For the first time in more than twenty years, Bronx Zoo has Gharials! According from their Facebook and YouTube, eight babies from the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust now live in JungleWorld:
I think "more than twenty years" part is incorrect. I am pretty sure Bronx had gharials in early 2000sFor the first time in more than twenty years, Bronx Zoo has Gharials! According from their Facebook and YouTube, eight babies from the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust now live in JungleWorld:
I first went to Bronx Zoo in 1999 - the gharials were still in Jungleworld. I think they left in the early 2000s, about the same time as proboscis monkeys. I read somewhere that gharials left because the zoo could not keep the habitat temperature high enough without making jungleworld's visitors too hot. If that was really the problem, I wonder how they solved it now...Correct me if I'm wrong someone, but wasn't the last time gharials were in Jungleworld was in 1992?
I read somewhere that gharials left because the zoo could not keep the habitat temperature high enough without making jungleworld's visitors too hot. If that was really the problem, I wonder how they solved it now...
Note the new artificial fallen logs onthe beach area--with hidden radiant heaters.I've wondered the same thing...
Ah, I wasn't sure how much was news and how much wasn't, never having been there. I have photos of the oriole (though not good, it flew before I really had time to try) and the lemur (some with light, some without, the flashlight on my phone proved useful as it was dim and did not startle the animal like a camera flash). I didn't see the deer with the gharials, or the sign, but I was taking photos of birdsI have never remembered the hornbill in WOB (although I think it has been exhibited there a few years back)
Interesting about the oriole!
Did you take pics of lemur?
There were always mouse deer with loris. It's the one by gharials that's new (first report of it there was me over summer)
I think they are indeed Northern luzon
No clue on tree shrews
The South Sulawesi tarictic hornbill (Penelopides exarhatus sanfordi) and the yellow-faced mynah are both signed in World of Birds, but I saw the hornbill and the mynah was signed in JungleWorld, and saw neither in World of Birds, so I suspect they've moved.
How long has there been an African golden oriole in JungleWorld? I saw nothing about it, anywhere, until I saw it in person today, and I am confident that my identification is correct. It's such a rare species, I would expect someone to have said something.
I did see the grey mouse lemur in Madagascar today, after missing its enclosure entirely two days ago. It was cute.
In JungleWorld, has there always been a mouse deer in the exhibit with slow loris? If not, the one from the gharial exhibit has moved.
Also in JungleWorld, the tree shrews were listed as Tupaia glis. I thought the only species in the country was T. belangeri, but the latter was once considered a subspecies of the former, so is this just outdated signage?
The cloud rats in the Mouse House were signed as Phloeomys cumingi, which is southern Luzon. I've always heard of them as being northern Luzon, is this another signage mistake?
You got me there. Darn. I just really wanna see the African golden orioleAre you sure it's an African? I've seen Black-Naped Oriole in there before.
Daurian pika, Ochotona dauurica, is on exhibit in the first exhibit on the right in the Mouse House
I always hoped to earn one of thoseYou lucky, lucky bastard.
![]()
Guess you'll have to make your way back to Columbus, where I've seen the African golden many times...You got me there. Darn. I just really wanna see the African golden oriole![]()