Also: I assume you mean Gambels quail? Either way, it was my first visit, I'll probably notice more birds in later visits
Yeah I mean Gambel's, I'm just being silly
Also: I assume you mean Gambels quail? Either way, it was my first visit, I'll probably notice more birds in later visits
Also: I think I might have the best picture of the montezuma's so far, as one of the females seem to have escaped!
There's currently no photos of the species at Burgers in the gallery - as such, I suggest you upload this shot there rather than merely attaching it to this thread![]()
Recently 2 Common hog deer (Axis porcinus porcinus) were born.
Source:
Instagram of Burgers' Zoo (17/05/2022) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cdqqo-Al8lX/






A male and female Montezuma quail where visible in the aviary with the socorro doves. The escaped female was on the other side of the wire running up and down. Made several photos of the male but apparently can't upload photos into the media section.

Do you have any evidence to back up such a claim, except some hunch. Based on the animal import location: a Canadian farm and their appearance it sounds extremely unlikely.
Where are they supposed to have come from, even in American zoos they are extremely rare, with only the desert cottontail having a few holders. And what is the point of importing a least concern species that is near-identical to the European rabbit and doesn't even make a good exhibit in terms of activity.
For a zoo that is still bringing in montezuma quail and crested bobwhite and maintains a large number of rare bird species because they fit the ecosystems they want to represent, that is a bold statement. The new strategy still focuses heavily on investing in rare species that fit the ecodisplays, alongside a push for more EEP managed species.
The zoo works together with dedicated private breeders a lot when it comes to quails, pigeons and passerines, much to the chagrin of the Dutch zoo association, which don't like that at all. Their mammal collection has been downscaled and is more boring than it was a few years ago ago, but here you see a clear welfare perspective. The newish head curator has clearly looked at which enclosures are outdated and those animals are sent away at a high pace and where limited communication seems the biggest problem. In the bighorn case, that area really was too small. The problem is the limited options for the bighorn enclosure. I personally would love to see the prairie dogs replaced by Harris antelope squirrel, which have been imported to Europe over the years and are better desert representatives. But this is not Zoo Tycoon. That said the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum, which has always been the main inspiration for the Desert, keeps both the tree porcupines and the prairie dogs as they fit the desert ecosystem (I mean when does an arid grassland become a desert....). It might not be the most inventive, but what were ever their realistic options apart from white-nosed coati and peccary.
How the mammal future will look will probably depend on what replaces the forest reindeer, spectacled langur and bobcat. If they really still want to invest in their legacy of (helping) to establish rarer mammals on the European continent like they did with swamp wallaby, ringed seal, white-bearded gnu and forest reindeer, they will need to focus on the level of e.g. babirusa.
First of all my criticism is on a high level and ai do not want to dismiss thr many many things good about the park.
But I believe it is fair to compare them to their past and also potential. Everything else d feel out of balance.
I can absolutely understand that my position can come across in different ways, but all my criticism is meant to improve an allready high standard.
Guess a certain quality does allows an idealism others do not even get applied to.
I full heartly support that professional institutions meet private breeders on eye level, but what I do not support is when a those with the abilities such as knowledge contacts professional reputation and resources that some private parties do not have do not pick up on their responsibility, and our source these jobs.
Sorry, but that seems lazy.
Burgers themself labelled them as californian in their guide book which is synonymous with sierra nevada
I seem to have solved the mystery of the missing montezuma! They have fully escaped and can be seen on a rocky ledge on the other side of the prairie dog enclosure!
So there aren't any birds in the aviary with the socorro doves any more?
Did they actually escape or where they just released into the hall. For all we know they were meant to be free-rangers.
So there aren't any birds in the aviary with the socorro doves any more?
I doubt it, as no new signage was added to the free-roamers signs
They could still be found here, but I think it'll be less likely now that they've escaped
Signage is a bad predictor, the Gambel's quails in the roadrunner aviary aren't signed either, but it is hard to argue they escaped into that aviary.

