04/08 and 07/08 (two separate visits)

Seoul Zoo is the first zoo on the Korean peninsula, founded in 1909 during the period of Japanese rule. The zoo suffered during the Second World War during which many of the animals were killed by the Japanese army or starved when the zookeepers were forced to leave. Originally the zoo was located at the site of an old palace (also destroyed during Japanese rule) but was relocated to the Grand park area in 1984 to give more space and to rebuild a replica of the Changgyeongwon Palace formerly situated there. The zoo has endured a multitude of escapes and accidents, with varying levels of accountability. However since its reopening in the mid-eighties it has maintained a fairly steady growth and the zoo I visited this week showed definite signs of a will to improve and renovate in the less modern areas.

The Grand Park as a whole is a collection of a few different parks, of which one is the zoo. Unfortunately, the zoo is also the park furthest from the subway station, at around 15-20 minutes walk along a very pleasant path. This process can be sped up by purchasing tickets for the Elephant tram, a service that for around 1500 won (about 1 GBP) takes you around to the zoo in a couple of minutes. The zoo itself is great value for money, with an adult ticket only 5,000 won (3.50 GBP). My visits were both on desperately hot days, so for the first day in particular there were very few people relative to normal visitation numbers from what I’ve heard and seen. But only sharing the park with a couple of hundred other visitors had its perks despite the at times overwhelming heat. The area is set in a very mountainous zone, a factor that makes for tremendous views from many areas in the park but also means that combined with the immensity of the park (25 minute walk from end to end) you leave quite exhausted.

The review will not progress in the same manner as the aquarium review. Instead I will borrow the concept used by @aardvark250 of covering the good, the bad and the ugly (and the excellent as there was some of that too in some areas). However as I don't particularly want to end another review with a negative outlook, I'll be going from ugly to excellent :). Pictures of the exhibits are already up so I recommend opening the media page and reading in conjunction with the images, photos of the animals will be up in due course.

Ugly

The zoo is 40 years old and unfortunately some of the enclosures are really starting to look it. The Pumas and Jaguars are kept in a horribly small cage. The only good thing I have to say about this exhibit is that at least there's a bit of privacy via a little bit of furnishing. The less said the better, but suffice to say these exhibits should absolutely be the next on the list for redevelopment.

The Oriental Pavilion is in a very similar boat in large parts. The pavilion holds a rather odd lineup of species - a bunch of macaque species, crocodiles, gibbons but also Royal pythons and Yellow anacondas. I don't know when the building was built but I sincerely hope it's also a remainder from the 80s as almost none of it is any good. There are outdoor exhibits for only two of the five macaque species and none of the gibbon species within the pavilion. These outdoor exhibits are themselves miserable and tiny cages for the macaques. Not a good look at all. The inside is very functional for the most part. The majority of the exhibits are below a big Beauval-type glass dome. Gibbons are housed in thin cages which in fairness rise to an impressive height. However, it is far from a good home for the primates, and the macaques have a similar situation indoors. A Chinese giant salamander (a smaller one at least) is in a tank around the right size for a Hynobius sp. At the very least the rest of the inhabitants of the pavilion generally have passable exhibits, though not without glare issues and lack of furnishings. All around another one that should be slated for demolition.

Ugly zone species lists:

Puma, Jaguar

Oriental Pavilion: Toque macaque, Rhesus macaque (I think, signage was poor here), Crested macaque, Northern pig-tailed macaque, Crab-eating macaque, Lar gibbon, Yellow-cheeked gibbon, Siamang, Striped hyena, European beaver, Indian star tortoise, African spurred tortoise, Korean ratsnake, Steppe ratsnake, Corn snake, Milksnake sp., Kingsnake sp., Yellow anaconda Royal python, Reticulated python, New Guinea crocodile, Giant Asian pond turtle, Green tree python, Green iguana, Burmese python, Chinese giant salamander.

Bad

Wasn't too sure where to put this one really but one little cage very nearly tipped the balance towards ugly. The Tropical birds pavilion is another old building (think World of Birds-style on the outside) except as opposed to the Oriental Pavilion they've actually done some nice things. There's definitely good ideas here - you have a walkthrough aviary with various turacos and parrots viewable from two levels, another nice little walkthrough predominantly for Budgerigars and some other nice ideas scattered around the place. This scattering is also unfortunately present in the species list, with the lineup seemingly completely random and uncoordinated. Glossy starling in with Monk parakeets and Budgies, Violet turacos and a Catalina macaw... While I don't mind a bit of continent-mixing, it was a bit much. They'd do well to try and rearrange a bit to make things a bit more cohesive. There are not so good elements of course - almost everything is indoors for starters, so that obviously limits things slightly. But with ample sunlight from skylights, I wish there was a bit more of an effort to introduce some natural substrate and try and grow some vegetation. Some of the smaller aviaries in particular are just too barren. The biggest blackmark for me, and I have no idea if this is a temporary or longer term thing was a Ring-necked parakeet in a minuscule cage within a much larger aviary. It made no sense to me and I hope it finds a better home.

I questioned whether to put the Marine Pavilion here, but it's at the better end of this category I guess. There isn't much to say - it's a series of about six to eight identical pools for Pinnipeds. They're all pretty small and though I couldn't accurately gauge depth they didn't look too great in that respect either. They're nothing shocking though, at least not for me.

Also adding on the flamingo lagoon, which isn't really bad per se but they all appear pinioned and it isn't particularly nice.

Bad zone species lists:

Tropical Birds Pavilion: Common hill myna, Greater glossy eared starling, Violet turaco, Red crested turaco, Rufous hornbill, Green winged macaw, Blue and yellow macaw, Monk parakeet, Rainbow lorikeet, Coconut lorikeet, Budgerigar, Cockatiel, White cockatoo, Citron crested cockatoo, Salmon crested cockatoo, Australian king parrot, Eclectus parrot, Scarlet macaw, Victoria crowned pigeon, Sun conure, Ring necked parakeet.

Marine Pavilion: California sea lion, Spotted seal, South American sea lion, South American fur seal, Harbor seal.

Flamingo lagoon: Lesser flamingo, Greater flamingo, American flamingo, Chilean flamingo.

Every exhibit from now on had good elements at the very least or was just ok. The difference between the high end of bad and low end of good is purely arbitrary and so this is now officially the ok zone.

Ok

The South American Pavilion was less a show of mediocrity than a mix of some dare I say very good and some bad. Bearing in mind the outdoor exhibits for anteaters, capybara, tapir, guanaco and maybe more are currently under construction/renovation, the South American area is currently just this building. It is quite the building. You enter and are immediately faced with a stretch of about 70 metres worth of caging which loops around almost the entire house. It's most distinctive feature however is the fact that the cages rise to about 15-20 metres in height and are viewable from two levels, ground and 'tree' level. There is no vegetation, just a bunch of caging, wooden swings, stairs, logs, buckets, platforms, tires, hammocks, you name it. It isn't pretty, nor is it naturalistic, but it is functional and I honestly kind of love it. In these cages are capuchins, spider monkeys, coatis, toucans, sloths (not all together but in various mixes). Looping around you come to separate pools for some of the largest crocs I've ever seen (salties) and Dwarf crocs, plus additional pools for snapping turtles and pig-nosed turtles. None of these are great, all quite shallow, all viewed from above and completely barren. On the very very edge of the less good end of mediocre for sure. Similar story with the next few exhibits for anacondas. Then come a few more exhibits which the sloths can venture into, an excellent exhibit for armadillos, a good substrate-filled exhibit for an invisible echidna (can always tell if it's a good echidna exhibit by whether you find the animal) and a Radiated tortoise-sloth mix which I found odd but fun. Overall, some very good bits, some not so great bits.

