AWP's zoo visits Down Under

AWP

Well-Known Member
5+ year member
In the last weeks I've been travelling in Australia and I was able to visit some zoos along the trip.

Perth Zoo
On my second day in Australia, I visited Perth Zoo. Because my time was limited that day, I focused on native species. First, I went to "Reptile Encounter" to see one of the species of my wishlist for Perth Zoo: the perentie. I saw one sleeping on a rock in the inner part of the enclosure. It was quite a contrast with the dwarf Dampier Peninsula Monitor in the same building.

Through "Australian Wetlands" I went to "Australian Bushwalk", hoping to see species number two of my overall whistlist (number one would follow in the zoos of the eastern coast): the numbat. At first, I only saw a brown fluffy thing in the upper part of the enclosure, but at the end one individual was very active and came really close! Close to the end of "Australian Bushwalk" I saw a Western Brush Wallaby as well, although at first I thought it was a juvenile Grey or Red Kangaroo, and an active Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat. I didn't see any Quokkas, but the next day I would see plenty of them in the wild at Rottnest Island.

The next native section, the Nocturnal House, was located at the crossing point of "Asian Rainforest", "Amazonia" and "African Savannah". Along the way to the Nocturnal House, I had a quick look at the enclosures for tigers (didn't see any), elephants and orangutans. The Nocturnal House of Perth Zoo would be the largest of the ones I visited during this trip with the most diverse collection. I saw all mammal species but the Western Quoll, including some rare species endemic for Western Australia.

I followed the route of the "African Savannah" to the exit, but didn't see any animals because it was near closing time and the keepers probably already put the giraffes, rhinos, painted dogs, etc in the inner enclosures.

Beautiful zoo with the best native section and largest nocturnal house of all the zoos I visited during my trip. I didn't see much of the exotic sections, so it's hard to judge these sections or to compare them to that of European zoos.

List of mammal species
Short-beaked Echidna
Tasmanian Devil
Western Quoll
Northern Quoll*
Red-tailed Phascogale
Fat-tailed Dunnart*
Dibbler*
Numbat*
Greater Bilby
Common Brushtail Possum
Western Ringtail Possum*
Northern Sugar Glider
Feathertail Glider
Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat
Koala
Long-nosed Potoroo
Quokka
Tammar Wallaby
Western Brush Wallaby*
Western Grey Kangaroo
Red Kangaroo
Goodfellow Tree Kangaroo
Golden-bellied Water Rat
Spinifex Hopping Mouse
Ghost Bat
Dingo

Asian Elephant
Sumatran Tiger
Lion
Meerkat
Binturong
Spotted Hyaena
African Painted Dog
Malayan Sun Bear
Red Panda
South American Coati
Asian Small-clawed Otter
White Rhinoceros
Grant Zebra
Rothschild Giraffe
South African Porcupine
Ring-tailed Lemur
Black-and-white Lemur
Pygmy Marmoset
Cotton-top Tamarin
Golden Lion Tamarin
Brown Capucin Monkey
Hamadryas Baboon
Silver Gibbon
Northern White-cheeked Gibbon
Sumatran Orangutan

* species not seen before
 
Melbourne Zoo
I had some doubts of this zoo was worth a visit because of the small native section, but I'm glad I went. It's a nice zoo and it has a very clear set-up with a central lane and five major trails.

After entering the zoo, I followed the central lane to see the main reason I decided to visit Melbourne Zoo. In a darkened aquarium I saw my most wanted species: the platypus! It was great to finally see one and the platypus was very active. After my visit to the Platypus House, I went to "Wild Sea" met penguins, fur seals and some aquaria. I liked the underwater views, but above water the enclosures weren't that special. "Australian Bush" with the nice Great Flight Aviary was next, followed by the herpetological houses (nice combination of native and exotic reptiles) and some enclosures for exotic mammals (quite odd combination of Malayan and Brazilian tapir).

