Bovine Import Review

This is so great, hope the Giraffe, Hippo and overseas Parrot IRA's are full steam ahead very very soon. Out of interest which of the approved Bovidae species do you guys think would cohabitate well together across several exhibits?
 
This is so great, hope the Giraffe, Hippo and overseas Parrot IRA's are full steam ahead very very soon. Out of interest which of the approved Bovidae species do you guys think would cohabitate well together across several exhibits?
In my opinion Red lechwe, and Sitatunga can live together, Greater Kudu, Scimitar-horned Oryx, Waterbuck, Grant's Gazelle, Nyala can all live together
 
This is so great, hope the Giraffe, Hippo and overseas Parrot IRA's are full steam ahead very very soon. Out of interest which of the approved Bovidae species do you guys think would cohabitate well together across several exhibits?

Lowland nyala seem to be the Bovidae species most zoos are adding to their mixed savannah exhibits.

Indian antelope have long cohabited with savannah animals, fooling 90% of visitors into thinking they’re an African species.
 
Not real sure as to why the non endangered Nyala where the flavor of the month when the Endangered Bongo which were already here within the region and in bad need of new bloodlines were not given priority! :rolleyes:

@Zorro So true, Bongo are such an amazing antelope and endangered so why they were given up on is insane

Part of the reason could be the zoos didn’t feel the rainforest dwelling Eastern bongo were suitable for a savannah exhibit (a clash of biomes); though Indian antelope (clash of continents) were apparently fine.

It’d be nice to see large herds of Eastern bongo at some of the open range zoos in the future, with the city zoos holding surplus bulls.
 
@Zoofan15 Yeah thats a good idea

Come to think of it with Taronga's Africa area during the 90s/00s/10s prior to the new one they had a very mixed habitat and regional collection of hoofstock and (mainly) mammals in general with the Giraffe & Zebras as the consistent savannah species, with Ostriches and a Black Rhino from Dubbo for (a) short period(s), the Bongo(s) and Pygmy Hippos being rainforest dwelling, the Barbary Sheeps, Dromedary(s) and Scimitar' Oryx(s) from the deserts (well Barbarys from desert mountains/rocky terrain) ; the Meerkats and Fennec Foxes moved in much later and of course there were the Indian Rhinos, Brazilian Tapir, Sun Bears, Dholes and crossbred-Asian Lions for temporary periods that were nice to have at the zoo but obviously misplaced in theme. I guess with the mixed African habitats theme over the decades when the Bongo(s) came in '95/'96 they weren't out of place. Had no idea until someone uploaded a 1990 map of the zoo on here that the antelope I saw in 1994 would have been the Sitatunga(s) as they occupied the exhibit before the Bongo(s) came. I could be wrong but to me it seemed in comparison to a lot of city zoos during the last 30 years Taronga had an above average species number in their collection of bovidae (unfortunately a past tense now but am very impressed with the country/open-range zoos collections currently and it seems will get better and better with this import review).
 
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@Zoofan15 Yeah thats a good idea

Come to think of it with Taronga's Africa area during the 90s/00s/10s prior to the new one they had a very mixed habitat and regional collection of hoofstock and (mainly) mammals in general with the Giraffe & Zebras as the consistent savannah species, with Ostriches and a Black Rhino from Dubbo for (a) short period(s), the Bongo(s) and Pygmy Hippos being rainforest dwelling, the Barbary Sheeps, Dromedary(s) and Scimitar' Oryx(s) from the deserts (well Barbarys from desert mountains/rocky terrain) ; the Meerkats and Fennec Foxes moved in much later and of course there were the Indian Rhinos, Brazilian Tapir, Sun Bears, Dholes and crossbred-Asian Lions for temporary periods that were nice to have at the zoo but obviously misplaced in theme. I guess with the mixed African habitats theme over the decades when the Bongo(s) came in '95/'96 they weren't out of place. Had no idea until someone uploaded a 1990 map of the zoo on here that the antelope I saw in 1994 would have been the Sitatunga(s) as they occupied the exhibit before the Bongo(s) came. I could be wrong but to me it seemed in comparison to a lot of city zoos during the last 30 years Taronga had an above average species number in their collection of bovidae (unfortunately a past tense now but am very impressed with the country/open-range zoos collections currently and it seems will get better and better with this import review).
I remember seeing a Gnu at Taronga in 1977 :cool:
 
@Zorro that's awesome, do you remember if it was a Blue or Black?

According to the 1972 Taronga Zoo Guidebook (1972 edition) - Taronga kept Western white-bearded wildebeest Connochaetes taurinus albojubatus. They’re a subspecies of Blue wildebeest. The last one died in February 1977 and was also the last wildebeest in Australia.

Adelaide Zoo has held Black wildebeest in the past.
 
As @Zoofan15 mentioned White bearded, What I do recall is it was the only one by its self also I never saw any signage on the enclosure!

According to @Ara they had four females around the start of the 70’s. I assume they at one stage had a bull and possibly bred them prior to their phase out in 1977.

The Adelaide pair (Black wildebeest) produced a calf, but had to be seperated due to aggression from the bull.
 
According to @Ara they had four females around the start of the 70’s. I assume they at one stage had a bull and possibly bred them prior to their phase out in 1977.

The Adelaide pair (Black wildebeest) produced a calf, but had to be seperated due to aggression from the bull.
Could it be possible for Wildebeest to be welcomed back into the region (I would love to see Monarto, Western plains ,and Werribee Park house either Black ,Blue, and White Bearded)
 
Could it be possible for Wildebeest to be welcomed back into the region (I would love to see Monarto, Western plains ,and Werribee Park house either Black ,Blue, and White Bearded)
Unfortunately it’s not possible. See the first page of this thread:

as mentioned in the draft report, all the species from Bovini and Caprinae are not included within this IRA therefore animals like American Bison and the caprids mentioned above are a resounding no for future imports. Also, wildebeest are excluded as well due to the risks with Malignant Catarrhal Fever.
 
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