The Australian Zone was really quite pedestrian and non-descript other than a few Wallaroos which I wasn't exactly expecting. The paddocks were find for most, just wish there was a bit more privacy and protection from direct sunlight in places.

Similar story for the deer, although all of these paddocks had indoor stables and better protection. Species list was nice as well, with Barasingha and Sambar as well as two subspecies of sika deer present. In fact almost all of the hoofstock unless otherwise stated were in paddocks which were fine, often quite green and spacious. Sable antelope exhibit may have had a few too many individuals in it for the space available though. Otherwise zebra, giraffe, eland, etc. all fine. I'll list all the hoofstock other than those in good (or maybe in excellent?) just below.

Fairly pedestrian Red panda exhibit here too, with an overhead pass between two outdoor exhibits being the only thing of note. Also here is Stork Village, a small grouping of glass aviaries for various storks, ibises and spoonbills. Particularly of note here are the Saunders's gulls. The aviaries are fine, nice and tall with only one viewing window for each aviary and pine trees planted around the other sides for privacy. They're nothing special but they're quality exhibits for the species exhibited.

The Bear area very nearly made it to good but for the Sun bear housing, which I would say is well below par, being quite small and seemingly the only water available on hot summer days being rainwater in a gutter on the side of the exhibit. I'm not sure what the plan is with Sun bears but really they should be going in the newly vacated former American black bear exhibit which is much larger and nicer. The other bear exhibits are essentially converted grottos which give the bears ample space and are complete with pools, shaded areas and a waterfall, all of which came in conveniently for them during the heatwave when I visited. There's also a small run of the mill ASCO exhibit on the side.

Coyotes and wolves are exhibited in also quite nice exhibits, ample privacy and good furnishing. It was nice to see Coyotes as these are few and far between in Europe, particularly given they were very active.

Ok Zone species lists:

South American pavilion: Capybara, Tufted capuchin, Geoffroy's spider monkey, Linnaeus's two-toed sloth, Ring tailed coati, Six banded armadillo, Short beaked echidna, Toco toucan, Saltwater crocodile, Bengal slow loris, Dwarf crocodile, Yellow anaconda, Alligator snapping turtle, Pig nosed turtle.

Australian Zone: Southern cassowary, Common wallaroo, Emu, Red kangaroo, Eastern grey kangaroo.

Deer enclosures: Barasingha, Red deer (maybe hanglu?) Pere David's deer, Sambar, Fallow deer, Yakushima sika deer, Ezo sika deer, Hog deer.

Hoofstock exhibits and adjacent enclosures: Himalayan tahr, Mouflon, Dall sheep, Nubian ibex, Barbary sheep, Sable antelope, Common eland, Bactrian camel, Dromedary, Przewalski's horse, Fennec fox, Meerkat, Gemsbok, Plains zebra, Giraffe.

Red panda

Stork village: Oriental stork, African sacred ibis, Saunders's gull, Scarlet ibis, Grey crowned crane, Eurasian spoonbill.

Coyote, Grey wolf (maybe ssp. chanco?)

Bear exhibits: Asian small-clawed otter, Ussuri brown bear, European brown bear, Asiatic black bear, Sun bear.

Indian peafowl

Good

The Nocturnal Area I found to be quite well done - every species had a sizeable darkened indoor exhibit and a large outdoor exhibit, with sufficient furnishings and privacy. Naked mole rat was one of the most extensive glass tunnel and box networks I've seen and it was all quite well done. Fruit bat exhibit was closed for renovation when I visited though.

The Large Herbivores Pavilion and associated outdoor exhibits is a lot better than I thought it might be. The inside of the pavilion itself isn't great, with indoor holdings fairly basic, so hopefully the animals aren't all cooped up there in the winter. However the outdoor exhibits, particularly for the elephants, are outstanding in my opinion. Every outdoor exhibit is spacious, has shaded areas, some privacy, lots of different viewpoints at sometimes varying elevations. Other than the elephants they're fairly standard, but the latter exhibit introduces an idea I haven't actually seen at any other zoo. The elephants have a pretty large normal outdoor paddock, but what truly sets it apart is a small but signifcant patch of dense forest penned in by a large gate. I don't know quite how often the elephants are let into this small patch of forest but I understand it is fairly frequent. I know there are sensible reasons for forested elephant exhibits not being commonplace, but it was striking for me that I was surprised that Asian elephants (a primarily forest-dwelling species...) had a patch of forest to themselves in a zoo. I would to love to see the concept at least trialed in Europe, as I think it could be really stimulating for the animals. For an excellent picture of the animals enjoying this forest, please see this image by @JAMESTHEGREAT - hope he doesn't mind my linking his photo but post-visit it made me smile.

Also here are the African carnivores. There are small renovations underway in both their indoor pavilion area and the upper viewing to their enclosures so it's hard to gauge exactly how good the exhibits are but particularly the lions have a nice and large space, with good viewing opportunities from the ground as well as an elevated window in a cafe.

Talking of carnivores, the Asian carnivore exhibits are similarly good. Seeing abandoned cages very similiar, if not worse than those for pumas and jaguars covered above, I suspect these were the former homes of the cats in question. Now the leopards are in four or five very nice enclosures connected by overhead walkways, with multiple levels, ample furnishing and lots of height to climb. They're nothing massively special, but they cover all the bases and are pleasant for both the visitor and the cats. Exact same story for all the other species - tigers have several exhibits with waterfalls etc. It's all very consistently good.

Finally the Large Waterfowl Aviary is a massive circular aviary of around 90m in diameter for a bunch of waterfowl, storks, cranes and so on. Lots of water features etc. but the most telling thing was just how far the birds could fly continuously. A couple of storks in particular seemed to enjoy this feature of the exhibit.

Good exhibits species lists:

Nocturnal area: Northern raccoon, Aardvark, Kinkajou, Crested porcupine, Naked mole rat, Egyptian fruit bat.

Large Herbivores Pavilion
: Asian elephant, Southern white rhino, Cape buffalo, Asian water buffalo (signed as wild, almost certainly domestic surely) European bison, Watusi, American bison.

African Carnivores: Lion, Cheetah, Spotted hyena

Asian Carnivores: Yellow throated marten, Siberian tiger, North Chinese leopard, Amur leopard cat, Eurasian lynx, Asian badger.

Large Waterfowl Aviary: Black swan, White stork, Demoiselle crane, Sarus crane, Bean goose, Red crowned crane, White naped crane, Canada goose, Whooper swan, Easter white pelican, Swan goose.

Excellent

The Raptor Area is probably the best I've seen. Massive, tall aviaries for every species, lots of hiding spaces, so much height and live trees in most of the enclosures. Most notably absolutely giant aviaries for Cinereous vulture and White tailed eagle, the latter having a large pine tree in the middle of it. The height, the natural greenery and the (sometimes maybe a bit too much, particularly for the Tawny owls) space make this an absolutely top drawer area for these birds.

Around here is the Insectarium. This building’s name is a bit misleading as in fact it holds an impressive range of invertebrates as well as a number of both native and exotic amphibians. Each room had a clear focus, with one room for beetles, another for aquatic invertebrates (diving beetles, water scorpions and shore crabs for example, not jellies) Signage was also excellent, with both scientific and common names listed (though there were occasional lapses in this regard such as the listing of a few vivaria as housing ‘Theraphosidae sp.’. Other than this, the house also contained cabinets full of old invert specimens, reams of educative material on the walls and an outstanding attention to detail with the theming, making it particularly accessible to children. The pictures I've uploaded really don't do the place justice. The house finished off with a large greenhouse supposedly for butterflies, although a somewhat gaping design flaw may or may not have contributed to the apparent lack of the latter within the exhibit. However the lack of butterflies was made up for by the amphibian vivariums scattered along the path through the well-planted hall. The vivariums were generally on the small side but well furnished to the extent that spotting the frogs took a great deal of persistence (some never showed themselves). From someone who has one of the best insect houses in Europe essentially on their doorstep, I was deeply impressed by the Insectarium and it definitely outstripped London’s in some ways.

