Colchester Zoo Colchester Zoo - past, present and future

I've thought for a while that the rightmost of those upper large tanks (now a cactus display, which doesn't make much sense in a mostly African section) would be a good cross-section display, with a colony of naked mole-rats below and above a more standard display for, say, the pancake tortoises and plated lizards. Then use their display down by the rock pythons for something like striped grass mice - having a big group of mice that can be seen from multiple points would be great, in my opinion.
Great idea! Especially considering the dwindling numbers of the Pancake tortoises and Plated lizards (I only saw one of each on my last visit), moving them upstairs (maybe even bolstering their populations), to a nice new display would leave a nice and secluded spot for a species such as that to thrive.
 
PROSIMIANS

This group of primates has often been kept at Colchester Zoo, but perhaps notably only lemurs seem to have been held – I can find no information suggesting that bushbabies or lorises have ever been part of Colchester’s collection. The replacement of several smaller enclosures with larger mixed-species displays has seen the diversity of lemurs drop, but there are still four species kept at Colchester Zoo, two of which are breeding groups.

Past holdings:

Fat-tailed dwarf lemur, Cheirogaleus medius

While I am not certain when they arrived, Zootierliste reports that this species left the collection in 2001. No maps from around the time show where they may have been kept, if they were on-display at all.

Common brown lemur, Eulemur fulvus

It is sometimes difficult to identify when this species has been kept as until 2001 several lemur species, including the red-fronted lemur, were thought to be subspecies. However, a 1986 report from International Zoo News mentions that sometime between January and April of that year, a ‘Mayotte’ brown lemur unsuccessfully bred, so the species was definitely present around that time. Also, The Story of Colchester Zoo mentions that further Mayotte brown lemurs were brought to the zoo in 1991 from London Zoo, when the latter’s survival was in doubt.

Black lemur, Eulemur macao

According to Zootierliste, an issue from volume 35 of IZN mentions black lemurs occurring at Colchester Zoo – this corresponds to around 1988. The 1998 guidebook also includes a black lemur image. A zoo map from 1994 shows this species, living in one of the former Hornbill Hill enclosures. I do not know exactly when they arrived or left the collection.

Blue-eyed black lemur, Eulemur flavifrons

A pair of these lemurs arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2007, and apparently bred in 2009. They left the collection in 2013. While the original plan was to keep them in the Lost Madagascar walkthrough, they only ever lived in the now-demolished Out of Africa building, which is currently part of the footprint for the Barbary macaque enclosures.

Red-fronted lemur, Eulemur rufifrons, E. rufus or E. rufifrons x rufus

As with the black lemur, a 1998 issue of the IZN mentions this species. By the start of 2007, there was a group of five of these lemurs comprising two males and three females – the species left the collection later that year.

Mongoose lemur, Eulemur mongoz

A pair of mongoose lemurs, possibly the first at the zoo, arrived in 2000 – originally from Mulhouse and Banham Zoos. The last mongoose lemurs left the zoo in 2009, where they moved first to Edinburgh Zoo and then subsequently to Flamingo Land where they remain today.

Red ruffed lemur, Varecia rubra

The earliest map record I can find of a red ruffed lemur is from 2003, although I cannot rule out them being there earlier. These lemurs lived in several different locations, including Out of Africa, a small enclosure by the shore of the upper lake and later in the Lost Madagascar walkthrough enclosure. The last animal departed in 2018 for Curraghs Wildlife Park on the Isle of Man.

Present holdings:

Red-bellied lemur, Eulemur rubriventer

Two red-bellied lemur brothers arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2012 from Woburn Safari Park. They currently live in the Lost Madagascar walkthrough.

Crowned lemur, Eulemur coronatus

A pair of these lemurs arrived in July 2018, where they live in the Lost Madagascar walkthrough. The pair bred in 2020 and 2021, although only the eldest offspring still seems to be at the zoo.

Ring-tailed lemur, Lemur catta

These most commonly-kept of lemurs have long been a fixture at Colchester Zoo. The first individual arrived in 1964, the year after the zoo opened. The first record I can find of one being born at the zoo was from sometime between 1966 and 1968. Today, there are two groups of ring-tailed lemurs split into two separate groups. As of 2022, there is a bachelor group of nine males living in the Lost Madagascar walkthrough, while the breeding group of thirteen animals lives next-door on Lemur Island. In the past, they have lived in the Beginning Zone, but the Lemur Island has been occupied since at least 1994.

