On November 23 last year, two Tasmanian wombats arrived at BestZoo. They are a male and a female, they come from the Darling Downs Zoo in Australia. They are 7 and 8 years old.
@Kifaru BwanaOn November 23 last year, two Tasmanian wombats arrived at BestZoo. They are a male and a female, they come from the Darling Downs Zoo in Australia. They are 7 and 8 years old.
It seems most European zoos are now investing in Tassie wombats, an informed choice made.On November 23 last year, two Tasmanian wombats arrived at BestZoo. They are a male and a female, they come from the Darling Downs Zoo in Australia. They are 7 and 8 years old.
Is the European region familiar with breeding wombats? I know that Duisburg had breeding success but I don't know any other recent births.It seems most European zoos are now investing in Tassie wombats, an informed choice made.
Is the European region familiar with breeding wombats? I know that Duisburg had breeding success but I don't know any other recent births.
so if things go well then European zoos (hopefully) wouldn't have to rely on Australia for imports correct?Hamerton, Hannover, Copenhagen and Budapest have all bred the species in recent years - with Duisburg and Hamerton breeding the mainland subspecies, and the remaining three breeding the Tasmanian subspecies.
On November 23 last year, two Tasmanian wombats arrived at BestZoo. They are a male and a female, they come from the Darling Downs Zoo in Australia. They are 7 and 8 years old.
Last Tuesday I visited BestZoo for the first time mainly to see the wombats. Their enclosure is at the end of the zoo and is only viewable if you stand on a bench or look past a large fench... I asked a zookeeper whether they had wombats to which she replied "no" and that she wasn't allowed to tell me whether they would arrive or had arrived... We all know that they arrived, given the quoted post and Ralph's uploaded photo. Could someone tell me whether they still have the wombats? One of the doors to the inside enclosure was open, so perhaps they were inside? I did also see a goat grazing in one of the outside enclosures not sure if both species can be kept together.
I wasn't so impressed by the zoo, most birds/primates have small cages but the wombat and fossa enclosures looked good. The new entrance building (seen from a distance) also looked quite good, so I am interested to see how this zoo will develop itself in the coming years.
I was surprised by the number of Sri Lankan leopards that the zoo had, I counted 7 leopards divided over 2 enclosures. I did however only see 2 jaguars, but I persume that the male was inside.
I saw the pair of Allen's gallinule (Porphyrio alleni) which share their enclosure with Green magpie (Cissa chinensis).
Lastly I saw 2 Caracals (Caracal caracal) in one of the fossa enclosures. According to ZTL this species was no longer in the collection.
While the collection might have some nice species, to me it is a glorified animal collector's backyard. I have not seen the new things but I visited in 2019 and it was the biggest dissapointment. The zoo might have to rethink their collection based on the space. The amount of big cats in a small space is insane..It’s a promising little zoo though, with a quirky collection.
Has it changed hands in ownership as the new projects and entry area signify different directional efforts.Personally I would have preferred if Best Zoo had invested some if not all of the money for their fancy new entrance building into improving and enlarging some of their existing exhibits, especially the cat and some of the primate exhibits.
I visited in 2019 and while I saw no third world or roadsize hellhole level awfulness at Best, I did see quite a few rather poor exhibits with questionable adequacy and substantial room for improvement. I would like to see this zoo develop and improve, as there is some potential.
Has it changed hands in ownership as the new projects and entry area signify different directional efforts.