Animals ZooChatters Have Seen Living Before Extinction

Smaggledagle

Well-Known Member
5+ year member
I've seen the "Animals that few ZooChatters have seen" thread, but I decided to branch off from that into this. Basically, if you saw it living before the entire species went extinct, then it counts. What doesn't count are taxidermied/dead/skeletal remains of certain extinct creatures.

Also, I will just keep a list from the other thread of which ZooChatters have seen before they went extinct so far.

1. Pinta Island tortoise (Chelonoidis nigra abingdonii) seen by - Giant Eland
2. Rabbs' fringed-limbed treefrog (Ecnomiohyla rabborum) seen by - jayjds2 "supposedly"

I'm curious as to if anyone has seen an extinct animal before.
 
I think it is Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct) officially, but I don’t think anyone really thinks it is still extant except for a couple of optimistic “stringers”; birders who see more rare birds than common ones. I’d be delighted to be proven wrong, naturally!
 
The reverse - it's believed to be extinct, but has not been officially designated so as yet.

I see...very sad indeed

I think it is Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct) officially, but I don’t think anyone really thinks it is still extant except for a couple of optimistic “stringers”; birders who see more rare birds than common ones. I’d be delighted to be proven wrong, naturally!

Very lucky to have seen this Tetzoo Quizzer!
 
I think it is Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct) officially, but I don’t think anyone really thinks it is still extant except for a couple of optimistic “stringers”; birders who see more rare birds than common ones. I’d be delighted to be proven wrong, naturally!

Personally I think there’s a chance of there being a few individuals out there.

But in most cases the IUCN is way too slow to declare a species formally extinct, there still species that haven’t been sighted since the late 1800s and early 1900s on there.
 
It's a disputed taxon these days but I (and I'd imagine quite a few other Zoochatters) saw Cape Verde Kite (Milvus (milvus) fasciicauda) at Newent back in the day. There is ongoing dispute over whether this was a species, a subspecies or just a slightly weird island form of Red Kite. It was finished off by hybridisation with Black Kites. I'd have to check records but I'm pretty sure I've seen at least one now-extinct Partula as well (and Northern White Rhino on a few occasions, though they're not quite all gone of course). No others leap to mind.
 
From memory, Bristol, Chester and I think Jersey, as well as Nottingham University were also holders, but I may be wrong, and would not be surprised if there were others as well.

For animals that are so easy to keep I wouldn't be suprised either, but I do remember hearing that there was one (or perhaps a couple of) species that were only found ex-situ at ZSL / nowhere else in the world.

I really can't remember the name of these species though.
 
From memory, Bristol, Chester and I think Jersey, as well as Nottingham University were also holders, but I may be wrong, and would not be surprised if there were others as well.

Edinburgh and Marwell at the very least, if I recall.
 
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