Black-and-white ruffed lemur, Varecia variegata

The earliest record I can find of this species is from a 1991 zoo map, although they may have been kept prior to this date. This species of lemur seems to have quite probably remained at the zoo ever since, moving between several different enclosures in that time – they first lived in a small enclosure in the Beginning Zone, followed by a cage on Monkey Mountain / Hornbill Hill (where the spider monkeys now live), then the Out of Africa display and briefly living in the L’Hoest’s guenon enclosure in Edge of Africa. The current pair – comprising an eighteen-year-old female and seven-year-old male – live in an enclosure along the shores of the uppermost lake.

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The replacement of many smaller single-species displays with a larger mixed walkthrough has seen some rare and sensitive lemurs, such as the blue-eyed black lemur, disappear from Colchester.
 

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MONKEYS

The monkeys could well be Colchester Zoo’s biggest speciality – certainly, they are the group of mammals most commonly-kept there, with sixteen species currently kept, and at least twenty-six more kept in the past. All five families of Neotropical monkeys have been kept at Colchester at some point (with four kept currently), while among the Afro-Eurasian monkeys the three main subfamilies have all had multiple species kept. Today, the Afro-Eurasian monkeys are the minority of species kept, with just six altogether, but looking back through the zoo’s history they have represented the majority of monkey species kept (twenty-three identified thus far). The one monkey known to definitely be planned for the new zoo is the gelada, identified as getting a new enclosure in the recently-released masterplan.

Past holdings:

Eastern pygmy marmoset, Cebuella niveiventris

I cannot find exactly when this species first arrived at Colchester Zoo, with the earliest evidence being a zoo map from 1991. The last evidence I can find of this species at Colchester Zoo are several photographs on Flickr, all said to have been taken in 2015. They lived in what is now the indoor golden lion tamarin enclosure, inside the leopard viewing area.

Silvery marmoset, Mico argentatus

The earliest confirmed evidence I can find for the silvery marmoset is a zoo map from 1998. The last individual left Colchester Zoo in 2014. They have lived in several enclosures, primarily in the Beginning Zone, but the last animals were kept in the Worlds Apart Walkthrough.

White-lipped tamarin, Saguinus labiatus

A trio of this species, comprising a male and two females, arrived at Colchester from Belfast Zoo in 2006. It is not clear when the species left the collection, although photographs online suggest they may have remained at the zoo until at least 2013. The one enclosure I know they inhabited is the Rainforest Walkthrough

Cottontop tamarin, Saguinus oedipus

The earliest evidence I can find for cottontop tamarins is from a zoo map from 1994. It was in 2007 when the last cottontop tamarins, a breeding group consisting of five males and one female, left Colchester Zoo for the final time. They lived in a now-demolished enclosure in the space between the red panda and giant anteater enclosures.

Emperor tamarin, Saguinus imperator

The earliest date I can link to this species is 1994 – a news article from 2007 talking about the birth of a young emperor tamarin mentions that the mother had been at Colchester Zoo for thirteen years. The final animals left Colchester sometime around 2012 to 2013. They lived, at different times, in the Small Mammal House and in the secondary giant anteater enclosure.

Dourocouli, Aotus sp.

The Story of Colchester Zoo notes that, in 1964, a number of douroucoulis arrived at Colchester Zoo. At the time there was thought to be only a single species, so identifying which species was actually present is basically impossible. It is also not known where in the zoo they lived, or when they left the collection. The 1972 guidebook briefly mentions them, but I do not know if they are referring to animals actually kept in the zoo or if they are included simply as an example of a South American primate.

Tufted capuchin monkey, Sapajus apella

I do not know when this species arrived at or departed from the collection, or where it was kept, but the 1986 report from International Zoo News mentions that two males of this species were successfully bred sometime between May and August of that year.

Woolly monkey, Lagothrix lagotricha

It is not known when they arrived at or departed from the collection, but this species is mentioned, in an old issue of the Colchester Express, from around 1966 to 1967 living in the former Monkey House. The 1972 guidebook also mentions the species, with it saying that there were hopes to successfully breed them.

Allen’s swamp monkey, Allenopithecus nigroviridis

It is not known when this species arrived at or departed from the collection, but the species is labelled on a 1994 map, living in the monkey complex on what is now the spider monkey enclosure.

Talapoin monkey, Miopithecus sp.

An unidentified species of talapoin monkey was recorded at Colchester Zoo sometime around 1966, with these animals mentioned in the guidebook of that year. They were inhabitants of the old Monkey House.

De Brazza’s guenon, Cercopithecus neglectus

It is not clear exactly when this species arrived at Colchester Zoo, but a news report suggests some arrived in 1967 for the Monkey House. A successful breeding was recorded sometime in May or August 1986 in the IZN issue of the time. A 1994 map shows them in the old monkey complex where the spider monkeys now live. The last record is from a map for 2003, which shows them living in one of the old bear dens. It can be assumed they left the collection soon after this.