After that, I went to the "Lion Gorge", a newly opened trail with carnivores (painted dogs, big cats, Philippine crocs, devils and coatis). Because of the warm temperatures, there wasn't much action over there. "Trail of the Elephants" (Southeast Asia themed) and "Gorilla Rainforest" (mainly primates) were both nicely done, especially Tree-tops Monkeys.

List of mammal species
Platypus*
Tasmanian Devil
Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat
Koala
Red-necked Wallaby
Kangaroo Island Kangaroo
Australian Fur Seal*
New Zealand Fur Seal*

Asian Elephant
Sumatran Tiger
Lion
Snow Leopard
Meerkat
Binturong
African Painted Dog
Red Panda
South American Coati
Asian Small-clawed Otter
Malayan Tapir
Brazilian Tapir
Chapman? Zebra
Collared Pecari
Pygmy Hippopotamus
Rothschild? Giraffe
Ring-tailed Lemur
Black-and-white Lemur
Brown Capucin Monkey
Black-handed Spider Monkey
Hamadryas Baboon
Guereza
Northern White-cheeked Gibbon
Siamang
Sumatran Orangutan
Western Lowland Gorilla
 
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Adelaide Zoo
After Melbourne, I travelled by touring car through Victoria and South Australia, following the Great Ocean Road and across the Grampians to Adelaide. Beside emus, parrots, kookaburras and kangaroos, I saw a Swamp Wallaby and an Echidna in the wild.

Adelaide Zoo has a nice collection of both native and exotic species, most notably the only giant pandas of the Southern Hemisphere. I expected it to be somewhat larger based on the map, some enclosures were empty (most notably that of the koalas and common wombats) and some enclosures were a bit old-fashioned (that of the lions and small carnivores), but I liked this zoo. Highlight was the Nocturnal House, seeing some marsupials for the first time. I was quite impressed by the size of the squirrel gliders, didn't know that this species is larger that sugar gliders.

List of mammal species
Short-beaked Echidna
Tasmanian Devil
Northern Quoll
Greater Bilby
Southern Brown Bandicoot*
Common Ringtail Possum*
Squirrel Glider*
Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat
Long-nosed Potoroo
Quokka
Yellow-footed Rock Wallaby
Tammar Wallaby
Kangaroo Island Kangaroo
Red Kangaroo
Goodfellow Tree Kangaroo
Greater Sticknest Rat
Spinifex Hopping Mouse
Ghost Bat
Australian Sea Lion*

Sumatran Tiger
Lion
Serval
Meerkat
Maned Wolf
Fennec Fox
Malayan Sun Bear
Giant Panda
Red Panda
South American Coati
Asian Small-clawed Otter
Malayan Tapir
Brazilian Tapir
Hippopotamus
Pygmy Hippopotamus
Rothschild? Giraffe
Greater Mara
Capybara
Ring-tailed Lemur
Pygmy Marmoset
Emperor Tamarin
Golden Lion Tamarin
Bolivian Squirrel Monkey
Hamadryas Baboon
Mandrill
Dusky Leaf Monkey
Northern White-cheeked Gibbon
Siamang
Sumatran Orangutan
 
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South Australian Museum & Australian Museum
Because both museums had some animals in their eduction centers (small reptiles, frogs, invertebrates), I will mention these two museums as well. After leaving Adelaide Zoo, I went to the South Australian Museum. I liked it a lot with its diverse collection of mounted mammals (including a Javan Rhinoceros and a Philippine Colugo), the exhibit of extinct and locally extinct mammals (including a young Thylacine) that gave me a bit of a sad feeling, the interesting paleontological sections (Ediacara, Megafauna, opalised plesiosaur) and the small Egyptian room.

Later during my trip I visited the Australian Museum in Sydney. It was bigger, but not better than that of Adelaide. It had two good paleontological sections (Cenozoic and Mesozoic) with mostly casts and not that much original fossils, although a non-original skeleton of a Giganotosaurus is still impressive.
 
