Pyrops Candelaria.
I read on the internet that one insect farm in Thailand tried, but it feeds only from one tree species, so turned to be no-go.
Pyrops Candelaria.
It is a pest of longan and lychees, and a paper on its introduction to Taiwan also stated it being a threat to pomelo (which is a citrus fruit), so I wouldn't imagine feeding would be a huge issue.I read on the internet that one insect farm in Thailand tried, but it feeds only from one tree species, so turned to be no-go.
Yes Jo, we spoke on FacebookI received information a few weeks ago that the last one died. I see one pop up in local private collections from time to time but there is no zoological institution left that holds this species at the moment.
Other than Atlantic Mudskippers, are there any other Mudskippers species are kept in zoos or aquariums
Same question to Terrestrial snails other than African Giant
Other than Atlantic Mudskippers, are there any other Mudskippers species are kept in zoos or aquariums?
Yes, there's a handful of species scattered about. Pearse's is a more common one, relatively anyways.
I've seen Dwarf Indian Mudskippers in pet stores.Other than Atlantic Mudskippers, are there any other Mudskippers species are kept in zoos or aquariums?
Same question to Terrestrial snails other than African Giant.
Same question to Terrestrial snails other than African Giant.
Chiangmai Zoo Aquarium have 2 speciesOther than Atlantic Mudskippers, are there any other Mudskippers species are kept in zoos or aquariums?
Pardon me, I forgot to address this.
The Singapore Zoo does have the Malayan green tree snail (Amphidromus atricallosus ; subspecies atricallosus) in their collection. Further north, the Melaka Reptile & Butterfly Park exhibits the relatively rare giant fire snail (Platymma tweediei).
Yes. Silverlined Mudskipper is the usual species kept in Australian aquariums, although I do believe Giant Mudskipper is present too. Shuttles Hoppfish (a mudskipper species) is not uncommon in Japanese aquariums.Other than Atlantic Mudskippers, are there any other Mudskippers species are kept in zoos or aquariums?
Same question to Terrestrial snails other than African Giant.
Various blue ring species have been kept, Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium used to have Greater Blue Ringed Octopus (according to their website), and the Aquarium of Western Australia had one when I visited many years ago. Blue-ringed Octopus tank - ZooChatSo, I was looking through the LA Zoo and saw some interesting additions they wanted to add into the zoo
Blue ringed octopus
Cone Snail
Does anyone know of these animals in captivity? I think I may of heard of a tropical fish shop in Florida getting the octopus (for some reason)
I don't know if they still have them, but Shanghai Ocean Aquarium, 2013:Cone snails are rare in public aquariums, I'm not aware of any public facilities that keep them. The Venom Lab at James Cook University Cairns campus keeps Conus sp. for the purposes of researching their venom. I do not recall what specific species they were though.
Those are Strombus, not Cone Snails. Note the elongated eyestalks, longer than those in Cone Snails. Strombus are common in the aquarium trade and are non-venomous.I don't know if they still have them, but Shanghai Ocean Aquarium, 2013:
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tank for cone shells - ZooChat
Thanks. Very disappointing for me, because cone shells are much more awesome than Strombus, but I have changed the titles on the photos.Those are Strombus, not Cone Snails. Note the elongated eyestalks, longer than those in Cone Snails. Strombus are common in the aquarium trade and are non-venomous.
I’ve seen them a few times, most recently was probably at a nature center outside Charleston, SCAre there any US zoos that display glass lizards, other than Scovill Zoo?
Are there any US zoos that display glass lizards, other than Scovill Zoo?