Excellent zone species lists:

Raptor area: Andean condor, Tawny owl, Harris' hawk, Cinereous vulture, Bateleur, White-tailed eagle, European eagle owl.

Insectarium (by room):

Giant stag beetle, Dorcus titanus castanicolor
Little stag beetle, Dorcus rectus rectus
Rhinoceros beetle, Allomyrina dichotoma (and larvae)
White spotted flower chafer, Protaetia brevitarsis seulensis
Japanese stag beetle, Dorcus hopei binodulosus

Axolotl, Ambystoma mexicanum (both black and white)

Guppy, Poecilia reticulata
Japanese giant water bug, Appasus japonicus
Red clawed crab, Chiromantes haematocheir
Kurobenkeigani, Chiromantes dehaani
Chinese water scorpion, Ranatra chinensis
Japanese water scorpion, Laccotrephes japonensis
Diving beetle sp., Cybister brevis

Genji-botaru (firefly), Aquatica lateralis

Two spotted cricket, Gryllus bimaculatus
Superworm, Zophobas morio

Jungle centipede, Scolopendra subspinipes
African giant millipede, Archispirostreptus gigas
Asian forest scorpion, Heterometrus petersii
Theraphosidae sp.

Razorback musk turtle, Sternotherus carinatus
Boreal digging frog, Kaloula borealis
Seoul pond frog, Pelophylax chosenicus
Korean large brown frog, Rana uenoi
Black spotted pond frog, Rana nigromaculata
Japanese tree frog, Rana japonica
White’s tree frog, Litoria caerulea
Cane toad, Rhinella marina
Brazilian horned frog, Ceratophrys aurita
Tomato frog, Dyscophus antongilii
Budgett’s frog, Lepidobatrachus laevis

Conclusion

And that is it for what is now a pretty long review! Hopefully it was fairly engaging throughout. Seoul Zoo is a place full of innovation, of good ideas, of bad ideas, of excellent exhibits but also just as many bad exhibits. The bad exhibits are going to be present in any zoo at some point - what matters is what the zoo does about it, and how fast. At the time of my visit, there was ongoing construction in at least eight different areas of the zoo. While I maybe didn't get to see everything due to this, it is a very welcome sight in the context of a zoo where there is much to be done. Many bad zoos sit on what they have, choosing to ignore or neglect unsuitable exhibits. Seoul Zoo is not one of those, and from my perspective is almost aggressively proactive in its approach to renovation. This year it's the primates that receive a (much needed) new pavilion and outdoor area, but next year it might be the pumas/jaguars or the Oriental Pavilion given the rate at which these changes are made.

Another element I think I should mention is the Native Species Breeding Centre, an area that is currently offshow but looks like it may well be viewable to the public before long - it is essentially a fairly intensive breeding facility for eight endangered Korean species: Seoul frog, Reeves' turtle, Long-tailed goral. Black faced spoonbill, Hill pigeon, Korean red fox, Eurasian otter and Amur leopard cat. These facilities are far from pretty but their do the job and I understand they've had some success in breeding these species.

Either way, Seoul Zoo is clearly a zoo showing its intention to move towards bigger and better, and that is just as well since the zoo is absolutely massive. If the zoo manages to fix up the exhibits that I mentioned at the top of the post and maintains those towards the bottom, I hope it might then become one that is mentioned in the same breath as the best in Asia.

In my haste, I forgot to add, at the top end of the Good zone, the Hippo exhibits. The zoo holds both hippo species and I found that their housing of both was great. Sizeable pools, multiple separation paddocks and ample space. But the most noteworthy thing was that the Common hippos had a nice grassy paddock for grazing, a feature that continues to be a rarity in Europe and NA, overlooked in favour of larger, clearer pools. It isn’t flashy but it is great for the animals and costs the zoo almost nothing, and I really appreciated the addition.

The next review will be of a Japanese zoo with any luck :).
 
Incredible reviews, Amur Leopard! It’s really interesting to hear about South Korean collections that I will realistically never visit myself in such detail. The aquarium sounds bizarre to say the least, and from your photos, I feel I have to see it for myself to comment, but do fear that it is not as good for the fish as it is for the animals. Seeing African Manatees must have been great - how many other zoos around the world still hold the species?

Seoul Zoo looks interesting, too. Regarding the elephants, the forest area looks brilliant, and it actually has been trialed in Europe; Noah’s Ark Zoo Farm has the so- called ‘willow plantation’ at the far end of their bull enclosure, which like at Seoul, the elephants can visit semi-regularly. Sadly, it is at the very far end of the enclosure, and it is difficult to properly admire or photograph the elephants while they are using it, but all the same they look stunning among the trees.
 
It’s great to see this review of Seoul Zoo. I was in Korea years ago - not much information on the internet then - and the only references to the zoo I found in travel books suggested it was a bit grim and best avoided.

I doubt I will ever be back there but it’s good to get an up to date picture of what it is actually like.
 
I know I said it would be a zoo but instead here's a little aquarium I stopped off at on a little island off Hiroshima:

Miyajima Public Aquarium - 10/08

This aquarium is located on the island of Itsukushima (more commonly called Miyajima) off the coast of Hiroshima. The island is almost entirely covered in quite thick mountainous forest, but its Northern end is home to a large shrine with a very famous often-submerged massive Torii in the sea. The town around it is mostly formed of quite traditional Japanese buildings, though oriented towards tourists for sure, as well as being flooded by tame deer like in Nara.

The aquarium itself is set in a fairly traditional-looking and small building, to the extent that you really wouldn't guess what it was from the outside (did a bit of a double take myself). While it isn't terribly modern on the outside, it does function as a modern facility within thankfully. It was refreshing to see an aquarium that fit a lot more with my conception of how an aquarium should be housing and presenting its animals than the one reviewed above. Species lists all at the bottom :).

I visited very late in the day about 45 minutes before closing time but the people at the entrance were really kind about it. I did have to rush through a few areas though and I think I would have taken a fair bit more time over the facility if I had it to begin with. You start off with the local seas and rivers area which I thought was really well done, a lot of planning and foresight had clearly gone into the area and it was very much appreciated. The only thing, and something that has been quite a recurring theme across many of the collections I've visited over here is that tanks are a bit overstocked sometimes. Maybe just having fewer fish in the same environment, particularly in such a nice exhibit, would make things better for the tank's inhabitants. I know there is a temptation to make a tank seem bustling and to promote interactions but there comes a time when there are just too many fish for the space. Another thing I really appreciated was having species from a variety of classes in the same tank. Not just fish were exhibited here; horseshoe crabs, giant salamanders, oysters, Japanese toads, several snail species etc. were all housed here often with fish and it remained a recurring theme throughout the aquarium.

Exhibitry was also interesting. Several tanks in the aquarium imitated oyster farms since Miyajima is an oyster hotspot and so the environment of the long strings packed with oysters is a common one around the island for its fish. It was really nice to see an aquarium really embracing the local sealife along with the influences that humans have on their habitats. As well as this for some of the freshwater exhibits you'd have smaller tanks for aquatic insects on the bank of a much larger open tank for local fish. The only slight lowpoint was a tank for Black-spotted pond frogs and Wrinkled frogs that was well overstocked and lacked privacy. Otherwise, really good.