Taronga Zoo
I bought my ticket before going on the ferry to the zoo, so after arriving I could enter the zoo directly at the waterside entrance. I started in the marine section, followed by the Kids Trail (petting zoo meets wildlife park). Next was de best section of the zoo with the Blue Mountains Bushwalk (lyrebirds didn’t show, but I would see it in the wild later on), Platypus House (including Common Wombat and Greater Bilby) and “Australian Wildlife”, seeing my second Platypus and my first Long-beaked Echidna and Yellow-bellied Gliders. Both the koala and kangaroo enclosure were quite simple. After visiting Reptile World, I went to the African and Asian sections. There seems to be plans for new enclosures, but for now the African section are just chimpanzees and giraffes (nice view with the Opera House in the background). The Asian section wasn’t that special.

Well, Taronga… The zoo that I expected the most of, high on my worldwide wish list, but I was a bit disappointed. Where my expectations to high? Was it the fact that I already saw several rare native species in other zoos during my trip? Was it the overcrowding with Asians? I definitely didn’t like the chaotic pathways in some parts of the zoo and the fun park-styled attractions like the “Wild Ropes” and the new tiger enclosure. Don’t get me wrong, I had a good time in the zoo and saw some interesting species and some beautiful enclosures, but it was less fantastic than that I had expected. Perth Zoo had a better native area and both Perth and Melbourne Zoo had a more diverse exotic collection.

List of mammal species
Short-beaked Echidna
Western Long-beaked Echdina*
Platypus
Tasmanian Devil
Eastern Quoll
Red-tailed Phascogale
Greater Bilby
Long-nosed Bandicoot*
Common Brushtail Possum
Common Ringtail Possum
Squirrel Glider
Yellow-bellied Glider*
Feathertail Glider
Common Wombat
Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat
Koala
Woylie
Long-nosed Potoroo
Quokka
Brush-tailed Rock Wallaby
Swamp Wallaby
Red-necked Wallaby
Red Kangaroo
Goodfellow Tree Kangaroo
Plains Rat
Black-footed Tree Rat
Greater Sticknest Rat
Spinifex Hopping Mouse
Ghost Bat
Australian Sea Lion
New Zealand Fur Seal
Subantarctic Fur Seal*

Asian Elephant
Sumatran Tiger
Fishing Cat
Meerkat
Binturong
Malayan Sun Bear
Red Panda
Asian Small-clawed Otter
Californian Sea Lion
Pygmy Hippopotamus
Alpaca
Rothschild? Giraffe
Bongo
Ring-tailed Lemur
Cotton-top Tamarin
Golden Lion Tamarin
Bolivian Squirrel Monkey
François Leaf Monkey
Northern White-cheeked Gibbon
Chimpanzee
Western Lowland Gorilla
 
Wildlife Sydney Zoo & Sea Life Sydney
At first, it wasn’t in my plans to visit this zoo, but I had an unexpected extra free afternoon. I didn’t expected much of it; a wildlife park in the center of Sydney, in a building at Darling Harbour? It turned out to be quite nice with a diverse collection. Most sections were composed of a large enclosure with a combination of mammals and birds and terraria for reptiles and frogs. The nocturnal section was quite large, although the main enclosure was empty because of redecoration (I think bilbies were kept here). At first, I thought my luck with platypuses was gone, but in the end I saw both of them.

My visit to Sea Life, the next door facility, was mainly to see the dugongs. The other sections weren’t that special, although I liked the concept of “Jurassic Seas” as an evolution themed area with invertebrates, hagfish, lungfish and axolotls among others (the name is kind of strange for Australia, "Cretaceous Seas" would make more sense referring to the Eromanga Sea with its marine reptiles). The boat ride in the new “Penguin Expedition” was already closed at the time I got there. The enclosure is nothing compared to that of Loro Parque that I visited last year.

List of mammal species
Wildlife
Short-beaked Echidna
Platypus
Tasmanian Devil
Tiger Quoll
Fat-tailed Dunnart
Yellow-bellied Glider
Feathertail Glider
Common Wombat
Koala
Rufous Bettong*
Quokka
Yellow-footed Rock Wallaby
Red-legged Pademelon*
Agile Wallaby
Kangaroo Island Kangaroo
Eastern Grey Kangaroo
Spinifex Hopping Mouse
Ghost Bat

Sea Life
Dugong*
 
After leaving Adelaide Zoo, I went to the South Australian Museum. I liked it a lot with its diverse collection of mounted mammals (including a Javan Rhinoceros...
The rhino originally came from the Adelaide Zoo.
 
