Auckland Zoo Auckland Zoo News 2016

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Article about the first stage of Auckland's multi-million-dollar 10-year redevelopment plan will be completed this year with the opening of two new exhibits(Meerkats & Lace Monitors) and animals expecting babies(Capybara, Squrriel Monkey, Otter, Red Panda and Kiwi)
Zoo abuzz over baby boom and savannah - Summer Herald - NZ Herald News
Zoo abuzz over baby boom and savannah

5:00 AM Monday Jan 4, 2016

The first stage of Auckland Zoo's multi-million-dollar 10-year redevelopment plan will be completed this year with the opening of two new exhibits and the introduction of more zoo babies.

Last year, a playful Asian elephant from Sri Lanka made herself at home alongside Auckland Zoo's veteran elephant Burma, and the birth of a couple of clumsy-legged giraffe calves extended the zoo's steadily growing giraffe family.

In 2016, visitors will get the chance to welcome even more exotic newcomers, with zoo staff expecting capybara pups, squirrel monkey babies, a red panda cub, otter pups and kiwi chicks.

But the biggest milestone for Auckland Zoo will come around March/April with the opening of the new African Pridelands escarpment.

The $7 million development project began in May last year and is on track to open in time for Easter.


Auckland Zoo director Jonathan Wilcken said it was the first stage in the zoo's 10- year plan and was a "very exciting" development.

It will feature "fabulous new vistas" looking into the African savannah exhibit, he said, and provide a great new environment for some of the Auckland Zoo's African birds, meerkats and tortoises.

"Much of the focus of the next 10 years of development in the zoo is really about improving the environment within the zoo for our animals and for our visitors," Mr Wilcken said.

"The zoo has been around for over 90 years now and its development over that period has been a little bit ad-hoc.

"We've got now perhaps the most comprehensive development plans we've ever had and that's really aimed at bringing areas of the zoo up to our standards and our expectations."

Another new exhibit, opening later this year, will house fresh-water Australian species and will see the introduction of lace monitors - members of the monitor lizard family from over the Tasman.

These new exhibits, and the exciting range of species that arrive at Auckland Zoo to fill them, will join other recent newcomers such as Anjalee, who arrived in June last year to keep lonely Burma company in the Elephant Clearing precinct.

Mr Wilcken said the introduction of Anjalee went better than could have possibly been expected and she had settled in "so, so fabulously".

"It did take us a number of years longer than we first thought it would, but more than five years down the track we did finally bring Anjalee to the zoo.

"It was an amazing experience, it was quite emotional for everyone who was involved and we got such lovely feedback from everyone."

Mr Wilcken said the two elephants were now close friends. "You can just see Burma's a new elephant - it's great."

Auckland Zoo, which is home to 138 different species and over 875 animals, has the largest collection of native and exotic animals in New Zealand.

Mr Wilcken said that while there would continue to be new additions over the next 10 years, this was not the prime focus for the zoo's development.

He said the zoo was devoted to getting people engaged with and caring about wildlife at a time when animals were under extreme stress in the wild.

It was a conservation organisation in a number of different ways, Mr Wilcken said, and one of those ways was its ability to bring people and wildlife closer together and build empathy within the community.

"So over the next 10 years we'll be developing some extraordinary new habitats for orang-utans and for tigers and extending our area for some of our key African species - hippos and flamingos - and some of our primate species and so forth, he said.

"So there's a whole lot that we'll be developing both for our visitors and for our animals and it's all about creating that magic experience that gives people a sense of what amazing creatures [exist] and getting them to care."

The zoo would also continue to invest time and resources in its conservation projects around the country, Mr Wilcken said.

In 2015, Auckland Zoo staff clocked up more than 11,500 hours in the field, working on projects in 20 different locations in New Zealand.

This included releasing two of New Zealand's critically endangered takahe on to Rotoroa Island in the Hauraki Gulf and releasing 945 giant weta into mature native forest on the pest-free Motuhorapapa Island in the Hauraki Gulf.

Auckland Zoo staff also released six pateke, or brown teal, on to Rotoroa Island and successfully incubated, hatched, reared and released its 300th wild kiwi chick, which was named Thoihoi.

"A modern zoo is an incubator of really key wildlife management skills and it's our responsibility also to make them available to help wildlife in the wild," Mr Wilcken said.

He said Aucklanders and New Zealanders should not feel removed from the global wildlife crisis and the threat of poaching and species extinction.