Diana guenon, Cercopithecus diana

While it is not certain if they had inhabited the zoo earlier, the species is shown on a map dating to around 1984 to 1985. Another pair arrived in 1988 and moved into the first arguably modern enclosure at the zoo. The species remained at Colchester until at least 2005 in that same enclosure, which is now mostly a garden border along the walkway past the wreathed hornbills and red pandas.

Moustached guenon, Cercopithecus cephus

In The Story of Colchester Zoo, moustached guenons were recorded arriving at Colchester Zoo in 1966, with this corroborated by their presence in the guidebook from that year. These were probably inhabitants of the old Monkey House.

Lesser spot-nosed guenon, Cercopithecus petaurista

It is not known when this species arrived at or departed from the collection, but they are labelled on a 1994 map, living in one of the cages that would later become known as Hornbill Hill.

Hamlyn’s guenon, Cercopithecus hamlyni

A singleton of this species is mentioned in a newspaper report as being a resident of the Monkey House in 1967. It is not known if this is when it arrived or departed from the collection.

Syke’s guenon, Cercopithecus mitis

This species is mentioned in the 1966 yearbook as being a resident of the Monkey House in that year. It is not known if this is when they arrived, or when they departed from the collection.

Patas monkey, Erythrocebus patas

A zoo map from 1984 to 1985 mentions the upcoming patas monkey enclosure where Heart of the Amazon now stands; I cannot be certain if these monkeys were already at the collection or arrived for this enclosure, nor can I tell if the species was ever kept prior to that year. For a time, Colchester had a large breeding troop of the species, and coordinated the European breeding programme. This species moved in 2002 to Kingdom of the Wild, before briefly moving to the current L’Hoest’s guenon enclosure in Edge of Africa and the current Barbary macaque enclosure in Out of Africa. The species remained at the zoo for an uninterrupted period through to 2020, when the last animals were moved out after a failed attempt to mix them with newly-arrived Barbary macaques.

Stump-tailed macaque, Macaca arctoides

A tame one-year-old stump-tailed macaque named Peter was one of the animals present in the zoo’s 1963 opening year, according to The Story of Colchester Zoo. The species was later mentioned as living in the Monkey House in the 1966 guidebook. It is not certain when they finally left the collection.

Sulawesi crested macaque, Macaca nigra

This species is mentioned as living in the Monkey House in the 1966 guidebook. They are also mentioned in the 1972 guidebook, presumably still living in the Monkey House. It is not certain when this species arrived, or the last year it was kept.

Moor macaque, Macaca maura

This species is mentioned as being a resident of the Monkey House in the 1966 guidebook. It is not known if this is when they arrived, or when they departed from the collection.

Black crested mangabey, Lophocebus aterrimus

There is not much information about when this species arrived at Colchester. According to Zootierliste, Colchester Zoo became the first zoo in the UK to breed this species in 1984. According to the IZN, they bred the species again in 1986. In 1991, the zoo received an award for the newly-opened Out of Africa exhibit that included this species. The last record I can find of this monkey species is from a zoo map dating to around 1999 to 2000.

Sooty mangabey, Cercocebus atys

Without any further information about arrival or departure years, Zootierliste mentions that a guidebook from 1978 includes this species.

Hamadryas baboon, Papio hamadryas

A general ‘baboon’ species is mentioned as being a resident of the Monkey House in the 1966 guidebook. The Hamadryas baboon is mentioned more specifically in the 1972 guidebook, with the photograph of the animal from this guidebook also being used as a postcard. It is not entirely clear when the species arrived at or departed from the zoo.

Mount Kilimanjaro geureza, Colobus caudatus

It is not exactly clear if this species was kept at Colchester Zoo prior to the opening of Out of Africa in 1990. Throughout their time at the zoo, they regularly bred. They moved several times between here, the Edge of Africa monkey enclosure and a new monkey enclosure by Lion Rock, although by this time there were only three individuals remaining. The last animals were held here until 2019.

Francois leaf monkey, Trachypithecus francoisi

A pair of this species arrived at Colchester in 2012, coming from Howletts and Twycross Zoo. The original plan was for them to get a new enclosure in Wilds of Asia, but those plans fell through when attempts to mix the lion-tailed macaques (the original inhabitants of the planned langur enclosure) with the binturongs and small-clawed otters failed. In 2016, the male langur died and the female moved to France.