Moving on you come to a larger tank with the same oyster farm habitat representation, viewable on two levels and predominantly housing shoals of smaller fish if I remember correctly. Interestingly presented and a new perspective, was very nice to see. Next up is your ubiquitous tank for reef sharks and rays but there are a few things about this tank which made it a bit more interesting for me. First of all it was significantly deeper than most of its kind, viewable from three levels (one above the surface, as many of the rays congregated there) but also the species exhibited were far from bog standard. Naru eagle rays in particular were a species I had never heard of and it was nice to see. Again, maybe a little overstocked though.

Next up was for me perhaps the most interesting section, with small tanks for marine invertebrates in particular. Fiddler crabs, roaches, ice gobies, hermit crabs and mantis shrimp. I particularly enjoyed seeing box crabs. The tanks themselves were on the small side though and lacked privacy, but was interesting for sure to see these species that aren't exactly a staple in most aquaria. One tank in particular for medium-sized fish was horribly overstocked and will post pictures later in the gallery along with all the nicer tanks at this aquarium.

Next were the stars of the aquarium, the finless porpoises. These are the cutest cetaceans I've ever had the pleasure of seeing and the three individuals in the tank were very playful and active. The tank was too small for them though, and I honestly don't think I see an easy solution for the aquarium. There isn't really a larger tank in the building, and there is no potential for enlarging the current one, so at some point something has to give. Of the 4 cetacean species I've seen this summer, these were the ones whose intelligence shone through the most, and whose tank was perhaps the most thought-provoking of the lot. I don't want to trigger a renewed discussion on the topic but there was definitely a bittersweet feeling about seeing them, as with a bunch of the big rarities on this trip.

A couple of nice jellyfish tanks later is another large-ish tank with groupers and rays - this time decent on the privacy front but again there were just too many fish for the tank's size. Was nice to see Malabar grouper though. Nearing the end of the aquarium now was a corridor full of smaller tanks for an interesting lineup of species, nothing too special though on the exhibitry front. Then things ended on a bit of a low. In fairness, I had no idea quite what was going on in the final area of the aquarium as I came quite late. I understand that they have sealion shows earlier in the day (given they're Steller's it would likely have been quite impressive) but the tank for these sea lions was quite small at least from the one viewpoint which I could locate as I was rushing to leave in time. Saw an absolutely gigantic male sitting on the viewing area though - crazy how big Steller's sea lions are. The penguins didn't really have a great exhibit either, but otters were fairly well taken care of in a pair of exhibits joined by an acrylic side overhead. Overall, an area maybe spoilt by the fact that I didn't have much time left on the clock, but if there was nothing more to the penguin's exhibit than it seemed, quite disappointing on that front.

In summary, great first area, some interesting bits in the middle particularly species-wise and then some potentially not so good areas for the larger and more 'landmark' species of the aquarium. Overstocking a problem in a fair few of the tanks but not to the same extent as in COEX thankfully, and I appreciated the lack of lego and telephone booths here that the former aquarium couldn't seem to let go of. Anyway, in principle nice aquarium but definitely some points where the size of the building and limited expansion space was coming back to bite it.

Species list:

But just before I do list all the species, it is worth noting that signage was outstanding throughout, with both scientific and common names in both Japanese and English present throughout and a few sentences of info on every species in Japanese below. Definitely the best aquarium signage I've ever seen.

Local saltwater area:
1. Sharpbeak terapon (Rhyncopelates oxyrhynchus), Japanese horseshoe crab (Tachypleus tridentatus), Japanese common sea cucumber, (Apostichopus japonicus), Comb star (Astropecten scoparius)
2. Japanese filefish (Rudarius ercodes), Barbel eel (Plotosus lineatus), Maiden goby (Pterogobius virgo), Striped mullet, (Mugil cephalus cephalus), Horned turban (Turbo cornutus)
3. Black rockfish (Sebastes inermis), Marbled rockfish, (Sebasticus marmoratus), Purple urchin (Anthocidaris crassispina), Rapana venosa
4. Oyster sp. (Crassosterea gigas), Black rockfish (Sebastes inermis)
5. Japanese anchovy, (Engraulis japonicus), Japanese jack mackerel (Trachurus japonicus), Yellowstriped butterfish (Labracoglossus argentiventris), Grass puffer (Takifugu niphobles), Japanese stingray, (Dasyatis akajei).
6. Japanese horseshoe crab (Tachypleus tridentatus), Silver whiting, (Sillago japonica), Multicolorfin rainbowfish (Halichoeres poecilopterus).

Local freshwater life area (Rare Species and Creatures in Satoyama Areas)
1. Japanese rhinoceros beetle (Tryporylus dichotomus), Crucian carp (Carassius auratus langsdorfii), Japanese common catfish (Silurus asotus).
2. Tanakia lanceolata, Acheilognathus rhombeus, Pale chub (Zacco platypus), Dark chub (Zacco temminckii), Striped shiner (Pungtungia herzi).
3. Black spotted pond frog (Pelophylax nigromaculatus), Japanese wrinkled frog (Glandirana rugosa).
4. Giant water bug (Lethocercus deyrollei)
5. Diving beetle sp.
6. (missing one species here as my photo was blurry) Japanese dace (Tribolodon hakonensis), Japanese barbel (Hemibarbus barbus), Common carp (Cyprinus carpio), Koi
7. Kyushu bitterling (Rhodeus atremius), Kissing loach (Parabotia curtus), Japanese stone loach (Cobitis biwae)
8. Euhadra subnimbasa, Euhadra dironi dironi, Euhadra idzumonis
9. Japanese common toad (Bufo japonicus), Whitespotted char (Salvelinus leucomaenis imbrius), Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica)
10. Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus), Red spotted masu trout (Oncorhynchus masou ishikawae)

Large Saltwater tank for rays
1. Blacktip reef shark (Carcharias melanopterus), Naru eagle ray (Aetobatus narutobiei), Ocellated eagle ray (Aetobatus ocellatus), Teira batfish (Platax teira), Japanese stingray (Dasyatis akajei), Striped mullet (Mugil cephalus cephalus), Sawtail (Prionurus scalprum), Whitemargin unicornfish (Naso annulatus), Ballon porcupinefish (Diodon holocanthus).

Smaller saltwater inverts et al.
1. Wharf roach (Ligia exotica), Parasesarma pictum.
2. Red hand crab (Chiromantes haematocheir), Brackish water crab (Chiromantes dehaani).
3. Ice goby (Leucopsarion petersii)
4. Fiddler crab (Uca lactea), Ilyoplax pusilla.
5. Bulgyhead wrasse (Semicossyphus reticulatus), Japanese seabass (Lateolabrax japonicus), Belted beard grunt (Hapalogenys analis?), Pseudolabrus sieboldi.
6. Black scraper (Thamnaconus modestus), Decorator crab (Camposcia retusa).
7. Oblong rockfish (Sebastes oblongus), Elbow crab (Platyambrus validus).
8. Sunrise sculpin (Pseudoblennius cottoides), Pagurus filholi.
9. Banded mantis shrimp (Lysiosquillina maculate).
10. Mantis shrimp sp. (Odontodactylus scyllarus).
11. Red streaked box crab (Calappa lophos).
12. Pipefish sp. (Syngnathus schlegel), Styela clava.
13. Mantis shrimp sp. (Oratosquilla oratoria), Gymnodoris inornata.
14. Speckled goby (Redigobius bikolanus), Barbel eel (Plotosus lineatus).
15. Grass puffer (Takifugu niphobles), Barred flagtail (Kuhlia mugil), Threeband sweetlips (Plectorhincus cinctus), Thread-sail filefish (Stephanolepis cirrhifer).

