Colchester Zoo Colchester Zoo - past, present and future

FELIFORMS

Comprising cats, viverrids, mongooses, Malagasy carnivores and hyaenas, this is by far the more prominent of the two carnivoran groups kept during Colchester Zoo’s history. The griup has seen a steady decline in numbers – for example, there were no fewer than fifteen species of these mammals kept in the mid-1990s, compared to just seven today. However, generally speaking the enclosures have improved for those species that do remain. Throughout their history, at least thirty-six species of feliform have been kept. The zoo’s recent masterplan mentions just two species, both already present at the zoo – the Amur tigers in their current enclosure and the African lions in a new enclosure.

Past holdings:

Snow leopard, Panthera uncia

The International Zoo News issue for 1986 mentions the construction of the snow leopard enclosure, while the official 60th anniversary book released by the zoo says this is also the year the animals themselves arrived. They remained in the same enclosure, a fairly small space on the hilltop now occupied by the sun bear enclosure, before they departed in 2005.

Jaguar, Panthera onca

The first record I can find of this species at Colchester Zoo is from 1991. The zoo had a pair, with the male dying early in 2000 and the female, named Handaya, leaving for Edinburgh Zoo in 2005. Their enclosure was taken over by the Amur leopards, with the male leopard arriving on the same day as the departure of the last jaguar.

Caracal, Caracal caracal

I have found records of the caracal in the 1972 guidebook, with the included map showing they lived roughly where the Worlds Apart walkthrough now stands. The caracal appears on the maps for 1984 to 1985 and for 1991 – on both maps they live on the site of the current spider monkey enclosure. The IZN issue for 1986 records two unsuccessful litters born in that year. In 1991, a male caracal arrived from London Zoo to join a pair of females already at Colchester. However, Zootierliste notes that by 1992 this male was the only caracal left at Colchester. I am not certain exactly when this species stopped being kept.

Serval, Leptailurus serval

A 1976 issue of IZN recorded that the zoo was looking to source a female serval. However, it is not known if servals were ever kept at Colchester Zoo prior to the arrival of a young female in 2017 that was planned for inclusion in the animal display. When the display was ended in 2019, this serval was moved to the Wild Zoological Park in Staffordshire.

Cougar, Puma concolor

These American cats have had a rather long history at Colchester Zoo. The Story of Colchester Zoo records a cougar cub by the name of Mogi being hand-reared inside Stanway Hall in 1968, plus the later birth of three cubs in 1970. The 1972 guidebook includes them, with the map placing them roughly where the Worlds Apart walkthrough now stands. In 1987, a cougar had to be killed, after it escaped its enclosure when the great storm of that year crushed its enclosure with a fallen tree. They are shown on the 1991 map, living in one of the Hornbill Hill cages that is now part of the sun bear enclosure. This species finally left the collection in 1992, according to Zootierliste.

Eurasian lynx, Lynx lynx

This species was definitely present in the mid-1980s, although I am not certain exactly when they arrived at or left the zoo. The 1984 to 1985 map includes a lynx enclosure, while the 1986 IZN issue mentions the construction of the enclosure that was specifically for European lynx.

Fishing cat, Prionailurus viverrinus

The first record of the fishing cat that I can find is from the 1991 zoo map. They seem to have remained to the zoo until around 2004, with a photograph from that year on Flickr. Throughout their time at the zoo, they lived in an enclosure attached to the Rivers Edge building, roughly beneath the current footprint of the gibbon enclosure.

Leopard cat, Prionailurus bengalensis

This species was definitely kept from at least 1972, as it is mentioned in the guidebook and shown on the map living where the Worlds Apart walkthrough is now located – the guidebook refers to it as the Indian leopard cat. The 1986 IZN report records the unsuccessful breeding of the leopard cat in that year. Non-subspecies leopard cats are recorded on Zootierliste, with a pair present in 1992. The guidebook and map from 1998 and the map from 1999 to 2000 all show Amur leopard cats as being present in the lowest enclosure on Hornbill Hill, now part of the sun bear enclosure. It is not certain when the species finally left the collection.

Rusty-spotted cat, Prionailurus rubiginosus

Zootierliste records this species living at Colchester Zoo between 1990 and 1998. The only map showing these tiny cats is from 1994, which shows them living in the small cat enclosure tucked down the side of Stanway Hall that was used for Geoffroy’s cats for many years and has now been demolished for part of the sun bear house.

Pallas’s cat, Otocolobus manul

Zootierliste records this species arriving at Colchester Zoo in 2005, with animals arriving from Moscow Zoo. The last references I can find are photographs from around 2009 to 2010. In April 2007 these cats successfully bred, producing five kittens. They lived in the former fishing cat enclosure, now part of the gibbon enclosure.

Ocelot, Leopardus pardalis

According to The Story of Colchester Zoo, multiple ocelots were present at the zoo’s opening in 1963. An ocelot also arrived at the zoo in 1970 as part of the collection of Nick Nyoka. The 1986 issue of IZN reports the arrival of a male ocelot sometime between January and April, with a successful breeding following sometime between September and December. From at least 1991, ocelots lived in a narrow enclosure on the hill, now part of the Amur leopard enclosure. They remained until around 1999 or 2000.