Silvery leaf monkey, Trachypithecus cristatus

The earliest record I can find of these monkeys at Colchester Zoo is from a zoo map from 1991. There are several gaps where the species is not mentioned on zoo maps, but I suspect that they remained at the zoo for the entire duration to their final departure from the collection in 2012. At that time, Colchester were the second-to-last holder of this species in Europe. They lived in several enclosures, including one of the footprint of the current rufous hornbill aviary, a now-demolished enclosure where the gibbons now live and latterly in the mixed exhibit with the binturongs and small-clawed otters.

Present holdings:

Geoffroy’s marmoset, Callithrix geoffroyi

A big issue with identifying how long many callitrichids have been kept at Colchester Zoo is that the old maps often do not mention exact species, instead just labelling them as ‘marmosets and tamarins’. The earliest reference I can find for this species is from the 1998 guidebook. They have remained at the zoo since then, breeding fairly often. However, there is now just a single individual left in the Worlds Apart walkthrough – if any primate is to disappear from Colchester Zoo in the near future, this is one of my main suspects.

Goeldi’s monkey, Callimico goeldii

Again, the first record I can find of a Goeldi’s monkey in Colchester Zoo is from the 2003 map. The species stayed at the zoo and bred pretty regularly until the last individual left in 2015. Recently, the species has made a welcome comeback with two males arriving from Germany in late 2023 and moving into Worlds Apart. The zoo also hopes to resume breeding the species again in the future.

Pied tamarin, Saguinus bicolor

The first pied tamarins to arrive were two males, which came to Colchester from Montreal in 2008. The species has remained in the collection permanently since then and bred on several occasions – for much of the time they stayed in the same enclosure on the edge of the Worlds Apart building, only moving to the Worlds Apart walkthrough in January 2023.

Golden lion tamarin, Leontopithecus rosalia

This species was present when the zoo first opened in 1963. I cannot find any direct evidence to suggest they were then present at the zoo anytime between then and 1998, where they are shown on the zoo’s map for that year and included in the guidebook. Since then, the species has remained at the zoo without interruption – they have lived at Penguin Shores, in the Worlds Apart walkthrough and, most recently, in the newly-built Canopy of South America enclosure by the Amur leopards.

Golden-headed lion tamarin, Leontopithecus chrysomelas

The earliest record I can find of this species is from a zoo map from 1998. They seem to have remained at the zoo ever since and have almost always been kept in the Beginning Zone through that time. Today, a sibling pair can be found in the Rainforest Walkthrough.

Coppery titi, Plecturocebus cupreus

This species first arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2012, and in that time has become a big hit. Two males were the first to be brought in, but they were soon joined by a female and a pair have bred a couple of times. Two enclosures house these monkeys – both the Worlds Apart and Rainforest Walkthroughs. The latest plans, revealed in late 2023, is for both enclosures to have their own breeding pairs.

Guianan bearded saki monkey, Chiropotes sagulatus

A trio of this species arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2010, following the first faltering of the Rare Species Conservation Centre. One of the females died soon afterward, but the remaining pair has proved particularly fecund and bred several times. Currently, the species is kept in two enclosures with the breeding pair in Heart of the Amazon and four young males bred at the zoo living opposite the penguins in the Inca Trail.

South American squirrel monkey, Saimiri sciureus

The Story of Colchester Zoo notes that squirrel monkeys arrived in 1965, without any information on what the exact species was. Perhaps remarkably, the next record I can find of squirrel monkeys is from the 2003 zoo map. The 1972 guidebook does mention them, but only in passing, with the only information about them being a list of other South American monkeys. However, they have been a constant since 2003, living in the Heart of the Amazon display. Today, the huge group that had to be kept across multiple enclosures is a thing of the past, with a much more modest troop of two males, eight females and a baby born in late 2023.

Buffy-headed capuchin monkey, Sapajus xanthosternos

While capuchin monkeys are listed on the zoo maps of the 1990s and early 2000s, the first definitive proof I can find for this exact species is from a 2003 zoo map. This species has been kept continuously since then, moving between enclosures in the Aquatic and Heights zone before now becoming the first animals that visitors encounter in the Beginning Zone. It is planned for their current enclosure to get some degree of renovation in 2024, which is undoubtedly a good thing as their enclosure has not been updated since the orangutans moved out in around 2008. However, I do not know what the long-term plans for this species is, as their enclosure will eventually be demolished according to the masterplan map.