Porpoise exhibit:
1. Finless porpoise (Neophocaena asiaeorientalis).

Further large saltwater tanks:
1. Japanese anchovy (Engraulis japonicus), Japanese sardine (Sardinops melanostictus).
2. Long-headed eagle ray, (Aetobatus flagellum), Spotted eagle ray (Aetobatus narinari), Kelp grouper (Epinephelus brunneus), Malabar grouper (Epinephelus malabaricus), Giant grouper (Epinephelus lanceolatus), Golden kingfish (Gnathanodon speciosus), Green snapper (Lethrinus nebulosus), Pitted stingray (Dasyatis matsubarai), Speckled stingray (Taeniura meyeni), Black-spotted moray (Gymnothorax isingteena), Stripey (Microcanthus strigatus), Ballon porcupinefish (Diodon holocanthus).
3. Moon jellyfish (Aurelia aurita)
4. Papuan jellyfish (Mastigias papua).

Various reef tanks
1. Redfin fusilier (Caesio teres), Stocky anthias (Pseudanthias hypselosoma), Bartail fusilier (Pterocaesio tile), Zebra angelfish (Pomacanthus semicirculatus), Pennant coralfish (Heniochus acuminatus), Five banded damselfish (Abudefduf vaigiensis), Blue damselfish (Chrysiptera cyanea), Whitecollar coralfish (Chaetodon auripes), Blackspot cardinalfish (Apogon notatus), Fourstripe cardinalfish (Apogon doederleini), Gold reeffish (Chromis analis), Blue green chromis (Chromis viridis), Bird wrasse (Gomphosus varius), Sailfin tang (Zebrasoma veliferum), Flame parrotfish (Scarus ghobban).
2. Cherry bass (Sacura margaritacea), Hilgendorf's saucord (Helicolenus hilgendorfi), Japanese deepwater carrier crab (Paromola japonica).
3. Red lionfish (Pterois volitans), Lionfish (Pterois lunulata), Barbel eel (Plotosus lineatus).
4. Banjo catfish (Bunacephalus coracoideus), Leaffish (Monocirrhus polyacanthus).
5. Reef stonefish (Synanceia verrucosa)
6. Axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum).
7. Bering wolffish (Anarhichas orientalis), Japanese codling (Physiculus japonicus), Cloudy dogfish (Scyliorhinus torazame).
8. Giant moray (Gymnothorax javanicus)
9. Spotted seahorse (Hippocampus kuda), Razorfish (Aeoliscus strigatus).
10. Red spot green discus (Symphysodon aequifasciatus)
11. Snipefish (Macroramphosus scolopax), Giant spider crab (Macrocheira kaempferi), Lithodid crab (Paralomis hystrix).
12. Ocellaris clownfish (Amphiprion ocellaris), Pajama cardinalfish (Sphaeramia nematoptera).
13. Spotted garden eel (Heteroconger hassi).
14. Yellow tang (Zebrasoma flavescens), Yellow clown goby (Gobiodon okinawae), Pachychavularia violacea, Nemateleotris decora, Favia sp., Fungia scutaria, Sarcophyton sp., Euphyllia ancora.
15. Mudskipper (Periophthalmus modestus).
16. Giant cuttlefish (Sepia latinamus), Fan mussel (Pinna bicolor), Sea squirt (Halocynthia roretzi).
17. Cuttlefish sp. (Sepia lycidas), Slipper lobster (Scyllarides squamosus).
18. Cuttlefish sp. (Sepia esculenta?), Orange coral (Dendrophyllia arbuscular).
19. Kobi cuttlefish (Sepia kobiensis), Philyra pisum.
20. Japanese armorhead (Pentaceros japonicus), Longbill snake eel (Ophisurus macrorhynchos), Japanese angelshark (Squatina japonica).
21. Common octopus (Octopus vulgaris), Northern Pacific seastar (Asturias amurensis).
22. Japanese conger (Conger myriaster), Japanese spiny lobster (Panulirus japonicus).

Penguins and Pinnipeds
1. Humboldt penguin (Spheniscus humboldti)
2. Steller's sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus)
3. Asian small clawed otter (Aonyx cinerea)

There are definitely more pinniped species on show, I was just too late to see them. JAZA list South American sea lion, California sea lion and Spotted seal.

And that is that for the review! I think I might have missed one tank in the freshwater area with had Japanese pond turtle as one of its inhabitants, but otherwise the above should be comprehensively complete. Would be nice if anyone better versed in marine life could tell me if I saw anything massively of note there, but from a pretty badly-informed perspective it was a nice species list for sure.

Next up will be Asa Zoo, hopefully should be up tomorrow, and potentially the next aquarium too.
 
Another great review @amur leopard !

Great to see so many Japanese natives and it must have made the species listing a dream with everything was signed so well. The stars of the show have to be the finless porpoises and great photo of them too.

With everyone visiting Japanese collections as of late I think it's certainly a must to visit the country and see the many rarities this country has to offer!
 
I look forward to your review.
Will you be visiting Japan Amphibian Laboratory during your trip?
 
I look forward to your review.
Will you be visiting Japan Amphibian Laboratory during your trip?

Yes! (well hopefully, can never rule out typhoons etc - stuck in a hotel because of one currently actually). Will be taking notes of species on show to compare with your own excellent list from a few months ago - will be interesting to see the species turnover in places like these or whether holdings are relatively stable.
 
Asa Zoo (Hiroshima) - 11/08

Species list at the bottom.

Asa is Hiroshima's main zoo, located a 40 minute bus ride North of the city centre in the mountains. The weather for me was quite dreary and misty, with showers here and there, yet it was clear the environment was a lovely setting for a zoo - really nice mountainous forest and lots of space.

Reaching the entrance, the zoo is a pretty humble affair. A low concrete gate, a ticket booth and a pair of metal swivel gates. No footpath on either side of the road leading up to it. Not the greatest first impression, but plenty of good zoos have more low-key entrances. Unfortunately Asa is not a good zoo. I want to preface everything I'm about to say with a few caveats. The zoo clearly isn't the most well off. Entrance fee for an adult is around about 2 GBP, meaning there probably is a degree of subsidisation from the local council (I don't know this for a fact, just inference, but if anyone is better informed...). As a result they likely have just about enough money to break even and keep it all running, let alone make significant improvements or redevelopments. As a result, unlike in Seoul there was hardly any construction or development across the zoo. So this review is said in full knowledge that there is very limited budget to do much about the individual situations for each animal. However, I do believe that if a zoo is not able to provide a suitable environment for some of its animals, it shouldn't have those animals in its care, particularly when it is subsidised and hence more immune to decreased visitorship as a result of losing these animals.

In short, Asa was pretty horrendous for a lot of its animals. I know @CGSwans visited fairly recently so I wonder if he agrees with what I say about this place, but here goes. Entering the zoo, you are immediately faced with a Berlin-type baboon rock exhibit - nothing massively wrong here, pretty large rock and lots of climbing opportunities. Next to it is a flamingo pond with a pretty standard set up.

Working your way uphill you come to a little courtyard with a building and a small outdoor paddock. This is the Testudine area, with exhibits for 7 different tortoise species. The larger species are all mixed in the outdoor paddock area, with three absolutely massive giant tortoises being the most eye-catching of the lot, but the subspecific phayrei forest tortoises were nice to see as all European ones are nominate. Elongated, Indian star and Red footed tortoises are all in their own separate exhibits, but the latter's exhibit is overstocked to breaking point. The exhibit was only about 8 square metres and there were over 50 individuals packed in. At least they have a good breeding record I guess? Still, unacceptable conditions, even for tortoises.