"We're all part of a global community and even more importantly, and more immediately, we're all part of a New Zealand community and New Zealand wildlife itself is in great need."

Mr Wilcken said it was really important that as a society we develop a sense of stewardship and responsibility over wildlife - "which sees us all as active participants in helping wildlife to survive, and the zoo is trying to lead by example."


Coming up in 2016
The Zoo's full schedule of summer activities can be found at Auckland Zoo© -The Official Website of AKL Zoo

January

• Auckland Zoo's Travel the World activity programme gives people a chance to explore the zoo's distinct geographical regions, and if you visit and participate in Travel the World between December 16 to February 29, you can visit the zoo again for free before Easter.

February

• Every Thursday from February 4 to March 3 Auckland Zoo will be open in the evenings until 8pm.

• New Zealand drummer and photographer Shelton Woolright is having a photography exhibition - Lonesome Beast - in the Old Elephant House at Auckland Zoo. It will run from February 3-26.

• An art and photography exhibition will launch in late February for three weeks, featuring work from Woolright, Dean Sacred, Flox, Otis Frizzell and Askew. A portion of the sale of all artworks will go towards the Auckland Zoo Conservation Fund.

• There will be four Auckland Zoo concerts in February. They are:

Feb 5: Stan Walker

Feb 13: Fly My Pretties

Feb 20: Bic Runga and Tiny Ruins

Feb 27: Yet to be announced

March

• Every Tuesday from March 1 to April 12 there will be a half-hour Wriggle & Rhyme session. These will see the zoo once again teaming up with Auckland Libraries to give parents and their little ones the chance to take part in music, dance and rhyme workout sessions.

• Whio Weekend with the famous blue duck race will take place on March 5/6.

Mid 2016

• The Pridelands development opens.

• A new exhibit for Australian fresh water species will open, seeing the introduction of lace monitors to Auckland Zoo - a member of the monitor lizard family.

New faces at Auckland Zoo
Asian elephant Anjalee

This two metre Asian Elephant arrived at Auckland Zoo on June 21, 2015. She weighs roughly 2003 kg and her birthday is on August 23. She is now 9 years old. Anjalee - whose name means "gracious gift" - was a gift from the government and people of Sri Lanka and was born at the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage near the town of Kegalle.

Otter pups Chet and Kalaya

A male otter pup named Chet and a female named Kalaya were born at Auckland Zoo in March.

Capybaras Rosita and Consuela

Rosita and Consuela are two female capybaras that arrived from Adelaide Zoo in April. They were both born in April, 2014.

Zuri the giraffe calf

This female giraffe calf, which was born at the zoo in April, was Auckland Zoo's 32nd giraffe calf.

Mtundu the giraffe calf

Born on August 21 to Auckland Zoo's 13-year-old giraffe Kiraka. Mtundu - which means mischievous in Swahili - is Kiraka's second calf and the first male giraffe to be born at Auckland Zoo since 2010.
 
What tortoises are in African Pridelands?

Any idea what species will be home for the Australian freshwater exhibit?
 
The article states the zoo are expecting otter pups and a red panda cub in 2016. Can we conclude that both these births have already occurred and the offspring are in their nesting boxes waiting to emerge? Red pandas are born December/January and otters usually in the warmer months (November to April/May).

It seems it was a good decision to swap the previous breeding female Jana, with Jeta after Jana did not produce subsequent litters following her 2009 litter. Jeta has now had two successful litters with hopefully a third to follow, not to mention producing the first female otter pup in 12 years in 2015.

Jaya (1990) > Jade (1999) > Jeta (2003) > Kalaya (2015)
 
the zoo has five chicks from their orange-fronted kakariki (photos of them in the nest box posted yesterday on their Facebook page).
 
Well the Red Panda cub has arrived, although it turns out they got twins, from parents Bo and Sagar.

Story and video here: Zoo welcomes rare red panda cubs

Auckland Zoo is celebrating the arrival of two Nepalese red panda cubs, who are an extremely valuable addition to the international breeding programme for this endangered species.

Carnivore's team leader Lauren Booth says that the twins were born just after 3am on Thursday 14 January and while it is still early days, everything is going well with mum and the cubs.

"By watching the nest box cameras we've set up, we can see they have both been suckling. We couldn't ask for a better mum in Bo."

