At one point there were photos here on the forum of them doing so.
~Thylo
At one point there were photos here on the forum of them doing so.
~Thylo
I wonder what this really means. These are symptoms of neurologic disease and also side effects of NSAID drugs. I understand the need today to be circumspect, but I genuinely want to learn what elephants in human care are felled by. They don't hesitate to provide such info on The Zoo. These are symptoms, not diagnoses.According to the report by the WCS:
~Thylo
The roseate spoonbills in the Amazon Building at Smithsonian Zoo do this too. They fly down from the free-flight level into the exhibit hallway underneath and stroll around. I watched one walk up behind a woman looking at fish and start pulling at her handbag. One of those moments that you wish had been caught on camera.
The mouse deer was there when I visited in March but I wasn't sure of the species so didn't mention it. Thanks for identifying it! Did it have the entire exhibit now, or was it still fenced off in the back?
Visited today, in addition to @nczoofan’s visit notes, some more changes I noted:
- there is now a red-footed tortoise exhibit within Butterfly Garden.
- the zoo’s last Daurian pika recently passed away
- similarly, they no longer have ruddy-breasted seedeater
- helmeted curassows are no longer on exhibit in world of birds. I saw golden-headed quetzal, green honeycreeper, and red-footed tortoise in the exhibit
- it appears the lesser adjutants successfully bred recently, there are two juveniles on exhibit alongside the adults
- Indian red muntjac now is in its own exhibit on the monorail, after the first exhibit and before the Przewalski’s horses
Visited the Bronx Zoo this week (for the first time in a year, which is the longest span I have ever not gone):
- The kea exhibit in WOB is being renovated.
- They said on my tour they had 2 indian muntjac in there. Later in the same tour they pointed out a older female in the large exhibit after the rhino. It seems like they have them split between the 2 exhibits.
Photos from today of Tundra's old exhibit. Landscaping added, visitor path still blocked off
The zoo no longer keeps Kea, their last animal was sent to Tracy Aviary.
~Thylo
Interesting they filled I the pool, added natural substrate and a lot of small trees. Without any netting I can't see it being home to sea eagles or Amur Leopards. It's unfortunate it isn't going to be home to the leopards since they have one in Jungle World who probably would enjoy the outdoors more (they can handle a NY winter). Maybe wolverines or a small pack of wolves? I wish they would have filled in the front of the moat for more land area space (and maybe glass viewing). Knowing the holding area behind the exhibit I guess black bears could be a possibility, but I feel the exhibit would be too small.Wonder what it could be? (Steller's sea eagles? Amur leopard? Japanese snow monkey? My shoe?)
For a tourist Central Park is probably the easiest to get to. Since 2007 they did open a solid pair of snow leopard exhibits and renovated the old polar bear exhibits for brown bears.Quick question: I have the option to visit NYC in late July; is there a zoo I should pair up with a Bronx Zoo visit? I've been to the Central Park Zoo, like, 12 years ago. I haven't been to any of the others, though.
Quick question: I have the option to visit NYC in late July; is there a zoo I should pair up with a Bronx Zoo visit? I've been to the Central Park Zoo, like, 12 years ago. I haven't been to any of the others, though.