Kuranda
After Sydney I went to tropical Queensland. The best thing of Kuranda was the travel, by scenic railway and cable car through the rainforests of Barron Gorge National Park. The zoological attractions of the town - a small zoo, a large aviary and a butterfly garden - are like Kuranda it self: quite commercial. Instead of one "Kuranda Zoo" you have to pay three times a entrance fee and of course additional if you want to cuddle a koala. I went to Koala Gardens en Birdworld, but didn't go to the butterfly garden

My main reason to visit the Koala Gardens was to see the two endangered species of tropical Queensland, the Northern Bettong and the Mahogany Glider. Anyway, Koala Gardens was not bad with a lake with many freshwater crocodiles, a small walkthrough area with kangaroos and wallabies and a nocturnal house that was much larger than I expected. I read something about Bilbies, but there was a lot more to see. Gliders and bandicoots were also kept in a separate enclosure next to the nocturnal house.

Birdworld consists of one large walkthrough aviary. After entering, you come on a feeding platform. From there the pathway goes down to the cassowary enclosure at the lowest point and then up again. The aviary was nice, but I've seen more beautiful ones elsewere. I don't understand why they have to keep exotic birds. Tropical Queensland or Australia have enough interesting species, so why macaws, conures and Asian birds?

List of mammal species Koala Gardens

Greater Bilby
Northern Brown Bandicoot
Common Ringtail Possum
Squirrel Glider
Mahogany Glider*
Common Wombat
Koala
Northern Bettong*
Long-nosed Potoroo
Quokka
Red-legged Pademelon
Swamp Wallaby
Parma Wallaby
Agile Wallaby
Eastern Grey Kangaroo

List of species Birdworld (according to the given leaflet)
native
Cassowary
Radjah Shelduck
Whistling Duck
Freckled Duck
Black Swan
Buff-banded Rail
Cattle Egret
Intermediate Egret
Pied Heron
White-faced Heron
Red-winged Parrot
King Parrot
Eclectus Parrot
Fig Parrot
Rainbow Lorikeet
Scaly-breasted Lorikeet
Mustard Lorikeet
Galah
Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo
Major Mitchell Cockatoo
Rock Pigeon
White-headed Pigeon
Torres Strait Imperial Pigeon
Emerald Dove
Peaceful Dove
Bar-shouldered Dove
Figbird
Frairbird
Zebra Finch
Chestnut Mannakin

exotic
Mandarin Duck
Scarlet Macaw
Blue-and-yellow Macaw
Hahn Macaw
Nanday Conure
Sun Conure
Blue-fronted Amazon
Indian Ringneck
Alexandrine Parrot
Dusky Lorikeet
Chattering Lorikeet
Maned Pigeon
Luzon Bleeding-heart Pigeon
Spotted Turtle-Dove
Orange-breasted Finch
Java Sparrow
Cordonbleu Finch
 
Are there only mammals at Koala Gardens?

No, but I only made lists of the mammals that were kept in the zoos I visited. As you already knew, Koala Gardens has two species of frogmouth. Besides the mentioned freshwater crocodiles, the herpetological collection consists of knobtail geckos and white-lipped frogs in the nocturnal house and some lizards and snakes at two locations in the zoo (near the entrance and near the exit). Wild Eastern Water Dragons wander around at the Heritage Market and they are quite easy to spot.
 