The twins are the fifth and sixth offspring of six-year-old mum Bo (who arrived at Auckland Zoo in mid-2012) and the last of 15-year-old Sagar, who was euthanized in December 2015.

"The average lifespan of a red panda is eight to 12 years, so Sagar reached a great old age for a red panda, but due to his age he had developed a spinal condition that was at the point where treatment was not able to increase his quality of life," says Lauren.

"Ever since arriving from Darjeeling Zoo in 2010, he had an amazing personality. He's left a great legacy within the region fathering six cubs over the course of three years. With these two being the last of his legacy with Bo, it was nice to have this positive to focus on as we said a difficult goodbye."

Lauren says that red pandas develop slowly and are dependent on Mum for at least three months, so it will be some time before visitors see the cubs venturing out of their nest box and around the enclosure with Bo.

"We're keeping a regular watch on the cubs, but taking a very hands-off approach so Bo can continue to do the great job she's doing, and we minimise any potential stress for her. Around late February will be a safe time for us to do a full vet check on the cubs to find out whether we have boys or girls or both," she says.
 
Article about the first stage of Auckland's multi-million-dollar 10-year redevelopment plan will be completed this year with the opening of two new exhibits(Meerkats & Lace Monitors) and animals expecting babies(Capybara, Squrriel Monkey, Otter, Red Panda and Kiwi)
Zoo abuzz over baby boom and savannah - Summer Herald - NZ Herald News

Great to see confirmation of new exhibits for orangutans and tigers, hopefully within a connected South-east Asian area, with additional species also incorporated. I wonder what this will mean for the existing tiger exhibits, are the days of the pit enclosure numbered? The newer enclosure could make a good aviary or monkey enclosure.

Does anyone know where the Australian freshwater exhibit will specifically be located? There is space between the lorikeet aviary and the Tasmanian devils, and within the wallaby walkthrough, but I suspect they will be installing it at the end of the Brolga enclosure where the lovebird aviary used to be, and so create a link to the bridge and cockatoo exhibit again.
 
Great to see confirmation of new exhibits for orangutans and tigers, hopefully within a connected South-east Asian area, with additional species also incorporated. I wonder what this will mean for the existing tiger exhibits, are the days of the pit enclosure numbered? The newer enclosure could make a good aviary or monkey enclosure.

Does anyone know where the Australian freshwater exhibit will specifically be located? There is space between the lorikeet aviary and the Tasmanian devils, and within the wallaby walkthrough, but I suspect they will be installing it at the end of the Brolga enclosure where the lovebird aviary used to be, and so create a link to the bridge and cockatoo exhibit again.

I hope the tiger pit is retained. It is not highly unsuitable for the tiger, and combined with the second enclosure built 2006, I see little reason for an upgrade. I think the zoo arguably has bigger fish to fry.

If the zoo is to import Sumatran orang-utan, and upgrade is definitely in order. I did a behind the scenes in 2013 and the inside dens seemed quite tired etc. Keepers have spoken before on the unsuitability of the smaller enclosure, which makes the animals feel as if they're in a fishbowl. The naturally social chimpanzees probably had little objection but the orang-utans have apparently never taken to it.

Reading about the differences in curating Bornean vs. Sumatran orang-utans, Sumatrans were described as more social. Hopefully Auckland can do the species justice like Perth Zoo and breed regularly from multiple females, not like some of the other Australian Zoos who hold pairs, or small family units.

Sumatrans were also described as more aboreal (due to ground predators like the tiger in their native habitat). A bigger emphasis will need to be made on the availability of climbing structures vs. the more open plan park theme of the Bornean's habitat, which has also been criticised by staff.
 
It has been formally announced that Auckland Zoo will receive a second Asian Elephant from Sri Lanka "soon".

Read more: Auckland Zoo to welcome new elephant | NZNews | Newshub

Auckland Zoo has plenty to trumpet about with news a second Asian elephant will soon be arriving from Sri Lanka.

The zoo will be gifted another Asian elephant from the Sri Lankan government to join Anjalee, who arrived in 2015, as part of a growing cooperation between the two island nations.

Prime Minister John Key made the announcement today as part of his three-day tour of Sri Lanka.

"The second elephant will prove a great drawcard for tourists and locals alike," he said.

"This is another example of the close and growing relationship between our countries and I thank the Sri Lankan government for entrusting us with her."

Auckland Zoo's first gifted elephant, Anjalee, has settled into New Zealand life well, putting on 700 kilograms to an already hefty 1.7-tonne since arriving in June last year.