Colombian black spider monkey, Ateles fusciceps

Determining how long this exact subspecies of monkey has been kept at Colchester Zoo is very challenging, on account that the zoo often referred to their animals just as ‘spider monkeys’ and also because of taxonomic changes among these animals over the years. A family of spider monkeys was present at Colchester Zoo when it opened in 1963. In 1966, the new Monkey House was described as being home to black spider monkeys. The 1972 guidebook describes them as Central American spider monkeys, Ateles geoffroyi, but does specifically describe then as all-black in colour. At the start of 2007, Colchester had a troop of twenty-one spider monkeys but as of 2023 they had a much more modest group consisting of a single male and five females. Spider monkeys have been kept on roughly the same site since 1991, initially being one of several species of monkey kept in the Monkey Mountain complex before getting the entire space for themselves in around 2003.

L’Hoest’s guenon, Allochrocebus lhoesti

The first reference I can find to this species is from a 1994 zoo map. For a long time, these monkeys lived in part of Chimp World, but now can be seen in the large open-topped display in Edge of Africa. Colchester probably has one of the largest troops of this species in the UK, with five males and five females currently living together.

Lion-tailed macaque, Macaca silenus

The Story of Colchester Zoo records a pair of this species being present at the zoo’s opening in 1963. There is then a big gap in the records, where I am unsure if these monkeys were present, before they reappear on a 1991 zoo map. They have remained at the zoo ever since, although as of 2024 only two animals remain – a twenty-three-year-old male and twenty-eight-year-old female.

Barbary macaque, Macaca sylvanus

Although I cannot find any other reference for it, Colchester Zoo themselves have suggested that Barbary macaques were kept sometime around 1989. When a group of the macaques arrived at the zoo in 2019 and moved into Edge of Africa, it was suggested that this was the first time in thirty years that the species had been kept. Today, the Barbary macaques live next-door to the lions and have a troop comprising two males and four females.

Cherry-crowned mangabey, Cercocebus torquatus

The cherry-crowned mangabeys first arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2004, where they moved into the older lion enclosure where they have remained to the present day. At times, including in 2007, the group had around seven members, with births happening quite regularly. Now, there are four individuals at the zoo with the last successful breeding being from 2018.

Gelada, Theropithecus gelada

The first geladas arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2002, where they occupied the former white rhinoceros enclosure. At the time, they were the only ones of their species in the UK. Since the decrease in number of some of the primate groups, the geladas have now become the second most abundant primate species in the zoo behind the ring-tailed lemurs – in 2023, the troop contained six males and eleven females.

Mandrill, Mandrillus sphinx

The first record I can find of mandrills at Colchester Zoo is from 1967, where they lived in the newly-opened Monkey House. They are also mentioned in the 1972 guidebook. The IZN issue from 1986 records a pair of mandrills arriving sometime from January to April in that year, with another male departing the zoo in the same time frame. The zoo’s current troop descends from a male and two females imported in 1988 – since that time there have been four breeding males and the group has at times been over twenty strong. As of 2023, the troop has just ten members, only two of which are female. While they originally lived in a pair of enclosures, one roughly where the meerkats now live and the other now part of the Lion Rock enclosure, linked by an overhead walkway, they now live in Edge of Africa.

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Although many of the massive monkey troops are a thing of the past, they are undoubtedly still the most important and diverse mammalian family at the zoo.
 

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I'm thoroughly enjoying this thread! Particularly as Colchester Zoo was where my interest in wildlife started, with regular visits in the early 80s. I have a few guidebooks from that period - in relation to the groups you've covered so far, it's interesting to see one of these guidebooks (certainly pre-1983) mentioning "phalangers" [presumably Sugar Glider?] being kept in Moonlight World, and also "viscachas" which are described as living "in the open pampas of Argentina in warrens" [i.e Plains Viscacha].

I also think that the armadillos kept around then were Three-banded. My source is a species list that I wrote after a day at the zoo on 7/5/1983. I should caveat this by mentioning that I was 7 years old at the time - but I knew my animals, and there's no obvious mistakes on that list!!!
 
MONKEYS


Lion-tailed macaque, Macaca silenus

The Story of Colchester Zoo records a pair of this species being present at the zoo’s opening in 1963. There is then a big gap in the records, where I am unsure if these monkeys were present, before they reappear on a 1991 zoo map. They have remained at the zoo ever since, although as of 2024 only two animals remain – a twenty-three-year-old male and twenty-eight-year-old female.

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I didn't realise that Colchester had had such a diverse range of species in its earlier days...

Regarding the Lion-tailed Macaques. Possibly the initial 1963 pair were the founders of the group I saw in the mid 1990's when it numbered 7-9 individuals. They were in a long narrow enclosure with a covered visitor walkway. The two left are certainly the last survivors of that group.

