Beijing Zoo Beijing Zoo

Simon Hampel

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20+ year member
I just uploaded a collection of photos from Beijing Zoo which I took back in April 2006. Although there were one or two highlights, in general we found the zoo to be very depressing due to the poorly built and very dirty enclosures. Some of the animals did not look well either.

See all the photos here: Beijing Zoo - China - Photo Gallery

Some of the more interesting photos:

[thumb=3909;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_8940.jpg]Humboldt Penguin exhibit - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]
(painted penguins on the walls!)​

[thumb=3911;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_8953.jpg]Common Madagascar Day Gecko - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3914;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_8961.jpg]Mandrill enclosure - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3916;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_8976.jpg]Gorilla - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3917;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_8988.jpg]Chinese River Deer - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3918;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_8991.jpg]Dogs - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]
(domestic dogs in a zoo!)​

[thumb=3920;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9007.jpg]Chimpanzee - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]
 
More photos:

[thumb=3922;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9014.jpg]Elephants - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3930;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9082.jpg]Lion - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3931;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9090.jpg]Wolves - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3932;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9098.jpg]Giant Panda - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3935;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9146.jpg]Red and Grey Kangaroos - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

[thumb=3937;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9153.jpg]Beijing Zoo shocking enclosures with sick animals[/thumb]

[thumb=3940;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_9167.jpg]Polar Bear - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]
(waiting to be fed potato chips)​

... more photos here: Beijing Zoo - China - Photo Gallery
 
bears on potato chips?
Macacques being fed god knows what!
isnt there a push for this zoo to improve before the Olympics??
 
[thumb=3917;549;2006_04_16_-_IMG_8988.jpg]Chinese River Deer - Beijing Zoo[/thumb]

Just a correction: it is Chinese water deer Hydropotes inermis (Chinese river deer would be a new species and therefore a revolution). :D

We can all rant and rave about conditions here, I will not do that. Far too little decent information in English is available regarding the true and overall picture of Beijing Zoo.

I assume most animals are well cared for (allthough the Chinese public do have a tradition in yet throwing stuff at animals on exhibit) and I know they have several scientifically based conservation breeding programmes. To truly establish the zoo conservation/breeding/welfare record we need concrete information (and not just your average WSPA, Care for the Wild or Zoo Check jumping on the bandwagon).

I am not blind to the dumb and old looking exhibitry, and feel lots can be improved presentation wise, but I will not indulge in all this cheap zoo bashing. If we want to change or improve the situation, we must do our own bit. Criticism is so easy, providing a good solution frequently is not! :p

I guess our forum member Sun Wukong is better able to confront these issues (I will pm him anyway on the subject) ... (lol).
 
Just a correction: it is Chinese water deer Hydropotes inermis (Chinese river deer would be a new species and therefore a revolution). :D

I just called it what the sign at the zoo called it. Could well be a translation problem - that's very common.
 
I was short time in Beijing Zoo in summer 2006. There were at least 5 giant pandas.

Zoo generally was depressing, but giant pandas and many primates had really very decent outdoor enclosures. There were breeding group of Yunnan and two groups of Golden snub-nosed monkeys. I remember also hoolock gibbon and langur named Presbytis pileatus (don't remember official current name with all taxonomic shuffles).

We seen signposts of Crested Ibis Nipponia nippon and, astonishingly, Bearded Saki Chiropotes satanas, but I had no time to check their inhabitants.

Evidently an effort was made to rebuild parts of zoo, so maybe in this year olympics it will look better. On the other hand, night house was filthy to go in for visitor, not to say for animals.

What else I remember - lots of Asian cranes as non-breeders, Golden Takin and Kiang with foal in essentially cattle farm stables; Black-necked Stork pair; Chinese Monal pair, Great Bustard and some commoner pheasant in small, dark aviaries, pygmy slow loris; plenty of raccoons, foxes etc surprisingly interesting for Chinese, modern outdoor gorilla paddock (minus gorillas); lots of repriles with names I never heard before and Chinese giant salamander in big, sterile terrarium resembling some hospital or utility building.

Chinese have some of most interesting and rare fauna on Earth, pity than they share so little.
 
It is amazing how much garbage is tossed into the enclosures. I'm used to seeing atrocious, concrete pits with begging bears...but was a little shocked at the amount of litter in the macaque pit. I teach/tutor Korean students as a part-time job at an ESL school, and they are always telling me about visiting zoos near Seoul and bringing food for the animals. It is not unusual to see animals sitting around and constantly begging, and then being locked inside tiny, barred pits at night.
 
I see that the Beijing Zoo is going to have 15 giant pandas on display for this summer's Olympic Games. I doubt that they will all be in the public eye at once, as there will undoubtedly be some type of rotation going on. What I'm really curious about is the public reaction from western tourists to the concrete and bars that are prevalent throughout the zoo. From Sim's photos it appears that some of the exhibits are atrocious.
 
Yup, and some are definitely not. For instance they have ultra modern breeding complexes for their golden monkeys (both Sichuan and Yunnan) and crested ibis. It is just the perspective you come away with though. Do you only look at the bad apples (I am not closing my eyes on them though) or do you have an open mind to how things could change over time.

