For an example of the other domesticated camelid from South America being mixed with wild species in a display, Milwaukee County Zoo keeps alpaca with Baird’s tapir and greater rhea.
I will say ...
From what I understand reindeer moss is quite abundant in the United Kingdom and I have seen it wild in Kent myself. I wonder if it could be harvested and fed?Reindeer is not as easy (cheap) to feed as other common hoofstock and that probably dissuades many potential institutions. Most zoos around here import dried lichen from Scandinavia to complement their diet. Olomouc zoo is trialing lichen-free protocol - I´m unsure about exact contents but I remmember they give lots of browse, freshly cut grass, special hey and high-protein pellets (similar to what is fed to racing horses).
Have you seen domestic horses as a stand in for something?
I have not- just listed it as an example where there COULD be a stand-in sort of situation. It was the first that came to my mind wherein the "domestic version" is identical species-wise to the "wild version".
Same here in the states. Keeping water buffalo in mixed Asian paddocks is really common, also on drive through safaris.Water buffalos - Ostrava zoo keeps them in a large mixed pen with blackbuck, nilgai, axis deer, barasingha, tajik markhor (unsure if any are still left now), hog deer and indian peafowl.
Is it really “really common”? I only know Disney’s animal Kingdom who keeps them (albeit as an AZA member) otherwise I didn’t even knew they were commonly kept.Same here in the states. Keeping water buffalo in mixed Asian paddocks is really common, also on drive through safaris.
It's incredibly common, especially outside the AZA.Is it really “really common”? I only know Disney’s animal Kingdom who keeps them (albeit as an AZA member) otherwise I didn’t even knew they were commonly kept.
Is there anywhere that mixes dromedaries with Australian fauna like kangaroos and emus?