While the agreement has been in place for a second elephant from Sri Lanka's Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage for some time, it was only formally finalised today.

They will join the zoo's existing 32-year-old elephant Burma, also a female, who has been the country's only elephant since Kashin died in 2009.

As a part of the deal, Auckland Zoo will help with Sri Lanka's management of its own elephant population, as well as help train Sri Lankan wildlife workers.
 
...and, predictably, animal activists are "outraged".
Auckland Zoo 'delighted' by new elephant offer, but animal rights activists angry | Stuff.co.nz
Auckland Zoo says it is "delighted" to accept the gift of a Sri Lankan baby elephant, but the move has left animal rights activists outraged.

Prime Minister John Key, on a two-day visit to Colombo, announced the zoo and the Sri Lankan Government had agreed the zoo will get a five-year-old female elephant named Nandi.

A spokeswoman for Auckland Zoo said on Thursday it was the "next step in a long-standing and carefully planned programme of co-operation between Auckland Zoo and Sri Lankan authorities".

She was the second elephant New Zealand had been gifted by Sri Lanka in the past year, after Anjalee arrived in Auckland last June, also from Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage. They join the zoo's veteran elephant Burma, who has been at the zoo for more than 25 years.

Nandi who was born in captivity, was the right age and maturity to be re-homed, the spokeswoman said.

The current elephant enclosure at Auckland Zoo was suitable for a third elephant so if there were any changes, they would be minor.

"Auckland Zoo is delighted that it can confirm a second elephant from Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage in Sri Lanka, will be joining its elephants Burma and Anjalee.

"The immediate aim is to provide an elephant family for Burma and now Anjalee at Auckland Zoo.

"Subsequently, the plan is to breed elephants to ensure their long-term sustainability at the zoo.

"Our hope is that all three elephants will be compatible and Nandi to flourish here as Anjalee has," she said.

However, the executive director of animal rights group SAFE, Hans Kriek, said the offering of the elephant was more about "politics and international relationships than animal welfare".

"The cost involved with relocating and maintaining an elephant is so much higher than conserving animals in the wild," he said.

SAFE was "deadly opposed" to keeping elephants in captivity, and had urged Auckland Zoo to reconsider housing elephants when its elephant Kashin died in 2009.

"Elephants do not do well in captivity. I can understand why the public would want to see them, by and large. But it's just a selfish thought," he said.

"They have a very limited area to the point where they have to be taken for walks to give them exercise."

​Auckland Zoo director Jonathan Wilcken said the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage was built to house 30 elephants, but currently had 93 on site.

"All elephants held at the orphanage are unable to be released in to the wild, and the orphanage regularly re-homes elephants of Nandi's age to other facilities."

Wilcken said Auckland Zoo had "contributed significantly" to programmes in Sri Lanka aimed at the protection and conservation of elephants in the wild where they were threatened.

"Elephants are extraordinarily powerful ambassadors for wildlife and the natural world, one of the many reasons we are very excited about Nandi joining Anjalee and Burma to become part of our sustainable breeding herd," he said.

Veterinary preparations were already underway ahead of Nandi's transportation to Auckland.

Auckland Zoo said there was a lot of routine testing over the next coming months that Nandi would have to go through - the same process Anjalee went through before her arrival.

Eight-year-old Anjalee is "thriving" at Auckland Zoo since leaving Pinnawala elephant orphanage in March last year. She was quarantined in Niue before arriving in New Zealand.

"She and Burma have developed a strong relationship of mutual support and playfulness, both showing evident signs of enjoying each other's company immensely."
 
Fantastic news regarding the hopefully imminent arrival of Nandi. Pleased to hear she is only five years old so she can settle in and be bred from young like Melbourne Zoo were able to with Kulab, who was six years old on arrival, and produced her first calf aged ten.

Auckland Zoo were still viewing AI as the most viable option for breeding (as oppose to importing a bull), is this correct?
 
Auckland Zoo's Pridelands extension first residents move in, ahead of the exhibit opening next Friday.

Story & video here: Auckland Zoo meerkats move into new home, reaction caught on camera | Stuff.co.nz

A mob of mischievous meerkats have settled into their home in Auckland Zoo's new African savannah development.

"They wasted no time at all in exploring every area of their new enclosure, and were soon on sentry duty," Auckland Zoo carnivore team leader Lauren Booth said.