I also remember the overhead tunnel connecting the two halves of the previous Mandrill enclosure. The founders of the current group were a male from the Southport zoo and two females from London Zoo (or vice versa), or maybe one from London and one from Paignton- these three zoos being the main UK breeders of them at that time.
 
On 7th May 1983, I saw the following prosimians and monkeys at Colchester Zoo. Bear I mind I was 7 years old, and there could be the odd mistake - but none of these species sound too impossible!

As written at the time: ring-tailed lemur, pig-tailed macaque, baboon, sacred baboon [i.e.Hamadryas Baboon], barbary ape [i.e.Barbary Macaque], vervet monkey, squirrel monkey, black spider monkey, capuchin, common marmoset.
 
I'm thoroughly enjoying this thread! Particularly as Colchester Zoo was where my interest in wildlife started, with regular visits in the early 80s. I have a few guidebooks from that period - in relation to the groups you've covered so far, it's interesting to see one of these guidebooks (certainly pre-1983) mentioning "phalangers" [presumably Sugar Glider?] being kept in Moonlight World, and also "viscachas" which are described as living "in the open pampas of Argentina in warrens" [i.e Plains Viscacha].

I also think that the armadillos kept around then were Three-banded. My source is a species list that I wrote after a day at the zoo on 7/5/1983. I should caveat this by mentioning that I was 7 years old at the time - but I knew my animals, and there's no obvious mistakes on that list!!!

Thank you for this extra information - phalangers are a particularly interesting addition, as I believe they would either be brushtail possums or a species of cuscus. Viscachas also seem to strike me as a very 'Colchester' rodent that I would have expected them to have - it seems in the early days they had a lot of South American species in their collection.
 
Actually, I think you're probably right that the "phalangers" were Brush-tailed Possums. The guide goes on to describe them as "about the size of a cat, but in general appearance is more reminiscent of a large bushbaby", and also mentions that it is extensively hunted for its fur which is sold as 'Adelaide chinchilla'.
 
Actually, I think you're probably right that the "phalangers" were Brush-tailed Possums. The guide goes on to describe them as "about the size of a cat, but in general appearance is more reminiscent of a large bushbaby", and also mentions that it is extensively hunted for its fur which is sold as 'Adelaide chinchilla'.

That is definitely describing a common brushtail possum - very exciting to learn that a whole other family of marsupials have been kept at Colchester in the past.
 
APES

Apes have been another mainstay at Colchester Zoo, with chimpanzees, orangutans and some species of gibbon often having been kept simultaneously, although there was a brief lull in the keeping of gibbons, sometime between 2008 and 2010. The 1972 guidebook does mention the gorilla, but it seems to have just been general information about the animal rather than describing a species in the collection. Apes are firmly on the zoo’s agenda in the future, with the masterplan showing a planned new enclosure for the orangutans as well as two new species of great ape – the bonobo and the Western lowland gorilla.

Past holdings:

Lar gibbon, Hylobates lar

The lar gibbon was present at the zoo when it opened in 1963, living in a cage currently where the entrance building stands. The next confirmed reference I can find for this species of gibbon is from a 1994 zoo map, living in the same enclosure the species always occupied, next to the current capuchin enclosure by the zoo entrance. The last reference I can find to this species is a Flickr photograph from May 2008. They left soon after, as the second map made for 2008 does not mention them.

Agile gibbon, Hylobates agilis

The 1972 guidebook, while only including general information about gibbons, includes a photograph of a young animal of this species sitting on one of the zoo’s lawns. It is not known when this species arrived at or left the collection, but the map shows that the gibbons lived roughly where the capuchin monkeys now live.

Hybrid orangutan, Pongo pygmaeus x abelii

The have been two hybrid orangutans kept at Colchester Zoo over the years. The first to arrive was the famous Rajang, who arrived at the zoo in 1980 from Chester Zoo. In 1987, he was joined by hybrid female Annie, who lived in the zoo until 1998. Rajang outlived both Annie and his later partner Djambe, dying on 11th December 2018 at the age of fifty.

Sumatran orangutan, Pongo abelii

This species of orangutan has been kept twice at Colchester Zoo. Between 1976 and 1978, Colchester kept a male Sumatran orangutan called Adam, who arrived from Flamingo Land and left for Bristol Zoo. The zoo’s second and last Sumatran orangutan, a female named Djambe, died on 25th October 2008, just two weeks after the Rajang’s Forest exhibit opened. Originally, Colchester apparently had plans to bring in a pair of Sumatran orangutans in around 2009, but this didn’t happen while Rajang was alive. Eventually Bornean male Tiga arrived, and Colchester now seem invested in keeping this species instead.

