Thorny devils? Assuming this is a Phrynosoma and not actual Moloch horridus?
Phrynosoma asio.
In other news, I found that interview with the zoo's director mentioning Pygmy Hippos going into the old Monkey House here.
~Thylo
Thorny devils? Assuming this is a Phrynosoma and not actual Moloch horridus?
Oops, I meant Texas horned lizards. The Australian thorny devil would have been breaking news I wouldn't have hidden deep in a long thread!Thorny devils? Assuming this is a Phrynosoma and not actual Moloch horridus?
-There were two male Lions on-exhibit on Friday.
-Both the sika and Tufted Deer were mentioned on Friday and I saw one individual of each species. There zoo has roughly five Tufted Deer on-exhibit but they are very hit or miss given how seclusive they can be.
-Which enclosure in JW were unsigned? I only remember the newish mangrove tank and the now-empty Mangrove Snake enclosures being unsigned.
-I saw two bushbabies and one spotted skunk on Friday.
-The entire wall of enclosures from Egyptian Tortoise to Gila Monster were all signed on Friday :/ They recently updated the signage, too, for several new species so I don't know why they'd suddenly be gone now.
-The goose is a Cape Barren Goose.
-The hornbills are the zoo's Sanford's Dwarf Hornbill pair, which were also signed on Friday...
-I'm not sure about the curassows. I didn't see any helmeted in the Pheasant Aviary and while Blue-Billed were signed in the main SA walkthrough, I didn't actually see any sign of them.
~Thylo
That is good to hear that both deer species are in the collection, even though the tufted deer are so small they are hard to get a good look at. I see the cranes and geese did not last long either in the sika/sambar/hog deer exhibit.
In Jungle World- both snake exhibits were now unsigned (timor pythons were removed and it looks like work was being done in the exhibit). The old millipede exhibit was emptied and sign covered. Another exhibit was labeled "spider". There was a beetle and mantis species that I don't recall so must be relatively new.
I am curious to why all the signs were gone two days later, unless they are in process of replacing all the signage. I also noted there were black tree monitors and green tree monitors on exhibit and no green tree pythons of New Caledonian tree skink. The zoo is always rotating exhibits so it's hard to keep up!
And now we can add visitor stupidity to the list of the zoo's recent troubles.
https://nypost.com/2019/10/01/woman-walks-into-lions-den-at-bronx-zoo-and-survives/
Those of us familiar with this exhibit know that, contrary to all published stories, she was not in the lion exhibit. She was on the visitor side of the moat. She certainly risked a broken neck and perhaps getting to meet the lion in person, but she'd have to fall into the moat first.And now we can add visitor stupidity to the list of the zoo's recent troubles.
https://nypost.com/2019/10/01/woman-walks-into-lions-den-at-bronx-zoo-and-survives/
They’re actually Mexican giant horned lizards, I think they’ve been there for a few months now.Are Texas horned lizards a new addition?
Thanks.They’re actually Mexican giant horned lizards, I think they’ve been there for a few months now.
Are Texas horned lizards a new addition?
Yes, all the coverage of this has been overblown. She could easily has tripped on the plants and tumbled into the moat - which as we all know would not have gone well for her. But as it was she was never in any danger from the lion.... only from her stupidityBronx Zoo: Woman who taunted a lion identified as Myah Autry - CNN
This article is, unless I am misreading it, appallingly written. The first paragraph can only lead the reader to believe the woman was 'in' with the lion, and yet the last paragraph walks this almost all the way back.
Also, what are all the species in the Monorail and does anyone have an altitude based zoo map that shows all the hills and buildings? I wanna come up with a master plan.
Because the monorail cars were deliberately designed to face only one direction (Now, really, who does that? And why? Most aim for maximum seating and viewing)
If you study this very closely and trace the path of the monorail, you'll find that it actually circles the very perimeter of those buildings. Because the monorail cars were deliberately designed to face only one direction (Now, really, who does that? And why? Most aim for maximum seating and viewing), the path literally circles within a hair's breadth completely around the barns looking outward. When the cars pull up briefly in front of the elephant pond, their enclosure and all the others are directly behind you. Yes, at one point, the view behind the monorail is the parkway, but circling the buildings entirely would suggest that seeing big open fields of animals and not their indoor habitats is the motivation. As I mentioned previously, all of these animals are brought inside for the night, and I just cringe thinking of both very large animals and very large herds of large animals all packed into those few barns and fenced areas.
I've mulled out loud on here how to find a few acres for an exhibit to house a few non-breeding elephants so they can be visible from a path where people can stop and appreciate them leisurely for more than a few seconds. There has been every possible bit of water thrown on these ideas, from not enough space to terrain being too rocky. In the first place, 3 acres is tremendously more than they have now and is comparable to what many modern elephant exhibits have been able to carve out. Secondly, NZP's website actually describes elephants as being able to climb steep, rocky terrain, and if you have seen their 6-year-old exhibit, the steep drop-off between the upper yards and the Elephant Outpost was designed to be part of their usable habitat. Only a shortfall of funds at the end, to create a way for keepers to get from the top to the bottom, kept this from happening.
I tried Google Earth and while I can see the holding areas well, it's kinda hard to see the main paddocks. Also, I want a list of all monorail animals so I can figure out how to shuffle them around the zoo. I THINK it's...
Axis deer
Barasingha
Blackbuck
Przewalski's horse
Gaur
Brow-antlered deer
Amur/Malayan tiger
Babirusa
Asian elephant
Indian rhinoceros
Sambar deer
Hog deer
Nilgai
Formosan sika deer
Tufted deer
Markhor
Himalayan tahr (maybe phased out, didn't see them today)
Red panda
My ideas are...
Make the Wild Asia Area including the Monorail and the Asia Parking a massive Asian complex for elephants (breeding of course), rhinos, gaur, etc. Have all Amur tigers at Tiger Mountain only and only have Malayan tigers here to create an Asian jungle sorta theme. Then with the South(east) Asian hoofstock, make it so they can walk among the giants ala Dallas. Dholes could also be moved here and have them rotate with tigers ala Denver
Make the Bronx River Parking lot multi-level so you can get rid of Asia and the excess parking by the buffalo. Then use that whole area to create a sorta Yellowstone exhibit that incorporates the river and teaches about human/wildlife conflict in our nation. Get some pronghorns (they gotta share the exhibit with the bison), wolves, cougars, elk, and move the grizzlies here.
The Heads and Horns building is kinda wasted as education IMO. You could easily use it as a zoo museum since a ton of interesting crap happened at the Bronx Zoo.
Make the area around Tiger Mountain, Bears, Himalayan Highlands, etc. a whole Northern Asia thing with better flow, more modern exhibits, and with the displaced Northern Asian herbivores like the markhor (they'd love the grizzly exhibit with a few mods), tufted deer, etc.
With WoD, you could theoretically demolish the building and add a polar bear exhibit with an air-conditioned indoor area.
The African Plains exhibit really needs a spit and shine. I think redoing the layout and making the animal night areas more modern would work wonders. I think more hoofstock like elands, blue wildebeest, etc. could also fit. Also, give the
For the former Rare Animal Range, I have no idea tbh. I heard that the director wanted to do a Latin America exhibit which would hopefully have tapirs, monkeys, jaguars, macaws, etc. but it's likely not concrete.
Monkey house would likely be a copy and paste of the Madagascar concept with another ecosystem.
I'd do something a bit more interesting with the white rhino yard. Idk what that would be. It could be another kind of megafauna, reptiles, etc. but I'm sure someone here has a hot idea. I have a soft spot for black rhinos so seeing the yard expanded for a breeding group would be great.
That should be it for now.