Only kept at Central Park; the bird at Pittsburgh died. Available in the bird trade as well.
CPZ has Yellow-Crowned Gonolek, not Black-Headed.
~Thylo
Only kept at Central Park; the bird at Pittsburgh died. Available in the bird trade as well.
I thought the National Aviary had a gonolek.
I was surprised by this exhibit earlier this month: I can’t imagine that the galagos show themselves very often, and the on-show part of the exhibit is pretty small and “glass-fronted-box-ish”. Not quite as egregious as the nearby Banded Mongooses, or White-faced Sakis, but still not great...The cloud rats have been replaced by southern galagos...
The mouse deer has been moved to the beach, making it far more visible than it ever has been
If brown bears were meant to be a short-term solution to Gus' (polar bear) passing, what could be a better long-term solution? (Please be more polar bears, please be more polar bears...)Went to the Zoo last week and unfortunately, according to a keeper, Veronica the brown bear has passed away. The sign with both bears outside the enclosure has been updated to just have Betty. Wasn't able to learn more, and haven't seen any press release or anything online about her passing.
If brown bears were meant to be a short-term solution to Gus' (polar bear) passing, what could be a better long-term solution? (Please be more polar bears, please be more polar bears...)
The exhibit is likely un-nettable. Since New York gets a lot of snow, the expanse of the exhibit probably makes a mesh top impossible, as it would collapse in the snow, especially since the exhibit wasn't designed with it in mind. I know my local zoo has been having issues with this planning a replacement for two current exhibits, since any mesh top would collapse in the snow. Central Park almost certainly would have the same problem.Almost no chance of polar bear. The society probably feels the exhibit is too small and rocky for such a wide ranging species. As well the species’ population is lagging in zoos and bears are few and far between. Personally I would net over the exhibit and convert it for a new species. Andean bear would work with plenty of climbing features added.
OOH, I just realized you could split the habitat in two and have river otters in the area with the underwater viewing and black bears in the more land-based area. Something like Riverbanks' grizzly bear/otter habitats?Almost no chance of polar bear. The society probably feels the exhibit is too small and rocky for such a wide ranging species. As well the species’ population is lagging in zoos and bears are few and far between. Personally I would net over the exhibit and convert it for a new species. Andean bear would work with plenty of climbing features added.
Or maybe the congresswoman can get her way and have giant pandas at the Central Park Zoo...OOH, I just realized you could split the habitat in two and have river otters in the area with the underwater viewing and black bears in the more land-based area. Something like Riverbanks' grizzly bear/otter habitats?
The exhibit is likely un-nettable. Since New York gets a lot of snow, the expanse of the exhibit probably makes a mesh top impossible, as it would collapse in the snow, especially since the exhibit wasn't designed with it in mind. I know my local zoo has been having issues with this planning a replacement for two current exhibits, since any mesh top would collapse in the snow. Central Park almost certainly would have the same problem.