Present holdings:

Pileated gibbon, Hylobates pileatus

A pair of these gibbons arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2010 following the original closure of the Rare Species Conservation Centre, and originally lived in the old gibbon enclosure next to the current capuchin enclosure. In 2011 they moved to their current enclosure in Rivers Edge, and in 2013 they reproduced for the first time. In late 2022 the original female left for a zoo in France, being replaced with a new female in May 2023 from Zurich Zoo.

Bornean orangutan, Pongo pygmaeus

Although it is not entirely certain, there may have been an orangutan present at the zoo’s opening in 1963 – according to The Story of Colchester Zoo, it was a young animal that had been presented to the zoo’s owner by the governor of Borneo. The first known orangutans were Guy and Chrissie (alternatively referred to in the book as Prissy), who arrived in 1967. They were joined by a third orangutan, Lola, in 1968. Lola left in 1971 for Chester, Guy died in 1976 and Chrissie in 1978. They were followed by a new male Bornean orangutan called David, who arrived in 1979 from Chester and died in 1982. Currently there are three Bornean orangutans at the zoo – Tiga, who arrived in June 2009, and mother-daughter pair Mali and Tatau, who arrived at Colchester from Paignton Zoo in February 2021.

Chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes

The Story of Colchester Zoo mentions that a young chimpanzee named Mac may have been present at Colchester Zoo in the opening year of 1963. Throughout the following years, including in 1964 and 1969, more chimps arrived, often in pairs. In the 1970s the chimps moved into the former giraffe house, now the site of Rivers Edge, including Billy-Joe, the mother of current oldest chimp Tara and great grandmother of the youngest current chicks Tumba and Talia. Billy-Joe died in 2018. In 1992, the chimps moved into their current enclosure at Chimp World (now partially rebuilt as Chimpanzee Lookout). Currently, all five chimpanzees at the zoo are subspecies-level hybrids, so it is very likely that they will no longer be bred.

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@karenZOO Perhaps no single animal has been more important in Colchester Zoo’s history, in terms of recognition, than Rajang the hybrid orangutan.
 

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. Between 1976 and 1978, Colchester kept a male Sumatran orangutan called Adam, who arrived from Flamingo Land and left for Bristol Zoo. .

'Adam' fathered several young at Bristol though none survived to maturity. He and his mate Anne were later sent to the zoo at Santilla del Mar in Spain to 'retire' when the zoo went out of the species. They bred another baby there, which in turn had babies herself. One of them is Adam's grandson Silvestre, who was handraised at Monkeyworld and lived there until he was about 12, recently moving to Basel.
 
I knew Colchester Zoo quite well in its early days, and don’t remember Orangutans being there
 
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I knew Colchester Zoo quite well in its early days, and don’t remember Orangutans being there

First time I went was in late 60's and I remember the young Bornean pair (or trio) as mentioned above. Remember Lola being transferred to Chester also- they were very short of female Orangs. At Colchester they had pretty primitive housing right up until the most recent 'Orangutan Forest' development. Rajang, the famous hybrid, had (at least) three different enclosures there.

Postcard (postmarked 1971?) shows two of the three young Borneans, G,C & L.
 

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INSECTIVORES

This group of mammals, which are mainly small and unobtrusive, have been perhaps unsurprisingly very rarely kept in Colchester Zoo’s history. Only a single individual of the most famous of this group, the hedgehogs, has been kept for a brief period as an encounter animal.

Past holdings:

Four-toed hedgehog, Atelerix albiventris

This species arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2015, before leaving in the October of 2017. It lived in a diurnal enclosure in the Sensation Station, so was very rarely visible.
 
BATS

The second-largest mammalian group has only had a couple of brief periods of history of being kept at Colchester Zoo, with an unidentified species kept at the opening in 1963 and a single species kept in the short-lived Nocturnal House the zoo had in the early 1970s. It remains to be seen if the new nocturnal house from the zoo’s recent masterplan will contain any of these characterful mammals.

Past holdings:

Indian or Malayan flying fox, Pteropus medius or P. vampyrus

An unspecified number of these bats arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1972, which were then kept in the zoo’s Nocturnal House – according to a map from the time, this was roughly where Worlds Apart and its walkthrough are today. It is not clear when they left the collection. The Story of Colchester Zoo refers to them as Malayan flying foxes, while the guidebook of the time calls them the greater Indian fruit bat, with the scientific name of the Indian species. The picture in the guidebook makes me think they were Indian flying foxes, but I cannot be absolutely certain so will leave the species identification open.
 