Moving on, I came to two concrete yards for Cape buffalo and Black rhinos. The rhinos had a tiny bit of greenery but otherwise the exhibit had hardly any furnishing. Pretty grim, but not enough for them to stay in their awful indoor area barely viewable from the other side. It was these little quick peeks into these indoor exhibits for hoofstock that made me seriously fear the possible indoor situation for the big cats later on. I then worked my way up to the elephants, the only reason I visited the zoo. The zoo has, from what I can understand from comparing signage, 1 bull bush elephant and a pair of forest elephants. Neither were housed well at all. Tiny concrete paddocks all around, with all three elephants separated from each other by massive boulders. In stark contrast to Seoul with its forest area for sure. As a result it was a bittersweet feeling seeing the cyclotis individuals as the enclosure just wasn't even close to anything adequate.

Moved on up into the Children's Zoo after. Things didn't get much better here, or at least not at first. You first come up to a pair of parrot on a stick exhibits. At the very least they had plenty of room to climb, but it wasn't much of an improvement from the elephants just before. Things started to get a bit better here. A small penguin exhibit later was a chipmunk exhibit with two climbing areas connected by a long tube over visitors. Interesting set up and for once there was privacy and enough space. Then you have a couple of bridges over a shallow brook. In here (I think) were meant to be giant salamanders. This was probably one of the better exhibits in the zoo, as it sort of resembled their natural habitat and they had a fair bit of space, although I couldn't conclusively find any evidence other than a big statue that there were any in there. Possibly better that way though as at least it means they were able to move away from view. In there with them (or maybe separate, hard to tell) further downstream were a few freshwater fish species which children could see through magnifying contraptions set up beside the stream. Not a massively revolutionary exhibit, but there was thought behind it and it was good for the animals, so thumbs up. Beyond that is an aviary with what feels like hundreds of finches and a couple of pigeons and turacos. Nothing special.

Moving on, decided to go to the Nocturnal House. Pretty small place but a fair few species, and this was perhaps again reflected in the exhibitry. First was an apparently empty exhibit for free-tailed bats which I'd have quite liked to see, but hey. Then a few mouse exhibits which were ok, although for a few of them they were kept in smaller boxes within a larger vivarium - why not just give them the whole vivarium if you can? Kinkajous were in again a pretty small exhibit, but it wasn't awful, same going for the lorises and bushbabies. The dwarf flying squirrels were really active, gliding multiple times across their space. The giant flying squirrel was much less prone to action given its exhibit was about 2 metres across. Finally Japanese moles had an impressive set up but there were no moles onshow to inhabit it! Typical :D.

Reptile House was just all quite small terraria.

Had a quick lunch at one of the cafes, whose staff were really kind and patient given my (very) limited grasp of Japanese. Food was good for what it was too. Just outside was a big lake with Koi and a magnificent vista. Best enclosure in the zoo. Moving on, a few decent aviaries for a handful of small bird of prey species and then the small carnivore exhibits. All sort of concrete pits but had adequate furnishing and some had nice greenery. They seemed fine for the animals in general, and was nice to see really active Japanese badgers, a lifer incidentally. Next up was a pretty horrible pair of black bear exhibits. Less said about these the better, photos in the gallery later, but just essentially concrete grottos. There's an interestingly-designed waterbird aviary with good height and some small and pretty barren paddocks for Blackbucks and muntjacs. Nothing in this region of the zoo is actively good really. Continuing uphill, you hit a couple of exhibits for storks and cranes which are fine, a pretty good otter exhibit in which the otters were very active, a pair of passable serow exhibits and a similar Pere David's deer exhibit. Red pandas get a couple of trees and a grassy area and had attracted a small crowd with their shenanigans. Japanese hares actually had a large grassy cage which I thought was quite good, but neighbouring lemurs and macaques had sterile and small cages right next door.

Returning back, you come to the big cats. The tiger exhibit is atrocious. 40 square metres of awful. Can't even see the indoors but it can't have been much worse as the tiger stayed in there the whole time. Leopards got the same kind of area, but at least there was some greenery and privacy, but they also stayed invisible. Lions had a much larger concrete exhibit, but no privacy and honestly still well below par. Cheetahs had a comparatively large grassy paddock which looked like heaven in comparison, but then again anything even half decent would. Finally there are more awful cages for guenons and mandrills, and then probably the best non-Koi exhibit in the whole zoo for Chimps, which actually really came as a surprise given apes are often quite hard done by in older exhibits. It was a sort of Gorillarium-type set up, with ample vertical space, lots of climbing opportunities - honestly pretty good and as it was the last thing I saw, nice to end on a relative high after seeing some pretty grim enclosures.

In summary, there are a lot of bad exhibits, and then a small handful of good exhibits. But far too much that wasn't even close to good enough. As I said at the start, they likely don't have the funds to do much about it, but there are species that just have to leave. The tigers need to leave, the elephants similarly, much as they are a giant rarity and same with a bunch of species mentioned above if nothing can be done about their situation. There were a few little good things as I said (giant salamanders, chimps, hares) but yeah, I recommend entering, making your way to the forest elephants, seeing the forest elephants and then leaving. I wish it all the luck in the world, especially as the people working there were so kind, and for the sake of the animals it houses of course, but if I'm honest I can't see myself visiting again even if I have the chance.

Species list

African area
1. Olive baboon (Papio anubis)
2. Greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus), Lesser flamingo (Phoeniconaias minor)
3. Tortoises: Indian star tortoise (Geochelone elegans), Elongated tortoise (Indotestudo elongata), Leopard tortoise (Stigmochelys pardalis), Galapagos tortoise (Chelonoidis niger), Radiated tortoise (Astrochelys radiata), Red footed tortoise (Chelonoidis carbonarius), Northern Asian forest tortoise (Manouria emys phayrei).
4. Meerkat (Suricata suricatta)
5. Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer)
6. Eastern black rhino (Diceros bicornis michaeli)
7. African bush elephant (Loxodonta africana)
8. African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis)
9. Giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis), Plains zebra (Equus quagga).
10. Common ostrich (Struthio camelus)
11. Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes)
12. Mandrill (Mandrillus sphinx)
13. De Brazza's guenon (Cercopithecus neglectus)
14. Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus)

Nocturnal and Reptile House
1. Oriental free tailed bat (Tadarida insignis) (not seen)
2. Large Japanese field mouse (Apodemus speciosus)
3. Harvest mouse (Micromys minutus)
4. House mouse (Mus musculus)
5. Kinkajou (Potos flavus)
6. Japanese dwarf flying squirrel (Pteromys momonga)
7. Japanese giant flying squirrel (Petaurista leucogenys)
8. Woodland dormouse (Graphiurus murinus)
9. Senegal bushbaby (Galago senegalensis)
10. Leschenault's rousette (Rousettus leschenaulti)
11. Kinkajou (Potos flavus)
12. and 13. Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang)
14. Japanese mole (Mogera wogura) (none on show at the time of my visit).
------
15. Japanese five lined skink (Plestiodon japonicus)
16. Mamushi (Gloydias blomhoffii)
17. Japanese ratsnake (Elaphe climacophora)
18. McCord's snake necked turtle (Chelodina mccordi), Northern Australian snake necked turtle (Chelodina rugosa).
19. Burmese python (Python bivittatus)
20. Amboina box turtle (Cuora amboinensis)
21. Eastern blue tongued skink (Tiliqua scincoides scincoides)
22. Eastern box turtle (Terrapene carolina carolina)
23. Scheltopusik (Pseudopus apodus)
24. Armadillo lizard (Ouroborus cataphractus)
25. Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus)
26. Dwarf crocodile (Osteolamus tetraspis).
27. Kenyan sand boa (Eryx colubrinus)

Children's Zoo
1. Humboldt penguin (Spheniscus humboldti)
2. Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus) mixed with a bunch of fish which weren't terribly well signed.
3. Siberian chipmunk (Tamias sibiricus)
4. A few macaw species, not sure which, definitely Scarlet and Blue and yellow at least.
5. Zebra finch (Taeniopygia castanotis), Java sparrow (Padda oryzivora), Fantail pigeon, Bengal finch, Japanese green pigeon (Treron sieboldii), Oriental turtle dove (Streptopelia orientalis), Common quail (Coturnix coturnix), Painted quail (Synoicus chinensis), Guinea turaco (Tauraco
persa
).