Margay, Leopardus wiedii

The Story of Colchester Zoo records a margay as one of the animals that arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1970 with Nick Nyoka. Later, Zootierliste records that, in 1986, Colchester had a single male margay in its collection. Sometime later, they made a return, with the species moving into the former ocelot enclosure in 2000, where they remained until 2009, when their enclosure was demolished as part of the Amur leopard extension.

Geoffroy’s cat, Leopardus geoffroyi

This species probably arrived in 1998, as this is the first zoo map that includes the species – it moved into the former rusty-spotted cat enclosure tucked down the side of Stanway Hall. The species remained on-display in one of the old bear dens until around 2014, but the last female stayed off-show at the zoo until at least 2018.

Jungle cat, Felis chaus

The zoo map from 1984 to 1985 shows an enclosure for jungle cats at the bottom of Hornbill Hill, now part of the sun bear enclosure. The maps from 1991 and 1994 also show the jungle cat being kept in the same location. I am not certain when this species left the collection.

Sand cat, Felis margarita

This species of cat first arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1996 and first bred in 1997. They lived in the Desert Life building in the Beginning Zone for the entire duration of their time at the zoo, and left the collection when the exhibit was shut in 2008.

Black-footed cat, Felis nigripes

This small cat was kept at Colchester Zoo at least from 1991, with a pair recorded in 1992 and a second female in 1993. The species was no longer kept by late 1993 or 1994. The only map record is from 1991, which shows them living in the small indoor space that would later become Snakes and Lizards, the now-closed indoor annex between what is now the mangabeys and the former hyaena enclosure.

Afro-Asian wildcat, Felis libyca

While it is not known exactly when they arrived or departed from the zoo, a copy of International Zoo News from 1986 shows that between September and December of that year an enclosure was constructed for Indian desert cats.

European wildcat, Felis silvestris

The Scottish wildcat was kept at Colchester Zoo. The 1986 IZN copy shows that a new enclosure for these cats was constructed sometime between January and April, with a successful breeding taking place sometime during May to August of the same year. Sometime in the early to mid-1990s, a pair of Scottish wildcats were stolen from the zoo and later released by the Animal Liberation Front. It is not clear if these were the only individuals at the zoo at the time, or whether the wildcat persisted at Colchester after that time.

African civet, Civettictis civetta

The 1984 to 1985 map shows a general mark for ‘civets’ without specifying what species. The first confirmed record of this species I can find is from the 1986 IZN issue, which mentions the arrival of a pair of African civets between May and August of that year. There is a photograph of this species taken at Colchester in 1990, while the 1994 map also mentions it. While the 1980s map shows the civet in the former Small Mammal House, these later records show the civet in an awkward enclosure where the squirrel monkeys currently live – apparently, they were only visible through the mesh back of another enclosure. I am not certain of the exact year in which this species left the collection.

Large-spotted civet, Viverra megaspila

Other than an information-free listing on Zootierliste, no further details exist about this species’ history at Colchester including its years of arrival and departure from the zoo.

Common palm civet, Paradoxurus hermaphroditus

While it is not known if the species was kept previously, a single palm civet arrived at the zoo in early 2017 to be in the animal display. It left in around 2019, when the shows were ended.

Banded mongoose, Mungos mungo

It is difficult determining exactly when this, and indeed most of the other mongoose species, actually arrived at Colchester Zoo – the first evidence I can find is from the 1998 zoo map, which puts them in the Patas Plains area where the squirrel monkeys currently live. They moved around a bit – around 1999 to 2000, they moved into a custom-made enclosure called Mongoose Mound in the children’s zoo until at least 2008, they briefly were mixed with the mangabeys and by around 2009 were living in the Small Mammal House. It seems they left the zoo at around this time.

Common dwarf mongoose, Helogale parvula

This species is first mentioned, as far as I can tell, from the 1999-2000 map, although the Small Mammal House that they always lived in has existed and been labelled since at least 1991, so they may well have been around much longer. They are definitely shown on the 2003 map and maybe also the 2007 map, but probably left soon after.

Yellow mongoose, Cynictis penicillata

On the 1999-2000 map, yellow mongooses have replaced the banded mongooses in Patas Plains. By 2003, they had moved to the Mongoose Canyon exhibit by the gelada baboons. They were probably still present around 2007, but left the zoo in around 2008 to 2009.

Marsh mongoose, Atilax paludinosus

The earliest reference I can find to the marsh mongoose is from the 1994 zoo map, where they lived in part of a network of enclosures that is now part of the Heart of the Amazon housing. There are also shown on the 1998 and 1999 to 2000 maps, now shown living in an enclosure right at the zoo’s northeastern boundary. The species was no longer present in the collection by 2003. Part of their enclosure can still just about be seen – to the left of the entrance to the Playa Patagonia sea lion tunnel, a rock-lined depression can be seen in the planted border, which was once the marsh mongoose’s pond.

