Chester Zoo Chester Zoo news 2025

According to a brief BBC news item, a new 7 year old male Fossa named Zaza has arrived from San Diego?,to be paired with a female named Shala.
Yes, Zaza I can confirm does indeed come from San Diego, they used a "blind date" technique for this. Here is the statement made below from this article:
newsitem – Veterinary Community
"Zaza has been matched with Shala as part of a conservation scheme.

A rare Malagasy fossa has been moved to Chester Zoo as part of a conservation programme to save the highly threatened species.

Zaza, a seven-year-old male fossa, travelled from San Diego Zoo after being selected as a genetic match for Chester Zoo's female fossa Shala.

The fossa is native to Madagascar, where it is the largest natural predator. They are closely related to the mongoose, but have retractable claws like cats.

However, as a result of mass deforestation in Madagascar, the species has become highly threatened. It is now estimated that there are fewer than 2,500 fossas living in the wild.

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists the species as vulnerable to extinction.

Zaza's move to Chester Zoo forms part of a global conservation breeding programme to save the species. It is hoped that Zaza and Shala will contribute to the survival of their species by having pups.

Fossa live solitary lives, and so Zaza and Shala will spend much of their time apart.

During the first stage of their introduction, zookeepers will rotate them separately through different habitats, giving them the opportunity to smell each other. They will also be able to see each other through a glass window and a slideable screen, without being able to get to one another.

For the conservation project to work, the two fossa must be introduced at precisely the right moment. This is because female fossa only come into season once a year, for a two-week period.

Jack Cunningham, a keeper in the carnivore team at the zoo, said: “They’re usually a silent species, except for when the females are looking for males, and then they will vocalise.

“After a few days of soft introductions through the windows and mesh, we’ll know Shala is ready to meet Zaza because she will stand at the top of a tree and scream, which is her way of saying: I’m ready!”

Shala has previously had a litter of pups at Chester Zoo with her last mate, Isalo, who will be moving zoos himself as part of the breeding programme. The litter of pups have already found new homes in the UK and abroad.

Her mating call has also played its part in improving scientific knowledge of the species.

Researchers recorded the call and analysed it to create a spectrogram – a visual representation of the sound. It is being used in the Madagascan rainforest to identify female fossas looking for mates in the wild.

This not only helps researchers in tracking species numbers, but also helps identify their preferred environments.

Speaking about Shala, Mr Cunningham added: “She was a wonderful mum to her first pups, so we’re excited to see if she and Zaza have their own litter.”"
 
Fossa is one species I never thought I would see alive in my lifetime.

I first saw them in 1994 at Colchester. Sorry if my post is confusing and people though the ones at Chester were the first I'd seen.
I first saw fossa in Duisburg Zoo, forty-five years ago, back in 1980. For many years after that, I only saw fossa on visits to Duisburg Zoo; it was a long while before I ever saw the species in the UK.
 
I grew up seeing them at Marwell, and didn't quite process just how special it was to have a local zoo holding them. Of course they have since moved on and I am yet to see them elsewhere - Chester being at the other end of the country to me. I hadn't realised 6 collections still hold them! Hopefully one day they will return to the south coast. Wishful thinking, perhaps.

There's a rather nice BBC article on the move:
Breeding hope as rare fossa arrives at Chester Zoo from US
 
The walkthrough aviaries are finally open !!! I can’t wait to see the revamped Tsavo aviary again one of my favourite parts a of the zoo although I don’t think weaver birds have been added in there yet which were always such a mesmerising sight.
 
Also the Bush Dogs are back on-show in the enclosure which previously held a Cheetah male with the Cheetah moving to the old Serval enclosure.
Thanks for the confirmation, I wonder what the plan is for the former Cheetah (most recently held the African wild dogs temporarily) enclosure?
 
Iberian wolves could be good in there, I’d suspect it’s probably just going to be new cheetahs
That's probably the most likely option, whenever it would come about. As you say it would also be suitable for other similar size carnivores so Cheetah probably won't be the only possibility.
 
Female Bat Eared Foxes have arrived from France - and are now on display.

Confirmed via email;

After travelling over 500 miles from Paris, sisters Maasai and Malindi are settling into their new home at Chester Zoo – the first bat-eared foxes here in more than 30 years!
 
Zoo animals to get more space in 'long overdue' welfare reforms

An interesting article confirming that among Chester's new projects will be an expanded elephant exhibit, and according to the article, "Zoos and aquariums will face a two-year timeline to adapt to the changes, which will also require them to improve conservation standards and safety measures when keeping dangerous animals." (EDIT: Zoos have until 2040 to implement these changes for elephants, so Chester's got a bit more time, but considering they've already made plans for an expanded elephant exhibit, we'll see how that timeline looks in due course.)

Hopefully they're able to put the 20 acres adjacent to the lions to good use! I am curious what that means for the current Elephants of the Asian Forest complex, and whether or not they'll move the species they currently have to other exhibits within the zoo...
 
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It would be expensive, but they could keep the house and current paddock and build some kind of access over/under the public footpath and build a new large enclosure next to the lions, then the male would have a large area and at the entrance to the zoo when separated. Maybe cheaper than building a new house.
 
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