Recently a Venezuelan red howler was born.
https://twitter.com/Apenheul/status/1537377189003411457?s=20&t=d0wSMFLIMpPswivJqKC6lw
Seems like a new area is being built for talapoins, king colobus, and sulcata tortoises.
I remember it being three days (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday) from my visit today2 days a week the Talapoins are visible in the Red howler/Golden lion tamarin area, they rotate exhibit so that the talapoins can get used to the walk-through way of life.
I remember it being three days (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday) from my visit today
I used to hold apenheul in high regards but while gaia park truely turned more and more interesting concept wise apenheul did not just stagnated but declined.
One can argue about a lot of things but one thing not even debatable any more was the lack of improovement.
There had been too small enclosures, some outdoor like the squirrel monkey forest islands for capuchin and once howler monkeys now seemingly sakis,
but in general all indoor spaces.
They are uninspired and way too small.
I have once seen a dpcumwntar avour singapores peoboscis monkeys where they stated the key to succesfull husbanrsy with this species was the enclosure design that allowed the animals privacy, that was absolutely absent from apenheuls enclosure
Too small too dark gaint windows covered in crowds some knocking on the windows.
Why do not they have as awwing indoor instalations as their unique outdoor paths.
I would like to see tropical rainforest houses.
The dismanteling of the iconic indonesian farm was unacceptable for me.
What on earth is that map.
Also what happened to the old plans.
The giant insect wall is very good but it could stay without the monkey park.
I mean I can not blame them to fail my visions of adapting all parts to the representive design their barbary macaques recieved, but I do expect a park focussing only on monkeys to offer a proper educatiobal exhibition on why neither south america nor madagascar was one enclosure, like these species did not exist in one place.
I used to hold apenheul in high regards but while gaia park truely turned more and more interesting concept wise apenheul did not just stagnated but declined.
One can argue about a lot of things but one thing not even debatable any more was the lack of improovement.
There had been too small enclosures, some outdoor like the squirrel monkey forest islands for capuchin and once howler monkeys now seemingly sakis,
but in general all indoor spaces.
They are uninspired and way too small.
I have once seen a dpcumwntar avour singapores peoboscis monkeys where they stated the key to succesfull husbanrsy with this species was the enclosure design that allowed the animals privacy, that was absolutely absent from apenheuls enclosure
Too small too dark gaint windows covered in crowds some knocking on the windows.
Why do not they have as awwing indoor instalations as their unique outdoor paths.
I would like to see tropical rainforest houses.
The dismanteling of the iconic indonesian farm was unacceptable for me.
What on earth is that map.
Also what happened to the old plans.
The giant insect wall is very good but it could stay without the monkey park.
I mean I can not blame them to fail my visions of adapting all parts to the representive design their barbary macaques recieved, but I do expect a park focussing only on monkeys to offer a proper educatiobal exhibition on why neither south america nor madagascar was one enclosure, like these species did not exist in one place.
There is a very clear reason why the houses are so small and no large indoor houses are constructed: they can't. One of the perks of being located in a natural park is that the "bestemmingsplan" (law on what can be built and what not in certain areas), stipulates that only a very small percentage of the land can be covered by buildings. So that is why the indoor enclosures are so small and functional.
I am sure Singapore Zoo was heavily involved in the design of the proboscis monkey enclosure, so if these issues would appear to them, they would have been addressed.
One could actually say that the barbary macaque area is the worst part of the zoo with all its rockwork and openness. Barbary macaques much more typically live in (mountain) forest, not in rocky deserts.
And yes the map is terrible, no need to argue about that. But in general you seem overly negative about stuff and go on in rambling points that often seem to have no coherence and not based on any factual evidence, just personal preferences.
Allright we got the reason, but a reason is not automaticaly an excuse. This is not just personal taste of aesthetics, but animal welfare. Some enclosures are too small, either both inside and out, or just one of them. Nobody should get themself a pet they can not provide the proper care for and claim it would but close enough and the best possible under given circumstances. Just because the housing was bts does not mean the rules that forced many other instituions to either reduce or move their collection would apply to them. So either the natural park agrees to allow submergered planted roof top houses or they combine the indoor space for fewer species, or they move. A lot is not possible until it is done.
I am personaly equaly annoyed by the reduction of species kept, tho I believed a mismanagement rather to be the issue as the other stuff was just not too arguable.
So did I, but then there is the discrepancy, and the outcome is known so whats with that ? There were other Parks that have not just kept but breed members of the Presbytini including Proboscis monkeys, why were not they chosen to participate? The entire process should have been more transparent.
emotional influence. As much as I can be wrong, as much this forum is meant to discuss, so all members can exchange their different views, and potentialy learn from one another. One can criticize the tone for that, but not categoricaly dismiss the criticism. I want to apoligize for the manner these comments are sometimes more or less often made, and the disruption such causes. I in no way intentionaly do so, but have a reason that would be offtopic here, so if you are interested check out
the link
It is a reason for why there are no large indoor themed areas that you so badly wanted, so your point was not a valid point. It is not an excuse for bad enclosures and nobody used it as such, but it is a given you have to work with. While the indoor enclosures might be small, space is used optimally by always having compartmentalized indoor buildings which offer privacy and by being circles there is no way to corner a single individual in a conflict. Space is just a number if not used well, to use the gorilla indoor accomodation as an example: both keepers and gorillas are very happy with the set-up, despite its uglyness and small size. There is one place where the house is really too small and that is the gibbon indoor enclosure, for which something new would be needed....
Singapore used to get (and probably still gets) many questions from western zoos whether they can get some proboscis monkeys. Until Apenheul they always said no, because they had no trust in the level of care. Apenheul has an amazing track record with leaf-eating monkeys, it is the most successful keeper of woolly monkeys by far and has good track records with Javan langurs, crowned sifaka and two species of howler monkey (though at that time only 1). So from what I heard from someone at Apenheul at the time Singapore basically agreed that Apenheul would be a test case to see if long-term success was possible. The reasoning was that if they couldn't get it to work, it wasn't worth the monkeys. What in the end was the reason of the failure still doesn't seem to be quite clear. But the lack of privacy you mention is just a hunch based on something you once heard and saw. Not even close to a strong argument.
Yes this forum is to discuss and exchange views, but if you want an engaging discussion it is best not to make rambling posts that come across as overly negative (at least to me) with multiple criticisms combined. I also often don't have a clue what it is exactly that you want to say, there might be a language barrier, but re-reading posts before posting and check the spelling would be one way to improve them. In addition the criticisms are quite often just based on personal preferences or experiences, without being backed up by more and showing a lack of knowledge. The latter is excuseable, but you get much better discussions if you would not come across so sure of your own points and phrase stuff in the tone you do. Your personal backstory in the link might be a reason, but it is not an excuse.