Indian mongoose, Herpestes sp.

According to The Story of Colchester Zoo an unidentified species of Indian mongoose, predictably named Rikkitikkitavi, arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1964. It is not known how long it lived at the zoo for, nor where it was kept within the zoo.

Fossa, Cryptoprocta ferox

The first fossa arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1994. They bred once in 1999, and the species remained at Colchester Zoo until 2009. Their enclosure, called Foret de Madagascar, was the former home of the snow leopards that is now part of the sun bear enclosure.

Fanaloka, Fossa fossana

Zootierliste mentions this species under former holdings for Colchester Zoo. There is no information on when they arrived at or left the collection, with the only additional note being that this species did not breed while at the zoo.

Striped hyaena, Hyaena hyaena

The striped hyaena was one of the species present when Colchester Zoo first opened in 1963. The 1972 map and guidebook both mention the species, living roughly where the zoo entrance building now stands. The zoo maps from 1985 through to 1987 all list ‘hyaenas’ without specifying the exact species. However, the striped hyaena definitely returned sometime around 2004-2005, living in the Edge of Africa and rotating through the space with the last of the spotted hyaenas. In 2007, this pair reproduced but the single offspring did not survive. This species left the zoo in 2011 in preparation for the arrival of the new pair of spotted hyaenas.

Present holdings:

Tiger, Panthera tigris

The first tigers at Colchester Zoo arrived three years after opening in 1966 - two female tigers named Ranee and Ranjit. The Story of Colchester Zoo describes them as Bengal tigers, which could be an accurate subspecies identification. The following year, three tiger cubs arrived at the zoo. The 1972 map shows the tigers living roughly where the chimpanzees now live. By 1989, the tigers moved to Tiger Valley, now the Lost Madagascar lemur walkthrough. Tigers have remained at Colchester ever since their arrival, so now the focus is on major additions or changes. In 1998 a pair of white tigers arrived from ZooParc de Beauval. The male, named Sasha, became a minor celebrity when he killed his mate in 1999. He remained at the zoo until his death in 2010. Meanwhile, Siberian tigers arrived in 2003, moving into the Tiger Taiga enclosure that they still inhabit to this day. The Amur tigers bred in 2019, the first time Colchester Zoo had ever bred the species.

Lion, Panthera leo

One of the animals present at the opening of the zoo in 1963 was a male Asiatic lion by the name of Rajah. Lions have been at Colchester ever since, with one particularly famous individual being Simba, the largest lion ever recorded, who arrived in 1970 from Sandown Zoo with Nick Nyoka. The lions at first lived roughly where the chimpanzees now live, and also lived in an enclosure next to Stanway Hall in the 1970s. In 1992 the lions moved into the Serengeti Plains exhibit, where the mangabeys now live. They remained there until the opening of Lion Rock in 2004. Today, there is a single older male African lion named Bailey at the zoo – presumably, the plans for a new enclosure for the lions in Edge of Africa will involve the arrival of new individuals.

Leopard, Panthera pardus

A wild-born male Indian leopard, with the name Chief Horrible Noise or Chiefy for short, was present at Colchester Zoo at its 1963 opening. Leopards have been around at Colchester for a long period of time – The Story of Colchester Zoo records the arrival of a breeding trio of black leopards sometime between 1966 and 1968. In the 1972 map and guidebook there are enclosures for both Indian and black leopards, while the IZN issue for 1986 records the birth of two black leopard cubs sometime in the May to August of that year. There were leopards present until sometime between 1994 and 1998, living in an enclosure roughly where the pileated gibbons now live. Leopards remained absent from Colchester Zoo until the arrival of Amur leopards in 2005. This subspecies has remained at Colchester to the present-day, with a single successful breeding in 2019.

Cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus

Cheetahs have been part of Colchester Zoo’s collection since its 1963 opening, with tame female Kinna resident at the time. By 1965, there was a male and two female cheetahs at the zoo but, despite the best efforts at Colchester at the time, they did not manage to become the first British zoo to breed cheetahs. The 1972 zoo map shows that the cheetahs at that time lived in an enclosure on the site of the entrance building. By the publication of the 1984 to 1985 map, they had moved to the site of Cheetah Country, an enclosure that included the land currently home to the wreathed hornbills and red pandas – later, it was expanded to also include the space now home to binturongs and small-clawed otters. By 2002, the cheetahs had moved to Edge of Africa, where they remain to this day. Several litters have been successfully born in this enclosure. In 2023, a secondary enclosure for cheetahs was opened, in the former African painted dog enclosure. There are possibly plans for the cheetahs to get the current warthog enclosure, so that the breeding pair can be on-display simultaneously.