APES

Apes have been another mainstay at Colchester Zoo, with chimpanzees, orangutans and some species of gibbon often having been kept simultaneously, although there was a brief lull in the keeping of gibbons, sometime between 2008 and 2010. The 1972 guidebook does mention the gorilla, but it seems to have just been general information about the animal rather than describing a species in the collection. Apes are firmly on the zoo’s agenda in the future, with the masterplan showing a planned new enclosure for the orangutans as well as two new species of great ape – the bonobo and the Western lowland gorilla.

Past holdings:

Lar gibbon, Hylobates lar

The lar gibbon was present at the zoo when it opened in 1963, living in a cage currently where the entrance building stands. The next confirmed reference I can find for this species of gibbon is from a 1994 zoo map, living in the same enclosure the species always occupied, next to the current capuchin enclosure by the zoo entrance. The last reference I can find to this species is a Flickr photograph from May 2008. They left soon after, as the second map made for 2008 does not mention them.

Agile gibbon, Hylobates agilis

The 1972 guidebook, while only including general information about gibbons, includes a photograph of a young animal of this species sitting on one of the zoo’s lawns. It is not known when this species arrived at or left the collection, but the map shows that the gibbons lived roughly where the capuchin monkeys now live.

Hybrid orangutan, Pongo pygmaeus x abelii

The have been two hybrid orangutans kept at Colchester Zoo over the years. The first to arrive was the famous Rajang, who arrived at the zoo in 1980 from Chester Zoo. In 1987, he was joined by hybrid female Annie, who lived in the zoo until 1998. Rajang outlived both Annie and his later partner Djambe, dying on 11th December 2018 at the age of fifty.

Sumatran orangutan, Pongo abelii

This species of orangutan has been kept twice at Colchester Zoo. Between 1976 and 1978, Colchester kept a male Sumatran orangutan called Adam, who arrived from Flamingo Land and left for Bristol Zoo. The zoo’s second and last Sumatran orangutan, a female named Djambe, died on 25th October 2008, just two weeks after the Rajang’s Forest exhibit opened. Originally, Colchester apparently had plans to bring in a pair of Sumatran orangutans in around 2009, but this didn’t happen while Rajang was alive. Eventually Bornean male Tiga arrived, and Colchester now seem invested in keeping this species instead.

Present holdings:

Pileated gibbon, Hylobates pileatus

A pair of these gibbons arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2010 following the original closure of the Rare Species Conservation Centre, and originally lived in the old gibbon enclosure next to the current capuchin enclosure. In 2011 they moved to their current enclosure in Rivers Edge, and in 2013 they reproduced for the first time. In late 2022 the original female left for a zoo in France, being replaced with a new female in May 2023 from Zurich Zoo.

Bornean orangutan, Pongo pygmaeus

Although it is not entirely certain, there may have been an orangutan present at the zoo’s opening in 1963 – according to The Story of Colchester Zoo, it was a young animal that had been presented to the zoo’s owner by the governor of Borneo. The first known orangutans were Guy and Chrissie (alternatively referred to in the book as Prissy), who arrived in 1967. They were joined by a third orangutan, Lola, in 1968. Lola left in 1971 for Chester, Guy died in 1976 and Chrissie in 1978. They were followed by a new male Bornean orangutan called David, who arrived in 1979 from Chester and died in 1982. Currently there are three Bornean orangutans at the zoo – Tiga, who arrived in June 2009, and mother-daughter pair Mali and Tatau, who arrived at Colchester from Paignton Zoo in February 2021.

Chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes

The Story of Colchester Zoo mentions that a young chimpanzee named Mac may have been present at Colchester Zoo in the opening year of 1963. Throughout the following years, including in 1964 and 1969, more chimps arrived, often in pairs. In the 1970s the chimps moved into the former giraffe house, now the site of Rivers Edge, including Billy-Joe, the mother of current oldest chimp Tara and great grandmother of the youngest current chicks Tumba and Talia. Billy-Joe died in 2018. In 1992, the chimps moved into their current enclosure at Chimp World (now partially rebuilt as Chimpanzee Lookout). Currently, all five chimpanzees at the zoo are subspecies-level hybrids, so it is very likely that they will no longer be bred.

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@karenZOO Perhaps no single animal has been more important in Colchester Zoo’s history, in terms of recognition, than Rajang the hybrid orangutan.
This is weird ,looking through a1967/68 guide book and there is no mention of any Orangs at all
 
According to the above they arrived in 1967/8. Guidebook probably printed in advance of them arriving.
Thanks, that would probably explain it, and yet towards the end of the guidebook there is half a page dedicated to new arrivals and what species they are expecting to arrive, no mention of any Orangs
 
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