This is very powerful. You really hit the nail on the head that the zoo is missing many favorites. They promised 13 years ago to stop holding elephants, and have not replaced favorites who have died like Tundra. The four orphaned brown bears seem almost like a happy accident in a zoo that would now have no other bear species at all. People would die to see pinnipeds besides sea lions; there hasn't been a walrus in New York since the Aquarium lost theirs and didn't replace him. For a premiere zoo, there are just too many big species missing or soon-to-missing.
The bear cubs arrived in 2010, Tundra died in 2017. The zoo also had Grizzly Bears since at least the 90's, probably longer. That's like saying if in 2021 the zoo goes out of Indian Rhinos it's a happy accident that the zoo started keeping them in 2012 or else they'd be out of rhinos. And they are replacing Tundra-- with Chinese Dhole, a highly endangered species desperately in need of new holders in the US which fit much better in the enclosure than Polar Bears ever did. The aquarium went out of Walrus because the enclosure wasn't adequate for a group, and their animals were needed elsewhere for breeding. Harbor Seals can't still be seen as a second pinniped species at both Central Park and the aquarium. As for the elephants, that was 13 years ago and management has changed. No one knows what will become of Bronx's elephant program but I honestly do doubt that they'll be phasing them out until the silly court cases against them actually go somewhere. I also doubt they'll be building a massive breeding complex, though. In reality I can see the zoo becoming a sort of elephant retirement home, similar to San Diego. This way, the zoo can still continue exhibiting elephants for visitors in order to boost their conservation effect while also not having to lose many of their equally endangered but much less often kept hoofstock species in order to build a new exhibit.
But besides the elephants, what are all these other big name species the zoo is apparently getting rid of? Jurek mentions that many of the zoo's ABCs are represented by geriatric individuals but, aside form the elephants, which species are those exactly?
Every new species is smaller than one it replaced, as if the collection plan is determined by the available existing accommodations. For a zoo of this size, the collection should be determined by what species are most endangered and what SSPs need more members breeding. With the state of Andean bears what it is, both the Bronx and Queens should be part of the SSP. Same with Pallas Cats and Prospect Park. And why pygmy hippos? They'd require less in accommodations than Nile hippos? I wonder if the balance between in situ giving and conservation at home has indeed gone past what is healthy.
But... that is exactly what the zoo is doing... The zoo already has programs for large carnivores, large ungulates, large primates, etc. and has had some of them for longer than any of us have been alive for. Almost all of their newer programs are for highly endangered species that are often ignored by major zoos and therefore are in even greater need of additional holders. Freshwater turtles, small rodents, passerines, hornbills, non-famous hoofstock, obscure carnivores, venomous snakes, waterfowl, these are the programs that everyone on this forum complains that zoos don't put enough effort into, but then when Bronx does, all of a sudden everyone complains that the zoo is putting too much effort into those species and not enough effort into secondary ape complexes and ABC baby factories. It's the same with their conservation. Everyone complains about every single other zoo out there saying they don't focus enough on conservation; then, when the WCS makes conservation their priority, everyone complains that they're spending too much on conservation. The zoo just can't win here. The zoo single-handedly started the Maleo program, they're the only ones actively breeding adjutant stork, they have arguably the largest
Cuora collection in the States, they import gharials for other zoos, they restarted the Gelada program, and species like Indian Muntjac, Sambar, Barasingha, and Pink Pigeon are only still around in US zoos today almost solely because of Bronx and San Diego alone. These are the types of things people beg zoos to be doing, but now we're criticizing Bronx for it? And it's not like they aren't bringing in crowd favorites at the same time. Indian Gharial (a large crocodilian), Komodo Dragon, Aldabran Giant Tortoise, Angolan Colobus, Giant Anteater, Linneaus's Two-Toed Sloth, North Island Kiwi, and Little Blue Penguin are all new additions from the last five years or so, most of which had brand new displays built just for them. Somehow they get left out when discussing the zoo's recent activity.
I really don't understand your point, because you're complaining that the zoo should be doing something that it is already doing but just not for the species you want, even though the species you claim you want are the ones they are actually doing it for... The WCS works with and breeds Andean Bears. They focus on small, rarely kept felids like Pallas's Cat and Black-Footed Cat at Prospect Park. Bronx can't just have every program they have at all their zoos also on their grounds. They already do double up for Snow Leopards, Red Pandas (two subspecies across three zoos), American Bison, California Sea Lions (kept at all WCS collections), Black-Tailed Prairie Dog, Mohol Bushbaby, Grizzly Bear, Tufted Deer, Southern Pudu, Golden Lion Tamarin, Common Dwarf Mongoose, and undoubtedly others I'm forgetting off of the top of my head. The individual collections need variability. The Andean Bears are probably the most popular animals at Queens, and exhibiting them at Bronx would rob Queens of visitors who will now go to Bronx to see them along with other species they desire.
As for Pygmy Hippos, they are the significantly more endangered hippo that is in a much more dire need of holders than Common. They are also easier to house than Common, which need to be kept in groups of 3-4 and require nearly elephant-sized amounts of space to house properly when one considers their housing and filtration requirements. Yes the zoo has the space for Common, but they'd need to displace or completely phase-out many existing smaller species in order to house them, a move which would then be criticized by all of us. By going into Pygmy Hippos, they satisfy a visitor's (and apparently all of ZooChat's) desire for hippos, bring attention to a much more obscure species which visitors will still likely find desirable (they're basically seen as "forever hippo babies" by many), become an additional holder/breeder for a top priority SSP species, and are able to continue to house and breed many other even more obscure and endangered species both around the zoo and probably within the same house the hippos go into.
I couldn't find a link.
Also to add to the current discussion, I think the problem with the Bronx Zoo is that there is a lot of space just sitting there. I think that there's a lot more that WCS could do to be more effective with their space. For example, they could make the Bronx River parking lot mutli-leveled ala Cincinatti and get rid of Asia parking. That space could then make a baller elephant exhibit and fit in some other Asian hoofstock. You could also put one big dhole enclosure next to the Tiger mountain enclosure on the left and make a rotation system so the dholes and tigers can share that one.
There are many other things I could suggest but I'd need a map of the Bronx Zoo and a way to make annotations
I'm having trouble finding it myself. The website I know it was once posted on no longer has any results for it. I'll keep digging, though.
I've had similar ideas in regards to parking space and an elephant complex. Remember that there's a service road and some staff buildings over there, though, and an elephant habitat built in place of the parking lot couldn't be much larger than the existing one in reality. A parking garage costs a lot of money, of course, and that fact has already kept Smithsonian's plans for one nothing more than just that, plans. As for the Tiger Mountain idea, I'm pretty sure there's a lot of off-exhibit tiger housing behind the exhibit. The zoo has roughly 12 tigers between two subspecies afterall. Remember, just because it's empty space on a map doesn't mean it's empty in reality. A lot of the "woods" on the map actually hold a lot of off-exhibit breeding and staff compounds. Not to say there aren't vacant areas because obviously there are.
~Thylo