Binturong, Arctictis binturong

The Story of Colchester Zoo reports the arrival of the zoo’s first pair of binturongs in 1965. They are included in the 1972 guidebook, and the map from that year lists them as being part of the zoo’s Nocturnal House, roughly where Worlds Apart now stands. The IZN issue for 1986 records the arrival of a pair of binturongs sometime between September and December of that year. The species was present in at least 2003 in the Small Mammal House, on the site of the former Nocturnal House. By around 2007, the species moved into an enclosure that had previously housed the langurs, roughly where the current gibbon enclosure now stands. They remained here until around 2011-2012, when the species moved into its current enclosure near the lemur island.

Slender-tailed meerkat, Suricata suricatta

The earliest record I can find of meerkats at Colchester Zoo is from the 1984 or 1985 map, where they are shown living in the former Small Mammal House on the site of the Worlds Apart walkthrough. The IZN report from 1986 records the arrival of a pair of meerkats between May and August of that year. The next confirmation of meerkats is from 2003, again showing them in the Small Mammal House – however, several maps list the house without mentioning the animals within it, so it is fairly likely they were there throughout this time. Soon after this time, a secondary group of meerkats moved into an all-indoor enclosure in Kingdom of the Wild. The meerkats left the Small Mammal House for their custom new Suricata Sands enclosure in 2009 to 2010 Suricata Sands. By 2013, the meerkats had left the Kingdom of the Wild enclosure and now only live in a single enclosure in the zoo.

Spotted hyaena, Crocuta crocuta

Zootierliste records this species first being held at Colchester Zoo in 1988. The first map to show them is from 1991, when they lived in their former enclosure in the Serengeti Plains complex (the enclosure is now a picnic site, between the mangabeys and Barbary macaques) – they remained in this enclosure until 1998. The 1999-2000 map shows the spotted hyenas moving to their current enclosure in Kingdom of the Wild. One of these original animals, a male named Mbembe, lived at the zoo until 2010, sharing the enclosure on rotation with the striped hyaenas. In 2011, a new pair returned to Colchester Zoo and bred successfully on multiple occasions, with the male and two of his descendants at the zoo currently.

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Colchester Zoo once had one of the most extensive collections of small cats in the country, but following the departure of the last Geoffroy’s cat, there are now only four species of large cat remaining.
 

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Thank you @DesertRhino150 for this informative thread. I'm sure that it's taken many hours to compile all the facts and figures and I have been following along with interest. In some ways, it's a bit of a typical situation of a major zoo having a much diminished collection in the modern era, but I have enjoyed reading about all the changes that have occurred. I didn't realize the hugely impressive number of primates that Colchester Zoo has had over the years, even though I knew that it was a famous British zoo that was renowned for mammals. It's amazing what can be unearthed by going through old guidebooks and zoo maps!
 
1.1 Fanaloka were were listed in the International Zoo Yearbook Rare Animal Census for 1996/1997. (International Zoo Yearbook Volume 36 page 613). This was a mistake and the entry should have been for Fossa.
Hard to blame them given the fanaloka's Latin name of Fossa fossana! :p Although if this is the case, then somebody should probably update ZTL, seeing as to my knowledge there is no way for 'Zoofreund' ranked members such as myself to remove listings.

As a side-note, does this mean that the fanaloka imported in 2011 by the RSCC marked the first time that this species has ever been seen in the UK?
 
This is indeed a super interesting thread and it’s going to make my next Colchester trip even more engaging as I look around and try and track down where things used to be!

After I have done all the animal listings, I will be doing a second section where I look through each part of the zoo and show what was kept there in the past, so that should hopefully be helpful with searching for historic species locations.
 
FELIFORMS

Comprising cats, viverrids, mongooses, Malagasy carnivores and hyaenas, this is by far the more prominent of the two carnivoran groups kept during Colchester Zoo’s history. The griup has seen a steady decline in numbers – for example, there were no fewer than fifteen species of these mammals kept in the mid-1990s, compared to just seven today. However, generally speaking the enclosures have improved for those species that do remain. Throughout their history, at least thirty-six species of feliform have been kept. The zoo’s recent masterplan mentions just two species, both already present at the zoo – the Amur tigers in their current enclosure and the African lions in a new enclosure.

Past holdings:

Snow leopard, Panthera uncia

The International Zoo News issue for 1986 mentions the construction of the snow leopard enclosure, while the official 60th anniversary book released by the zoo says this is also the year the animals themselves arrived. They remained in the same enclosure, a fairly small space on the hilltop now occupied by the sun bear enclosure, before they departed in 2005.

Jaguar, Panthera onca

The first record I can find of this species at Colchester Zoo is from 1991. The zoo had a pair, with the male dying early in 2000 and the female, named Handaya, leaving for Edinburgh Zoo in 2005. Their enclosure was taken over by the Amur leopards, with the male leopard arriving on the same day as the departure of the last jaguar.

Caracal, Caracal caracal

I have found records of the caracal in the 1972 guidebook, with the included map showing they lived roughly where the Worlds Apart walkthrough now stands. The caracal appears on the maps for 1984 to 1985 and for 1991 – on both maps they live on the site of the current spider monkey enclosure. The IZN issue for 1986 records two unsuccessful litters born in that year. In 1991, a male caracal arrived from London Zoo to join a pair of females already at Colchester. However, Zootierliste notes that by 1992 this male was the only caracal left at Colchester. I am not certain exactly when this species stopped being kept.