Cairns Aquarium
I visited Cairns Aquarium, which was from the entrance of my hotel on the other side of the roundabout, during the evening. Because of Chinese New Year the aquarium was open during evening hours. In the first part of the aquarium I was the only visitor, but eventually there were some others in the reef sections. Cairns Aquarium consists of two floors with themed exhibits, beginning with freshwater and followed by rainforest and mangroves, coral reefs and finally the Oceanarium. The collection is not pure aquatic or amphibious, but also include several terrestrial and arboreal species of reptiles, frogs and arthropods, mainly in the rainforest section. A special part of the reef section is dedicated to venomous species, including Olive Sea Snakes. The aquarium keeps several species of sharks with Blacktip Reef Sharks in “Aqualuna”, the basin of the restaurant. Unfortunately the hammerheads were nowhere to see, although there is a large photo of one above or next to the entrance. I liked Cairns Aquarium with its good themed exhibits and diverse collection. It’s “just” an aquarium and not almost a theme park like Sea Life Sydney. Bonus are the large flocks of Spectacled Flying-Foxes roosting and flying around the aquarium.

To conclude, I really liked my visits to these Australian zoos and aquaria. Some were really good, some were average and some were a bit disappointing, but all were worth a visit for the collection or the park/aquarium itself.

It’s a nice list: three species of monotremes, nine species of dasyuromorphs, four species of peramelemorphs, eight species of gliders and possums, three species of vombatiforms, four species of potoroids, fifteen species of macropods, five species of native rodents, four species of native pinnipeds, dugongs, dingos and ghost bats, as well as among others eight species of monitors, some of the most venomous snakes of the world and countless species of birds.
 
Thanks very much for posting all about these Aussie zoos and aquariums. Your reviews and lists are much appreciated! :)
 
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Here is a list of the mammals listed in 3 or more of the animal collections visited by AWP.

5: Tasmanian Devil; Koala; Quokka; Ghost Bat

4: Short-beaked Echidna; Greater Bilby; Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat; Long-nosed Potoroo; Northern White-cheeked Gibbon; Spinifex Hopping Mouse; Sumatran Tiger; Meerkat; Red Panda; Asian Small-clawed Otter; Rothschild? Giraffe

3: Platypus; Squirrel Glider;
Feathertail Glider; Common Wombat; Kangaroo Island Kangaroo; Goodfellow Tree Kangaroo; Asian Elephant; Hamadryas Baboon; Sumatran Orangutan; Lion; Binturong; Malayan Sun Bear; South American Coati; Pygmy Hippopotamus

I think it's a bit sad that some Australasian species that occur in a few Australian zoos are not kept outside Australia, but the exotic species seem to be fairly common outside Australia.
 
the exotic species seem to be fairly common outside Australia.

Taronga has two regional rarities, the mentioned Long-beaked Echidna of New Guinea (although Zaglossus lived in Australia and I read something about a collected specimen from Kimberley dated around 1900) and the tuatara of New Zealand. Furthermore, I didn't see any exotic rarities besides the Giant Pandas.
 
I like nocturnal houses, mainly because of the small mammals that are kept in these places. In Australia almost every zoo or larger wildlife park seems to have one, what is great. Below I'll put lists of the set-up of the different nocturnal houses I visited during my last trip.

numbers corresponding to the enclosures


Perth Zoo

1. Western Ringtail, Red-tailed Phascogale
2. Fat-tailed Dunnart
3. Southern Boobook, Long-nosed Potoroo, Common Brushtail Possum
4. Dibbler
5. Tawny Frogmouth
6. Ghost Bat
7. Olive Python
8. Cane Toad
9. Jungle Python
10. Rough-scaled Python
11. Northern Quoll
12. Spinifex Hopping Mouse, Owlet-Nightjar
13. Greater Bilby, Ghost Bat
14. Northern Sugar Glider
15. Green Tree Frog
16. Western Quoll
17. Giant Prickly Stick Insect
18. Scorpion
19. Australian Tarantula
20. Banded Knobtail Gecko
21. Stimson’s Python
22. Feathertail Glider, Leaftail Gecko
23. Golden-bellied Water Rat

Adelaide Zoo
first long side:
1. Spinifex Hopping Mouse
2. Greater Sticknest Rat
3. Northern Quoll
4. Long-nosed Potoroo, Squirrel Glider
5. Greater Sticknest Rat
short side:
6. Long-nosed Potoroo, Squiller Glider
second long side:
7. Greater Bilby
8. Southern Brown Bandicoot, Common Ringtail Possum
9. Ghost Bat

