I went for a visit this morning to Colchester Zoo, which was pretty busy considering that it is currently February Break. This is what I noticed:
Species Arrivals, Departments and Movements
- The old Caribbean marine aquarium in Worlds Apart has now been redeveloped and stocked as a South American freshwater aquarium - it has three new species, the penguin tetra (Thayeria boehlkei), glowlight tetra (Hemigrammus erythrozonus) and lemon tetra (Hyphessobrycon pulchripinnis) as well as the zoo's existing bronze cories (Corydoras aeneus).
- Less good news, but the display of five African cichlid species has been removed from Koi Niwa and they have been replaced with a number of young koi carp.
- The green anaconda has already moved over to Wilds of Asia, with their enclosure in Worlds Apart now home to a male Fiji banded iguana (three females/youngsters are still in the current banded iguana enclosure within the building).
- The lack of signage indicates that the blue duiker has now moved out of their second enclosure near the giant anteaters.
Births
- The new white rhino calf was outside this morning, which meant that all the other animals were shut inside the house.
Developments
- I think a few more foundations have been dug in the former wild dog enclosure, but there is no indication what it might be for.
- Although there was no signage indicating a change was coming, I did notice that the blue-tongued skink tank in Kingdom of the Wild has had several branches added (which would be useless for a ground-dwelling skink) which makes me think something will be either mixed with or replacing the skink.
- Not sure if it's anything to do with the above, but at the building site for the outdoor eating area between the elephant and Kingdom of the Wild houses the development sign includes a stylised picture of a chameleon - the other development signs I saw all had species from the zoo, such as the leopard, depicted on them. Not suggesting chameleons will replace the outdoor eating area, but hopefully it indicates they may arrive somewhere fairly soon.
- Lots of little developments are continuing, including the area where the former gold panning activity was (between Koi Niwa and the elephant house).
General Observations
- The giant Asian pond turtle was easily visible today in Orangutan Forest.
- The Chilean flamingos have been let out of their housing and are now back on the lake, having been shut in as protection against avian flu.
- A lot of the animals were extremely active today - the large breeding groups of gelada and L'Hoest's monkey were particularly good to watch.