Serval, Leptailurus serval

A 1976 issue of IZN recorded that the zoo was looking to source a female serval. However, it is not known if servals were ever kept at Colchester Zoo prior to the arrival of a young female in 2017 that was planned for inclusion in the animal display. When the display was ended in 2019, this serval was moved to the Wild Zoological Park in Staffordshire.

Cougar, Puma concolor

These American cats have had a rather long history at Colchester Zoo. The Story of Colchester Zoo records a cougar cub by the name of Mogi being hand-reared inside Stanway Hall in 1968, plus the later birth of three cubs in 1970. The 1972 guidebook includes them, with the map placing them roughly where the Worlds Apart walkthrough now stands. In 1987, a cougar had to be killed, after it escaped its enclosure when the great storm of that year crushed its enclosure with a fallen tree. They are shown on the 1991 map, living in one of the Hornbill Hill cages that is now part of the sun bear enclosure. This species finally left the collection in 1992, according to Zootierliste.

Eurasian lynx, Lynx lynx

This species was definitely present in the mid-1980s, although I am not certain exactly when they arrived at or left the zoo. The 1984 to 1985 map includes a lynx enclosure, while the 1986 IZN issue mentions the construction of the enclosure that was specifically for European lynx.

Fishing cat, Prionailurus viverrinus

The first record of the fishing cat that I can find is from the 1991 zoo map. They seem to have remained to the zoo until around 2004, with a photograph from that year on Flickr. Throughout their time at the zoo, they lived in an enclosure attached to the Rivers Edge building, roughly beneath the current footprint of the gibbon enclosure.

Leopard cat, Prionailurus bengalensis

This species was definitely kept from at least 1972, as it is mentioned in the guidebook and shown on the map living where the Worlds Apart walkthrough is now located – the guidebook refers to it as the Indian leopard cat. The 1986 IZN report records the unsuccessful breeding of the leopard cat in that year. Non-subspecies leopard cats are recorded on Zootierliste, with a pair present in 1992. The guidebook and map from 1998 and the map from 1999 to 2000 all show Amur leopard cats as being present in the lowest enclosure on Hornbill Hill, now part of the sun bear enclosure. It is not certain when the species finally left the collection.

Rusty-spotted cat, Prionailurus rubiginosus

Zootierliste records this species living at Colchester Zoo between 1990 and 1998. The only map showing these tiny cats is from 1994, which shows them living in the small cat enclosure tucked down the side of Stanway Hall that was used for Geoffroy’s cats for many years and has now been demolished for part of the sun bear house.

Pallas’s cat, Otocolobus manul

Zootierliste records this species arriving at Colchester Zoo in 2005, with animals arriving from Moscow Zoo. The last references I can find are photographs from around 2009 to 2010. In April 2007 these cats successfully bred, producing five kittens. They lived in the former fishing cat enclosure, now part of the gibbon enclosure.

Ocelot, Leopardus pardalis

According to The Story of Colchester Zoo, multiple ocelots were present at the zoo’s opening in 1963. An ocelot also arrived at the zoo in 1970 as part of the collection of Nick Nyoka. The 1986 issue of IZN reports the arrival of a male ocelot sometime between January and April, with a successful breeding following sometime between September and December. From at least 1991, ocelots lived in a narrow enclosure on the hill, now part of the Amur leopard enclosure. They remained until around 1999 or 2000.

Margay, Leopardus wiedii

The Story of Colchester Zoo records a margay as one of the animals that arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1970 with Nick Nyoka. Later, Zootierliste records that, in 1986, Colchester had a single male margay in its collection. Sometime later, they made a return, with the species moving into the former ocelot enclosure in 2000, where they remained until 2009, when their enclosure was demolished as part of the Amur leopard extension.

Geoffroy’s cat, Leopardus geoffroyi

This species probably arrived in 1998, as this is the first zoo map that includes the species – it moved into the former rusty-spotted cat enclosure tucked down the side of Stanway Hall. The species remained on-display in one of the old bear dens until around 2014, but the last female stayed off-show at the zoo until at least 2018.

Jungle cat, Felis chaus

The zoo map from 1984 to 1985 shows an enclosure for jungle cats at the bottom of Hornbill Hill, now part of the sun bear enclosure. The maps from 1991 and 1994 also show the jungle cat being kept in the same location. I am not certain when this species left the collection.

Sand cat, Felis margarita

This species of cat first arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1996 and first bred in 1997. They lived in the Desert Life building in the Beginning Zone for the entire duration of their time at the zoo, and left the collection when the exhibit was shut in 2008.

Black-footed cat, Felis nigripes

This small cat was kept at Colchester Zoo at least from 1991, with a pair recorded in 1992 and a second female in 1993. The species was no longer kept by late 1993 or 1994. The only map record is from 1991, which shows them living in the small indoor space that would later become Snakes and Lizards, the now-closed indoor annex between what is now the mangabeys and the former hyaena enclosure.