Surprisingly though it must come from Beijing Zoo management on its own, as the current Olympics are given much more in free credits (in Renminbi that is) than the cash strapped municipal zoo. It is not that the zoo management does not want or does not know how to change, it is a lack of foresight on the part of Beijing City Council to fund its municipal zoo properly.

China is changing so quickly these days .. let us not forget it will be the world's super power of tomorrow (along with India). I am confident that - looking at Shanghai Zoo - Beijing Zoo might change in that direction too.

Perhaps Sun Wukong can give us a better perspective on Beijing Zoo (just look at his pictures of the golden monkeys, simply brilliant ... (dumbstruck and in total awe ... (lol)).
 
BTW, are crested ibis on display? I didn't manage to see them, and access close to aviary seemed to be blocked (temporarily?).

Also, Beijing zoo is often said to keep wild camels and asian desert cat. Is it (recently) true? Any other rare endemics not mentioned yet?
 
@Jelle: Now I'm feeling really flattered...;)

Positive things about Beijing Zoo:
-despite the for western eyes alarmingly bare & hostile cages and exhibits, quite a bunch of animals look pretty healthy and well-cared. In fact, some of the reptiles I saw were among the most beautiful specimen I ever encountered being kept in a zoo or in private. The Plumed basilisks f.e., housed in a tiny tank, were stunning individuals with complete tails. Same goes for various rare species of turtles and tortoises. To confirm this opinion of mine, I showed some of the video footage and pics I made to some experienced colleagues, working in the zoo & exotic pet field. They were equally amazed how well some of the animals looked - despite the bad husbandry conditions.
-There are some pretty good exhibits that come close to what You see in many Western zoos-like the Penguins & Bats exhibit, the Indian Rhinos, the crane pond or the pythons exhibit. Connecting the indoor crocodilian enclosure via channel with an outdoor pool is quite a nice idea.
-One should not forget that quite a few of the exhibits for surplus animals/aggressive males & the nonpublic exhibits behind the scenes of many modern and popular western zoos (San Diego!) aren't that much different from what I saw there in China. Beijing Zoo just shows its "underwear", if so to say.
-Despite the bad looks, Beijing Zoo seems to be successful in keeping and even breeding species western zoos seem to have problems with acquiring & keeping-like Francois' Langurs, Argalis, Red Gorals, Snub-Nosed Monkeys (even though one Yunnan male showed diarrhoea) or Tibet gazelle. Of course, B. is closer to the "source" if so to speak...
-The Beijing Aquarium doesn't differ much from its European or American counterparts, besides putting a lot of emphasis on colours & effects (a tank crammed full of silbery shiny Arowanas or orange Blood parrot cichlids, a so-called "cruel breed" no longer allowed for sale in some European countries). The Giant sturgeon exhibit was highly impressive.

There are, however, a lot of things one could criticize about this zoo-and they're not just some little "cosmetic" details:
-The husbandry of many species (reptiles & amphibians, Apes-even though the gorilla outdoor exhibit looked at first glance like that of a western zoo-, Chinese Mountain Cat (poor old thing), tapirs, parrots, Wanderu and other monkeys, the civet in glass cubes, wolves, dhole, the bears, the elephants, the domestic animals, most of the ungulates, the Nocturnal house, the pheasants...) really need improvement-urgently! Barren concrete cages full of garbage and dirty scratched glass walls simply shouldn't be part of a zoo nowadays.
-There are several animals that highly need improved hoof trimming (Golden Takins!), a serious change of nutrion (severley obese orangs & gorillas) and better parasite prophylaxis.
And could someone change the tank full of dead newts and the one full of banded kraits?
-The visitors = one of the biggest problems. Whoever swears about misbehaving western zoo visitors should try them out instead. Feeding of the animals with all kind of things, harassing (including throwing rocks at animals or hitting the glass using full force) animals is a very common sight-with adults behaving like little nasty children. And if You have students tilting hydrochloric acid over moon bears to test their reaction, as it happened in that zoo for a longer time span, something is really going wrong. Same goes for posing with chimp babies, renting dogs from tiny cages for a walk or fishing for goldfish for a dime.

Summa summarum: Beijing Zoo has an impressive collection of animals (among many others: the only wild camel!) and shows a few steps torwards modern zoo animal husbandry. But a lot of the zoo needs improvement in regard of modern animal husbandry. However, many Chinese zoos tend to be even worse.

I do support jelle's point of view: with international cooperation, Beijing Zoo could really be changed to the better. Western Zoos could also profit from this by getting animals needed for their breeding programmes, exchanging their surplus (if B. Zoo can adequately care for them then) animals and even get highly interesting rare and "new" species, like the Snub-nosed monkeys.

PS: A friend of mine visited Beijing Zoo just recently. According to him, nothing has really changed.
 
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Yes, Jonathan-Chinese Morals; and I think there is another institution in Beijing (I didn't go there, just heard recently about it) that has even more pheasant species.
@Jurek7: I saw mentioned Chinese Mountain cat & wild camel, Red And White Giant Flying Squirrels, Hog Badgers, Great Bustards, Mongolian Larks, Sichuan and Shensi Takins, various subspecies of the Brown Bear, Moon Bears, Francois' and Spectacled Langurs, at least half a dozen Pgymy Loris, Chinese Alligator en masse and much more. That enough?;)
 
Chinese Mountain Cat??!!!

I'm crazy over rare felids!!!!

probably very old, how many were their?
 
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