JurassicMax
Well-Known Member
On the 1st of January a Guianan weeper capuchin (Cebus olivaceus) was born.
Source:
Instagram of Zoo Berlin (09/01/2023)
Source:
Instagram of Zoo Berlin (09/01/2023)
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Nothing too surprising in there for anyone who has been keeping up to date with both collections. Nice to see plans for upgraded facilities across both sites however!
The lack of news on the elephants is suprising I agree. I thought the logical approach would have been to transfer the elephants over to the expansion, develop the current elephant exhibit for gorillas and then give the other apes more space. Getting rid of the other apes and just keeping gorillas would be a massive disappointment. I do however believe it’s not really feasible to give modern exhibit standards to polar bears in the bear area of the zoo if the zoo wants to keep other carnivore taxa in that area at the same time. A disappointment perhaps for donors but in the long run the development of a world class polar bear facility in the Tierpark is better imo than two average polar bear exhibits on the two sites.In a way you are right. What stuck out for the zoo for me, though:
- The fact that a new/updated plan indeed exists since 2021 (it has never been communicated publicly) but this time a joined one for both Berlin Zoo/Aquarium and Tierpark.
- The updated layout of the new cat exhibits.
- The fact they now have major plans for gorillas and will build a new separate house for them (unfortunately it does not state where in the zoo) but they do not mention any of the other apes any longer. There have been earlier plans to form the elephant complex into one for gorillas and orangs. But now the gorillas are singled out and the sheet for the monkey building doesn't show or mention any apes at all. Taken the large new outside enclosure(s) I guess there may well be at least one ape species in there.
- The fact they seem to rejoin brown bears and wolves in a far larger enclosure but don't seem to plan with polar bears any longer. They actually wanted to give an update on whether or not there will be any polar bears again but it never happened.
- The fact they do not mention anything about their elephants any longer. This seems to have fallen out of their current priorities.
While nothing of this comes as a huge surprise, I do believe there is some real potential for major public discussion/criticism. Many people (donors in particular) won't be happy to learn there won't be any new polar bears and they may (at least temporarily) not see all of the apes or any elephants. I can already picture the headlines in the local tabloid press (Bild/B.Z./Kurier). This may also well be the reason none of this has been published by now.
The lack of news on the elephants is suprising I agree. I thought the logical approach would have been to transfer the elephants over to the expansion, develop the current elephant exhibit for gorillas and then give the other apes more space. Getting rid of the other apes and just keeping gorillas would be a massive disappointment.
I do however believe it’s not really feasible to give modern exhibit standards to polar bears in the bear area of the zoo if the zoo wants to keep other carnivore taxa in that area at the same time. A disappointment perhaps for donors but in the long run the development of a world class polar bear facility in the Tierpark is better imo than two average polar bear exhibits on the two sites.
I totally agree. But ruling out any option will not be welcomed by many zoo supporters (a large fraction of them loves polar bears and visited Knut very regularly).
Still, based on current standards and best practice, I don't think they could appropriately house polar bears at Berlin Zoo without loosing other species (for space).It'd also be a massive pity on historical grounds if Zoo Berlin permanently went out of the species; before ceasing to keep the species a year or two ago, the zoo had displayed polar bear near-continuously since the 1890s to the best of my knowledge, with only a single interregnum between 1944 and 1951 (the result of the near-destruction of the zoo during WWII).
Still, based on current standards and best practice, I don't think they could appropriately house polar bears at Berlin Zoo without loosing other species (for space).
Fortunately they have a completely pointless bear species hogging a whole swathe of land in the centre of the zoo![]()
It'd also be a massive pity on historical grounds if Zoo Berlin permanently went out of the species; before ceasing to keep the species a year or two ago, the zoo had displayed polar bear near-continuously since the 1890s to the best of my knowledge, with only a single interregnum between 1944 and 1951 (the result of the near-destruction of the zoo during WWII).
Imagine the deer that there still could be in the collection..
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As to the brown bear: Yep, it seems a bit pointless but they can have an attractive shared exhibit and it still is the most iconic species for a zoo based in and called after the German capital.
It would be really annoying if red pandas were exempt from such a plan.I do like the approach that the two zoos in Berlin seem to be taking though with each having different species than the other and I do agree that Tierpark has more potential and future for polar bears.
You’re right. It’s great to see them trying to plan two collections to compliment each other. I would also be sad to see the Polar Bears go but I’ve long thought when these ones die out it would be the end. They suit the Tierpark more and would give them something unique over the zoo.Is the area around the former Asian black Bear Enclosure still empty? It's been half a decade since my visit now (how times flies!) but could the zoo potentially expand a polar bear exhibit there if they chose to keep exhibiting them??
I do like the approach that the two zoos in Berlin seem to be taking though with each having different species than the other and I do agree that Tierpark has more potential and future for polar bears.
Considering the partial closure due to avian flu that’s very impressive.The zoo counted 3.6 mio visitors in 2022. This comes quite close to the really strong year 2019.
Excellent news. And can I thank you for your informative updates - this website has been long overdue a regular Berlin poster for some time!The zoo counted 3.6 mio visitors in 2022. This comes quite close to the really strong year 2019.