Afro-Asian wildcat, Felis libyca

While it is not known exactly when they arrived or departed from the zoo, a copy of International Zoo News from 1986 shows that between September and December of that year an enclosure was constructed for Indian desert cats.

European wildcat, Felis silvestris

The Scottish wildcat was kept at Colchester Zoo. The 1986 IZN copy shows that a new enclosure for these cats was constructed sometime between January and April, with a successful breeding taking place sometime during May to August of the same year. Sometime in the early to mid-1990s, a pair of Scottish wildcats were stolen from the zoo and later released by the Animal Liberation Front. It is not clear if these were the only individuals at the zoo at the time, or whether the wildcat persisted at Colchester after that time.

African civet, Civettictis civetta

The 1984 to 1985 map shows a general mark for ‘civets’ without specifying what species. The first confirmed record of this species I can find is from the 1986 IZN issue, which mentions the arrival of a pair of African civets between May and August of that year. There is a photograph of this species taken at Colchester in 1990, while the 1994 map also mentions it. While the 1980s map shows the civet in the former Small Mammal House, these later records show the civet in an awkward enclosure where the squirrel monkeys currently live – apparently, they were only visible through the mesh back of another enclosure. I am not certain of the exact year in which this species left the collection.

Large-spotted civet, Viverra megaspila

Other than an information-free listing on Zootierliste, no further details exist about this species’ history at Colchester including its years of arrival and departure from the zoo.

Common palm civet, Paradoxurus hermaphroditus

While it is not known if the species was kept previously, a single palm civet arrived at the zoo in early 2017 to be in the animal display. It left in around 2019, when the shows were ended.

Banded mongoose, Mungos mungo

It is difficult determining exactly when this, and indeed most of the other mongoose species, actually arrived at Colchester Zoo – the first evidence I can find is from the 1998 zoo map, which puts them in the Patas Plains area where the squirrel monkeys currently live. They moved around a bit – around 1999 to 2000, they moved into a custom-made enclosure called Mongoose Mound in the children’s zoo until at least 2008, they briefly were mixed with the mangabeys and by around 2009 were living in the Small Mammal House. It seems they left the zoo at around this time.

Common dwarf mongoose, Helogale parvula

This species is first mentioned, as far as I can tell, from the 1999-2000 map, although the Small Mammal House that they always lived in has existed and been labelled since at least 1991, so they may well have been around much longer. They are definitely shown on the 2003 map and maybe also the 2007 map, but probably left soon after.

Yellow mongoose, Cynictis penicillata

On the 1999-2000 map, yellow mongooses have replaced the banded mongooses in Patas Plains. By 2003, they had moved to the Mongoose Canyon exhibit by the gelada baboons. They were probably still present around 2007, but left the zoo in around 2008 to 2009.

Marsh mongoose, Atilax paludinosus

The earliest reference I can find to the marsh mongoose is from the 1994 zoo map, where they lived in part of a network of enclosures that is now part of the Heart of the Amazon housing. There are also shown on the 1998 and 1999 to 2000 maps, now shown living in an enclosure right at the zoo’s northeastern boundary. The species was no longer present in the collection by 2003. Part of their enclosure can still just about be seen – to the left of the entrance to the Playa Patagonia sea lion tunnel, a rock-lined depression can be seen in the planted border, which was once the marsh mongoose’s pond.

Indian mongoose, Herpestes sp.

According to The Story of Colchester Zoo an unidentified species of Indian mongoose, predictably named Rikkitikkitavi, arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1964. It is not known how long it lived at the zoo for, nor where it was kept within the zoo.

Fossa, Cryptoprocta ferox

The first fossa arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1994. They bred once in 1999, and the species remained at Colchester Zoo until 2009. Their enclosure, called Foret de Madagascar, was the former home of the snow leopards that is now part of the sun bear enclosure.

Fanaloka, Fossa fossana

Zootierliste mentions this species under former holdings for Colchester Zoo. There is no information on when they arrived at or left the collection, with the only additional note being that this species did not breed while at the zoo.

Striped hyaena, Hyaena hyaena

The striped hyaena was one of the species present when Colchester Zoo first opened in 1963. The 1972 map and guidebook both mention the species, living roughly where the zoo entrance building now stands. The zoo maps from 1985 through to 1987 all list ‘hyaenas’ without specifying the exact species. However, the striped hyaena definitely returned sometime around 2004-2005, living in the Edge of Africa and rotating through the space with the last of the spotted hyaenas. In 2007, this pair reproduced but the single offspring did not survive. This species left the zoo in 2011 in preparation for the arrival of the new pair of spotted hyaenas.