The enclosure boasts features such as a new and improved tunnel system with pop-up viewing windows for visitors, plus under and over-passes for the meerkats.

Auckland Zoo posted about the move on its Facebook page on Thursday afternoon.

"They spent the morning exploring, eating, digging, and pulling apart the logs and aloe vera, plus checking out their new neighbours," the post says.

Booth said the animals' new home gave them an amazing vantage point to look out over the whole African savannah vista, looking out onto giraffes, zebras and other African species.

The African savannah development includes an expansive walk-through aviary, home to lovebirds, leopard tortoises and meerkats and will open on March 25.
 
Hello, I'm new to the forum. I have come accross and article about the new Savannah development, Sneak peek into Auckland Zoo's $7 million African savanna development | Stuff.co.nz There is also a video which is really good, it gives a sneak peek into what it will look like. The meerkat enclosure looks amazing, the domes for visitors look like a big improvement from the last ones. The African birds that will make home in the aviary are said to be moving in soon, as well as leopard tortoises and chameleons. Also the watering hole for the giraffes and zebras looks great, complete with a little waterfall. I look forward to checking it all out when it is finished, which should be in a few days. :)
 
Hello, I'm new to the forum. I have come accross and article about the new Savannah development, Sneak peek into Auckland Zoo's $7 million African savanna development | Stuff.co.nz There is also a video which is really good, it gives a sneak peek into what it will look like. The meerkat enclosure looks amazing, the domes for visitors look like a big improvement from the last ones. The African birds that will make home in the aviary are said to be moving in soon, as well as leopard tortoises and chameleons. Also the watering hole for the giraffes and zebras looks great, complete with a little waterfall. I look forward to checking it all out when it is finished, which should be in a few days. :)

Welcome ZooBoyNZ, from another zooboy from NZ. :D

The inclusion of Chameleons is exciting, the Zoo has not had these for about ten years. Presumably these will be Jackson's Chameleons from Ti Point. Interesting to hear the director state that there will be multiple bird species in the aviary, not just the lovebird colony - I wonder what else will be included? There are few African birds available apart from Guineafowl, African Grey Parrots and maybe some finches. Notably, he also mentioned other small animals, which might indicate that Porcupines might move here in the future, and possibly other species.
 
Interesting to hear the director state that there will be multiple bird species in the aviary, not just the lovebird colony - I wonder what else will be included? There are few African birds available apart from Guineafowl, African Grey Parrots and maybe some finches. Notably, he also mentioned other small animals, which might indicate that Porcupines might move here in the future, and possibly other species.
I'm thinking by "a whole range of African birds species" he might be exaggerating somewhat to refer just to lovebirds.

Just as a point of interest the sign at the start of the video shows the species which will be present. The bottom row of animals are meerkat, lovebirds, tortoise, lion and rhino. The top row is zebra, giraffe, nyala, guineafowl and ostrich.
 
Welcome ZooBoyNZ, from another zooboy from NZ. :D

The inclusion of Chameleons is exciting, the Zoo has not had these for about ten years. Presumably these will be Jackson's Chameleons from Ti Point. Interesting to hear the director state that there will be multiple bird species in the aviary, not just the lovebird colony - I wonder what else will be included? There are few African birds available apart from Guineafowl, African Grey Parrots and maybe some finches. Notably, he also mentioned other small animals, which might indicate that Porcupines might move here in the future, and possibly other species.

Thank you! :) And yes chameleons are very exciting. I was also wondering what other birds would be in the aviary, I guess we will need to wait and see, which should be only 4 days now! And it would make sense for the porcupines to move into the area, since this new meerkat enclosure looks very large, maybe they will make it a meerkat/porcupine mixed enclosure like Orana's. Either way, I'm very excited for the opening!
 
I'm thinking by "a whole range of African birds species" he might be exaggerating somewhat to refer just to lovebirds.

Just as a point of interest the sign at the start of the video shows the species which will be present. The bottom row of animals are meerkat, lovebirds, tortoise, lion and rhino. The top row is zebra, giraffe, nyala, guineafowl and ostrich.

Yes! I also noticed this! Nyala would be a great addition to the Auckland Savannah, as I believe Wellington has a herd of quite a few now (not exactly sure how many) but maybe a few females could be transferred to Auckland. Antelopes are my favourite animal, so it would be nice to have another species at Auckland. Speaking of that, it seems a little bit strange that the springbok are not featured on this sign...? :confused:
 
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