Asian Area
1. Bactrian camel
2. Malayan tapir (Tapirus indicus)
3. Japanese red fox (Vulpes vulpes japonica)
4. Japanese raccoon dog (Nyctereutes viverrinus)
5. Japanese badger (Meles anakuma)
6. Masked palm civet (Paguma larvata)
7. Asiatic black bear (Ursus thibetanus)
8. Japanese boar (Sus scrofa leucomystax)
9. Blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra)
10. Reeves' muntjac (Muntiacus reevesi)
11. Peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus)
12. Black kite (Milvus migrans)
13. Ural owl (Strix uralensis)
14. Lion (Panthera leo)
15. Amur tiger (Panthera tigris altaica)
16. Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis)
17. Aviary (from memory): Cackling goose (Branta hutchinsii), Common shelduck (Tadorna tadorna), Eastern spot billed duck (Anas zonorhyncha), Mandarin duck (Aix galericulata), one or two more maybe.
18. Red crowned crane (Grus japonensis)
19. Oriental stork (Ciconia boyciana)
20. Eurasian otter (Lutra lutra chinensis)
21. Japanese serow (Capricornis crispus)
22. Red panda (Ailurus fulgens) maybe styani? Does anyone know? They looked different to the ssp. we have in Europe.
23. Pere David's deer (Elaphurus davidianus)
24. Japanese hare (Lepus brachyurus)
25. Black and white ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata)
26. Rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta)
 
Does anyone know how Asa even aquired forest elephants? Quite distressing such an inadequate zoo managed to get such a rare species.
 
Asa Zoo (Hiroshima) - 11/08

Species list at the bottom.

Asa is Hiroshima's main zoo, located a 40 minute bus ride North of the city centre in the mountains. The weather for me was quite dreary and misty, with showers here and there, yet it was clear the environment was a lovely setting for a zoo - really nice mountainous forest and lots of space.

Reaching the entrance, the zoo is a pretty humble affair. A low concrete gate, a ticket booth and a pair of metal swivel gates. No footpath on either side of the road leading up to it. Not the greatest first impression, but plenty of good zoos have more low-key entrances. Unfortunately Asa is not a good zoo. I want to preface everything I'm about to say with a few caveats. The zoo clearly isn't the most well off. Entrance fee for an adult is around about 2 GBP, meaning there probably is a degree of subsidisation from the local council (I don't know this for a fact, just inference, but if anyone is better informed...). As a result they likely have just about enough money to break even and keep it all running, let alone make significant improvements or redevelopments. As a result, unlike in Seoul there was hardly any construction or development across the zoo. So this review is said in full knowledge that there is very limited budget to do much about the individual situations for each animal. However, I do believe that if a zoo is not able to provide a suitable environment for some of its animals, it shouldn't have those animals in its care, particularly when it is subsidised and hence more immune to decreased visitorship as a result of losing these animals.

In short, Asa was pretty horrendous for a lot of its animals. I know @CGSwans visited fairly recently so I wonder if he agrees with what I say about this place, but here goes. Entering the zoo, you are immediately faced with a Berlin-type baboon rock exhibit - nothing massively wrong here, pretty large rock and lots of climbing opportunities. Next to it is a flamingo pond with a pretty standard set up.

Working your way uphill you come to a little courtyard with a building and a small outdoor paddock. This is the Testudine area, with exhibits for 7 different tortoise species. The larger species are all mixed in the outdoor paddock area, with three absolutely massive giant tortoises being the most eye-catching of the lot, but the subspecific phayrei forest tortoises were nice to see as all European ones are nominate. Elongated, Indian star and Red footed tortoises are all in their own separate exhibits, but the latter's exhibit is overstocked to breaking point. The exhibit was only about 8 square metres and there were over 50 individuals packed in. At least they have a good breeding record I guess? Still, unacceptable conditions, even for tortoises.

Moving on, I came to two concrete yards for Cape buffalo and Black rhinos. The rhinos had a tiny bit of greenery but otherwise the exhibit had hardly any furnishing. Pretty grim, but not enough for them to stay in their awful indoor area barely viewable from the other side. It was these little quick peeks into these indoor exhibits for hoofstock that made me seriously fear the possible indoor situation for the big cats later on. I then worked my way up to the elephants, the only reason I visited the zoo. The zoo has, from what I can understand from comparing signage, 1 bull bush elephant and a pair of forest elephants. Neither were housed well at all. Tiny concrete paddocks all around, with all three elephants separated from each other by massive boulders. In stark contrast to Seoul with its forest area for sure. As a result it was a bittersweet feeling seeing the cyclotis individuals as the enclosure just wasn't even close to anything adequate.

Moved on up into the Children's Zoo after. Things didn't get much better here, or at least not at first. You first come up to a pair of parrot on a stick exhibits. At the very least they had plenty of room to climb, but it wasn't much of an improvement from the elephants just before. Things started to get a bit better here. A small penguin exhibit later was a chipmunk exhibit with two climbing areas connected by a long tube over visitors. Interesting set up and for once there was privacy and enough space. Then you have a couple of bridges over a shallow brook. In here (I think) were meant to be giant salamanders. This was probably one of the better exhibits in the zoo, as it sort of resembled their natural habitat and they had a fair bit of space, although I couldn't conclusively find any evidence other than a big statue that there were any in there. Possibly better that way though as at least it means they were able to move away from view. In there with them (or maybe separate, hard to tell) further downstream were a few freshwater fish species which children could see through magnifying contraptions set up beside the stream. Not a massively revolutionary exhibit, but there was thought behind it and it was good for the animals, so thumbs up. Beyond that is an aviary with what feels like hundreds of finches and a couple of pigeons and turacos. Nothing special.

Moving on, decided to go to the Nocturnal House. Pretty small place but a fair few species, and this was perhaps again reflected in the exhibitry. First was an apparently empty exhibit for free-tailed bats which I'd have quite liked to see, but hey. Then a few mouse exhibits which were ok, although for a few of them they were kept in smaller boxes within a larger vivarium - why not just give them the whole vivarium if you can? Kinkajous were in again a pretty small exhibit, but it wasn't awful, same going for the lorises and bushbabies. The dwarf flying squirrels were really active, gliding multiple times across their space. The giant flying squirrel was much less prone to action given its exhibit was about 2 metres across. Finally Japanese moles had an impressive set up but there were no moles onshow to inhabit it! Typical :D.

Reptile House was just all quite small terraria.

Had a quick lunch at one of the cafes, whose staff were really kind and patient given my (very) limited grasp of Japanese. Food was good for what it was too. Just outside was a big lake with Koi and a magnificent vista. Best enclosure in the zoo. Moving on, a few decent aviaries for a handful of small bird of prey species and then the small carnivore exhibits. All sort of concrete pits but had adequate furnishing and some had nice greenery. They seemed fine for the animals in general, and was nice to see really active Japanese badgers, a lifer incidentally. Next up was a pretty horrible pair of black bear exhibits. Less said about these the better, photos in the gallery later, but just essentially concrete grottos. There's an interestingly-designed waterbird aviary with good height and some small and pretty barren paddocks for Blackbucks and muntjacs. Nothing in this region of the zoo is actively good really. Continuing uphill, you hit a couple of exhibits for storks and cranes which are fine, a pretty good otter exhibit in which the otters were very active, a pair of passable serow exhibits and a similar Pere David's deer exhibit. Red pandas get a couple of trees and a grassy area and had attracted a small crowd with their shenanigans. Japanese hares actually had a large grassy cage which I thought was quite good, but neighbouring lemurs and macaques had sterile and small cages right next door.