Present holdings:

Tiger, Panthera tigris

The first tigers at Colchester Zoo arrived three years after opening in 1966 - two female tigers named Ranee and Ranjit. The Story of Colchester Zoo describes them as Bengal tigers, which could be an accurate subspecies identification. The following year, three tiger cubs arrived at the zoo. The 1972 map shows the tigers living roughly where the chimpanzees now live. By 1989, the tigers moved to Tiger Valley, now the Lost Madagascar lemur walkthrough. Tigers have remained at Colchester ever since their arrival, so now the focus is on major additions or changes. In 1998 a pair of white tigers arrived from ZooParc de Beauval. The male, named Sasha, became a minor celebrity when he killed his mate in 1999. He remained at the zoo until his death in 2010. Meanwhile, Siberian tigers arrived in 2003, moving into the Tiger Taiga enclosure that they still inhabit to this day. The Amur tigers bred in 2019, the first time Colchester Zoo had ever bred the species.

Lion, Panthera leo

One of the animals present at the opening of the zoo in 1963 was a male Asiatic lion by the name of Rajah. Lions have been at Colchester ever since, with one particularly famous individual being Simba, the largest lion ever recorded, who arrived in 1970 from Sandown Zoo with Nick Nyoka. The lions at first lived roughly where the chimpanzees now live, and also lived in an enclosure next to Stanway Hall in the 1970s. In 1992 the lions moved into the Serengeti Plains exhibit, where the mangabeys now live. They remained there until the opening of Lion Rock in 2004. Today, there is a single older male African lion named Bailey at the zoo – presumably, the plans for a new enclosure for the lions in Edge of Africa will involve the arrival of new individuals.

Leopard, Panthera pardus

A wild-born male Indian leopard, with the name Chief Horrible Noise or Chiefy for short, was present at Colchester Zoo at its 1963 opening. Leopards have been around at Colchester for a long period of time – The Story of Colchester Zoo records the arrival of a breeding trio of black leopards sometime between 1966 and 1968. In the 1972 map and guidebook there are enclosures for both Indian and black leopards, while the IZN issue for 1986 records the birth of two black leopard cubs sometime in the May to August of that year. There were leopards present until sometime between 1994 and 1998, living in an enclosure roughly where the pileated gibbons now live. Leopards remained absent from Colchester Zoo until the arrival of Amur leopards in 2005. This subspecies has remained at Colchester to the present-day, with a single successful breeding in 2019.

Cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus

Cheetahs have been part of Colchester Zoo’s collection since its 1963 opening, with tame female Kinna resident at the time. By 1965, there was a male and two female cheetahs at the zoo but, despite the best efforts at Colchester at the time, they did not manage to become the first British zoo to breed cheetahs. The 1972 zoo map shows that the cheetahs at that time lived in an enclosure on the site of the entrance building. By the publication of the 1984 to 1985 map, they had moved to the site of Cheetah Country, an enclosure that included the land currently home to the wreathed hornbills and red pandas – later, it was expanded to also include the space now home to binturongs and small-clawed otters. By 2002, the cheetahs had moved to Edge of Africa, where they remain to this day. Several litters have been successfully born in this enclosure. In 2023, a secondary enclosure for cheetahs was opened, in the former African painted dog enclosure. There are possibly plans for the cheetahs to get the current warthog enclosure, so that the breeding pair can be on-display simultaneously.

Binturong, Arctictis binturong

The Story of Colchester Zoo reports the arrival of the zoo’s first pair of binturongs in 1965. They are included in the 1972 guidebook, and the map from that year lists them as being part of the zoo’s Nocturnal House, roughly where Worlds Apart now stands. The IZN issue for 1986 records the arrival of a pair of binturongs sometime between September and December of that year. The species was present in at least 2003 in the Small Mammal House, on the site of the former Nocturnal House. By around 2007, the species moved into an enclosure that had previously housed the langurs, roughly where the current gibbon enclosure now stands. They remained here until around 2011-2012, when the species moved into its current enclosure near the lemur island.

Slender-tailed meerkat, Suricata suricatta

The earliest record I can find of meerkats at Colchester Zoo is from the 1984 or 1985 map, where they are shown living in the former Small Mammal House on the site of the Worlds Apart walkthrough. The IZN report from 1986 records the arrival of a pair of meerkats between May and August of that year. The next confirmation of meerkats is from 2003, again showing them in the Small Mammal House – however, several maps list the house without mentioning the animals within it, so it is fairly likely they were there throughout this time. Soon after this time, a secondary group of meerkats moved into an all-indoor enclosure in Kingdom of the Wild. The meerkats left the Small Mammal House for their custom new Suricata Sands enclosure in 2009 to 2010 Suricata Sands. By 2013, the meerkats had left the Kingdom of the Wild enclosure and now only live in a single enclosure in the zoo.

Spotted hyaena, Crocuta crocuta

Zootierliste records this species first being held at Colchester Zoo in 1988. The first map to show them is from 1991, when they lived in their former enclosure in the Serengeti Plains complex (the enclosure is now a picnic site, between the mangabeys and Barbary macaques) – they remained in this enclosure until 1998. The 1999-2000 map shows the spotted hyenas moving to their current enclosure in Kingdom of the Wild. One of these original animals, a male named Mbembe, lived at the zoo until 2010, sharing the enclosure on rotation with the striped hyaenas. In 2011, a new pair returned to Colchester Zoo and bred successfully on multiple occasions, with the male and two of his descendants at the zoo currently.