Taronga - Australian Nightlife
1. Greater Bilby
2. Greater Sticknest Rat
3. Short-beaked Echidna, Red-tailed Phascogale
4. Short-beaked Echidna, Common Brushtail Possum
5. Eastern Quoll
6. Spinifex Hopping Mouse
7. Short-beaked Echidna, Black-footed Tree Rat
8. Long-nosed Potoroo, Squirrel Glider
9. Yellow-bellied Glider
10. Feathertail Glider
11. New Caledonian Giant Gecko
12. Diamond Python
13. Plains Rat
14. Common Ringtail Possum, Long-nosed Bandicoot, Tawny Frogmouth
15. Short-beaked Echidna, Western Long-beaked Echidna, Squirrel Glider
16. Ghost Bat

Wildlife Sydney
1. Platypus (actually right before the real nocturnal section)
2. Yellow-bellied Glider
3. Feathertail Glider
4. (empty)
5. Night Skink
6. Knobtail Gecko
7. Northern Giant Cave Gecko
8. Fat-tailed Dunnart
9. Woma Python
10. Tiger Quoll
11. Rufous Bettong, Ghost Bat
12. Spinifex Hopping Mouse (actually right after the real nocturnal section)

Koala Gardens - Nocturnal Wonders
1. Greater Bilby (central enclosure)
2. White-lipped Frog
3. Northern Bettong
4. Papuan & Marbled Frogmouth
5. Common Ringtail Possum, Rufous Bettong
6. Mahogany Glider
7. Rough Knobtail Gecko
 
Taronga has two regional rarities, the mentioned Long-beaked Echidna of New Guinea (although Zaglossus lived in Australia and I read something about a collected specimen from Kimberley dated around 1900) and the tuatara of New Zealand. Furthermore, I didn't see any exotic rarities besides the Giant Pandas.
I recall reading a report of a possible sighting of Zaglossus in the Kimberleys in the last 18 months.
 
I recall reading a report of a possible sighting of Zaglossus in the Kimberleys in the last 18 months.
No, I was wrong, just looked it up. It was the 1900 specimen you mentioned. Scientists are training some detector dogs to search for scats to discover if they still exist in the area.
 
Below a list of Australian and New Guinean native mammals (precolonial) kept in zoos that I visited. In bold the additions of my recent holiday in Australia.

PlatypusOrnithorhynchus anatinus
Short-beaked Echidna – Tachyglossus aculeatus
New Guinean Short-beaked Echidna – Tachyglossus aculeatus lawesii
Long-beaked EchidnaZaglossus (bartoni or bruijni)

Kultarr – Antechinomys laniger
Fawn Antechinus – Antechinus bellus
Mulgara – Dasycercus cristicauda
Kowari – Dasyuroides byrnei
Western Quoll – Dasyurus geoffroii
Northern QuollDasyurus hallucatus
Tiger Quoll – Dasyurus maculatus
Eastern Quoll – Dasyurus viverrinus
NumbatMyrmecobius fasciatus
DibblerParantechinus apicalis
Red-tailed Phascogale – Phascogale calura
Common Planigale – Planigale maculata
Tasmanian Devil – Sarcophilis harrisii
Fat-tailed Dunnart - Sminthopsis crassicaudata

Northern Brown Bandicoot – Isoodon macrourus
Southern Brown BandicootIsoodon obesulus
Greater Bilby – Macrotis lagotis
Long-nosed BandicootPerameles nasuta

Striped Possum – Dactylopsila trivirgata (can't remember if I actually saw it)
Feathertail Glider – Acrobates pygmaeus
Yellow-bellied GliderPetaurus australis
Sugar Glider – Petaurus breviceps
Northern Sugar Glider – Petaurus breviceps ariel
Mahogany GliderPetaurus gracilis
Squirrel GliderPetaurus norfolcensis
Ground Cuscus – Phalanger gymnotis
Western RingtailPseudocheirus occidentalis
Eastern RingtailPseudocheirus peregrinus
Spotted Cuscus – Spilocuscus maculatus
Common Brushtail Possum – Trichosurus vulpecula
Northern Brushtail Possum – Trichosurus vulpecula arnhemensis