Returning back, you come to the big cats. The tiger exhibit is atrocious. 40 square metres of awful. Can't even see the indoors but it can't have been much worse as the tiger stayed in there the whole time. Leopards got the same kind of area, but at least there was some greenery and privacy, but they also stayed invisible. Lions had a much larger concrete exhibit, but no privacy and honestly still well below par. Cheetahs had a comparatively large grassy paddock which looked like heaven in comparison, but then again anything even half decent would. Finally there are more awful cages for guenons and mandrills, and then probably the best non-Koi exhibit in the whole zoo for Chimps, which actually really came as a surprise given apes are often quite hard done by in older exhibits. It was a sort of Gorillarium-type set up, with ample vertical space, lots of climbing opportunities - honestly pretty good and as it was the last thing I saw, nice to end on a relative high after seeing some pretty grim enclosures.

In summary, there are a lot of bad exhibits, and then a small handful of good exhibits. But far too much that wasn't even close to good enough. As I said at the start, they likely don't have the funds to do much about it, but there are species that just have to leave. The tigers need to leave, the elephants similarly, much as they are a giant rarity and same with a bunch of species mentioned above if nothing can be done about their situation. There were a few little good things as I said (giant salamanders, chimps, hares) but yeah, I recommend entering, making your way to the forest elephants, seeing the forest elephants and then leaving. I wish it all the luck in the world, especially as the people working there were so kind, and for the sake of the animals it houses of course, but if I'm honest I can't see myself visiting again even if I have the chance.

Species list

African area
1. Olive baboon (Papio anubis)
2. Greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus), Lesser flamingo (Phoeniconaias minor)
3. Tortoises: Indian star tortoise (Geochelone elegans), Elongated tortoise (Indotestudo elongata), Leopard tortoise (Stigmochelys pardalis), Galapagos tortoise (Chelonoidis niger), Radiated tortoise (Astrochelys radiata), Red footed tortoise (Chelonoidis carbonarius), Northern Asian forest tortoise (Manouria emys phayrei).
4. Meerkat (Suricata suricatta)
5. Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer)
6. Eastern black rhino (Diceros bicornis michaeli)
7. African bush elephant (Loxodonta africana)
8. African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis)
9. Giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis), Plains zebra (Equus quagga).
10. Common ostrich (Struthio camelus)
11. Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes)
12. Mandrill (Mandrillus sphinx)
13. De Brazza's guenon (Cercopithecus neglectus)
14. Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus)

Nocturnal and Reptile House
1. Oriental free tailed bat (Tadarida insignis) (not seen)
2. Large Japanese field mouse (Apodemus speciosus)
3. Harvest mouse (Micromys minutus)
4. House mouse (Mus musculus)
5. Kinkajou (Potos flavus)
6. Japanese dwarf flying squirrel (Pteromys momonga)
7. Japanese giant flying squirrel (Petaurista leucogenys)
8. Woodland dormouse (Graphiurus murinus)
9. Senegal bushbaby (Galago senegalensis)
10. Leschenault's rousette (Rousettus leschenaulti)
11. Kinkajou (Potos flavus)
12. and 13. Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang)
14. Japanese mole (Mogera wogura) (none on show at the time of my visit).
------
15. Japanese five lined skink (Plestiodon japonicus)
16. Mamushi (Gloydias blomhoffii)
17. Japanese ratsnake (Elaphe climacophora)
18. McCord's snake necked turtle (Chelodina mccordi), Northern Australian snake necked turtle (Chelodina rugosa).
19. Burmese python (Python bivittatus)
20. Amboina box turtle (Cuora amboinensis)
21. Eastern blue tongued skink (Tiliqua scincoides scincoides)
22. Eastern box turtle (Terrapene carolina carolina)
23. Scheltopusik (Pseudopus apodus)
24. Armadillo lizard (Ouroborus cataphractus)
25. Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus)
26. Dwarf crocodile (Osteolamus tetraspis).
27. Kenyan sand boa (Eryx colubrinus)

Children's Zoo
1. Humboldt penguin (Spheniscus humboldti)
2. Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus) mixed with a bunch of fish which weren't terribly well signed.
3. Siberian chipmunk (Tamias sibiricus)
4. A few macaw species, not sure which, definitely Scarlet and Blue and yellow at least.
5. Zebra finch (Taeniopygia castanotis), Java sparrow (Padda oryzivora), Fantail pigeon, Bengal finch, Japanese green pigeon (Treron sieboldii), Oriental turtle dove (Streptopelia orientalis), Common quail (Coturnix coturnix), Painted quail (Synoicus chinensis), Guinea turaco (Tauraco
persa
).

Asian Area
1. Bactrian camel
2. Malayan tapir (Tapirus indicus)
3. Japanese red fox (Vulpes vulpes japonica)
4. Japanese raccoon dog (Nyctereutes viverrinus)
5. Japanese badger (Meles anakuma)
6. Masked palm civet (Paguma larvata)
7. Asiatic black bear (Ursus thibetanus)
8. Japanese boar (Sus scrofa leucomystax)
9. Blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra)
10. Reeves' muntjac (Muntiacus reevesi)
11. Peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus)
12. Black kite (Milvus migrans)
13. Ural owl (Strix uralensis)
14. Lion (Panthera leo)
15. Amur tiger (Panthera tigris altaica)
16. Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis)
17. Aviary (from memory): Cackling goose (Branta hutchinsii), Common shelduck (Tadorna tadorna), Eastern spot billed duck (Anas zonorhyncha), Mandarin duck (Aix galericulata), one or two more maybe.
18. Red crowned crane (Grus japonensis)
19. Oriental stork (Ciconia boyciana)
20. Eurasian otter (Lutra lutra chinensis)
21. Japanese serow (Capricornis crispus)
22. Red panda (Ailurus fulgens) maybe styani? Does anyone know? They looked different to the ssp. we have in Europe.
23. Pere David's deer (Elaphurus davidianus)
24. Japanese hare (Lepus brachyurus)
25. Black and white ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata)
26. Rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta)
Zooinstitues says they're Chinese Red Panda.
 
Does anyone know how Asa even aquired forest elephants? Quite distressing such an inadequate zoo managed to get such a rare species.
Asa first got the female Mei from Burkina Faso before getting the male Dai, who also originated from Burkina Faso, from Akiyoshidai Safari Land a couple years ago.

With regards to inadequate zoos getting elephants my guess would be through having good diplomatic relationships with the countries of origin of the elephants. Examples being Tokuyama Zoo getting 1.1 Sri Lankan elephants from, well, Sri Lanka in 2013, which the elephants still having inadequate enclosures after transferring to a new one a few years ago. There’s also Maruyama Zoo obtaining 1.3 elephants from Myanmar but they did build an enclosure adequate for the elephants before obtaining them. In the case of the forest elephants it would be diplomacy between Japan and Burkina Faso.
 
Thanks for these truly fascinating reviews. Asa Zoo sounds awful, which surprises me a little as we are well into 2023 and one would assume that Japanese zoos are continually making significant progress towards modernization. I guess that's not the case in Hiroshima.
 
Back
Top