Common Wombat – Vombatus ursinus (according to ZTL: in Europa V. u. hirsutus and V. u. tasmaniensis)
Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat – Lasiorhinus latifrons
Koala – Phascolarctos cinereus (in Europa P. c. adustus, but I don't know for the Australian ones)

Rufous BettongAepyprymnus rufescens
Brushtail Bettong – Bettongia penicillata
Northern BettongBettongia tropica
Long-nosed Potoroo – Potorous tridactylus
Mala – Lagorchestes hirsutus
Spectacled Hare-Wallaby – Lagorchestes conspicillatus
QuokkaSetonix brachyurus
Red-bellied Pademelon – Thylogale billiardieri
Dusky Pademelon – Thylogale brunii
Red-legged PademelonThylogale stigmatica
Hagen's Scrub Wallaby – Dorcopsis hageni
Müller's Scrub Wallaby – Dorcopsis muelleri
Brushtail Rock Wallaby – Petrogale penicillata
Yellow-footed Rock Wallaby – Petrogale xanthopus
Swamp Wallaby – Wallabia bicolor
Agile Wallaby – Macropus agilis
Tammar Wallaby – Macropus eugenii
Western Brush WallabyMacropus irma
Parma Wallaby – Macropus parma
Red-necked Wallaby – Macropus rufogriseus
Antilopine Wallaroo – Macropus antilopinus
Black Wallaroo – Macropus bernardus
Western Wallaroo – Macropus robustus cervinus
Eastern Wallaroo – Macropus robustus robustus
Northern Wallaroo – Macropus robustus woodwardi
Kangaroo Island Kangaroo – Macropus fuliginosus fuliginosus
Black-faced Kangaroo – Macropus fuliginosus melanops
Eastern Grey Kangaroo – Macropus giganteus
Red Kangaroo – Macropus rufus
Goodfellow Tree-Kangaroo – Dendrolagus goodfellowi
Matschie Tree-Kangaroo – Dendrolagus matschiei

Ghost Bat – Macroderma gigas
Least Blossom Bat – Macroglossus minimus
Black Flying-Fox – Pteropus alecto
Grey-headed Flying-Fox – Pteropus poliocephalus

Brushtail Rabbit Rat – Conilurus penicillatus
Golden-bellied Water Rat – Hydromys chrysogaster
Greater Sticknest Rat – Leporillus conditor
Grassland Melomys – Melomys burtoni
Black-footed Tree Rat – Mesembriomys gouldi
Spinifex Hopping Mouse – Notomys alexis
Northern Hopping Mouse – Notomys aquino
Plains Rat – Pseudomys australis
Carpenterian Rock Rat – Zyzomys palatilis
Central Rock Rat – Zyzomys pedunculatus

Dingo – Canis lupus dingo
Subantarctic Fur Seal – Arctocephalus forsteri
Australian Fur Seal – Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus
New Zealand Fur Seal – Arctocephalus tropicalis
Australian Sea-Lion – Neophoca cinerea
 
I forgot to make notes in the Reptile Houses of Adelaide and Taronga, so when I couldn't recall which native snake species were on display, I decided to send a mail to the zoos. Quite a different reaction I got.

The reply from Taronga was of a enthousiastic reptile keeper who send me a complete list of all snake species at Reptile World including some interesting facts about them (thanks Lauren!).

The reply from Adelaide was just: "unfortunately I am unable to provide a list of all the snake species kept in our Reptile House"...

So, I'm still in doubts about the native snakes in Adelaide. I known @Najade visited the zoo recently, but did you make a list of reptile species?

I mailed some questions to Wildlife Sydney (also about snakes) and Melbourne Zoo (whether or not the animals I saw around the Pelican Pond are zoo animals) as well, but I'm still waiting for a proper reaction.
 
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