View attachment 685748
Colchester Zoo once had one of the most extensive collections of small cats in the country, but following the departure of the last Geoffroy’s cat, there are now only four species of large cat remaining.
I have a copy of the 1967/68 guidebook with lists of species held,under predators there are
African Lion
Tigers
Caracal Lynx
Cheetahs
Black Panthers
Pumas
Leopards
Small Predators
White Tailed Mongoose
Indian Mongoose
Red Fox ...European
Kinkajous
Genets
Russian Pine Marten
Coati mandi
Binturong
Indian Otters
Skunks
Palm Civets
Grisons
Civet Cats
Raccoons
I hope that this is of interest, if it is I can same for other groups. Really interesting thread
 
I have a copy of the 1967/68 guidebook with lists of species held,under predators there are
African Lion
Tigers
Caracal Lynx
Cheetahs
Black Panthers
Pumas
Leopards
Small Predators
White Tailed Mongoose
Indian Mongoose
Red Fox ...European
Kinkajous
Genets
Russian Pine Marten
Coati mandi
Binturong
Indian Otters
Skunks
Palm Civets
Grisons
Civet Cats
Raccoons
I hope that this is of interest, if it is I can same for other groups. Really interesting thread

Thank you for including this information - finding out more about the collection from this time would be very interesting, so I (and I imagine others) would definitely appreciate any further information you have.

Some surprising new species on that list - the white-tailed mongoose especially, and the genet is also an animal new to me. I'm very interested in the so-called Russian pine marten - I'm wondering if it was an actual pine marten or a sable, which is by far the more common species in Russia. Does the guidebook include a picture of the animal that could help identify it?
 
Thank you for including this information - finding out more about the collection from this time would be very interesting, so I (and I imagine others) would definitely appreciate any further information you have.

Some surprising new species on that list - the white-tailed mongoose especially, and the genet is also an animal new to me. I'm very interested in the so-called Russian pine marten - I'm wondering if it was an actual pine marten or a sable, which is by far the more common species in Russia. Does the guidebook include a picture of the animal that could help identify it?
Unfortunately no photo regarding so called Russian pine marten,I also had similar thought about it being a Sable.I will do other groups when i can find time .Do you think that there will any similar threads in the future?
 
Unfortunately no photo regarding so called Russian pine marten,I also had similar thought about it being a Sable.I will do other groups when i can find time .Do you think that there will any similar threads in the future?
I agree with your earlier comments about guidebooks,I have often thought that they sometimes create more questions than answers
 
FELIFORMS

Comprising cats, viverrids, mongooses, Malagasy carnivores and hyaenas, this is by far the more prominent of the two carnivoran groups kept during Colchester Zoo’s history. The griup has seen a steady decline in numbers – for example, there were no fewer than fifteen species of these mammals kept in the mid-1990s, compared to just seven today. However, generally speaking the enclosures have improved for those species that do remain. Throughout their history, at least thirty-six species of feliform have been kept. The zoo’s recent masterplan mentions just two species, both already present at the zoo – the Amur tigers in their current enclosure and the African lions in a new enclosure.

Past holdings:

Snow leopard, Panthera uncia

The International Zoo News issue for 1986 mentions the construction of the snow leopard enclosure, while the official 60th anniversary book released by the zoo says this is also the year the animals themselves arrived. They remained in the same enclosure, a fairly small space on the hilltop now occupied by the sun bear enclosure, before they departed in 2005.

Jaguar, Panthera onca

The first record I can find of this species at Colchester Zoo is from 1991. The zoo had a pair, with the male dying early in 2000 and the female, named Handaya, leaving for Edinburgh Zoo in 2005. Their enclosure was taken over by the Amur leopards, with the male leopard arriving on the same day as the departure of the last jaguar.

Caracal, Caracal caracal

I have found records of the caracal in the 1972 guidebook, with the included map showing they lived roughly where the Worlds Apart walkthrough now stands. The caracal appears on the maps for 1984 to 1985 and for 1991 – on both maps they live on the site of the current spider monkey enclosure. The IZN issue for 1986 records two unsuccessful litters born in that year. In 1991, a male caracal arrived from London Zoo to join a pair of females already at Colchester. However, Zootierliste notes that by 1992 this male was the only caracal left at Colchester. I am not certain exactly when this species stopped being kept.

Serval, Leptailurus serval

A 1976 issue of IZN recorded that the zoo was looking to source a female serval. However, it is not known if servals were ever kept at Colchester Zoo prior to the arrival of a young female in 2017 that was planned for inclusion in the animal display. When the display was ended in 2019, this serval was moved to the Wild Zoological Park in Staffordshire.

Cougar, Puma concolor

These American cats have had a rather long history at Colchester Zoo. The Story of Colchester Zoo records a cougar cub by the name of Mogi being hand-reared inside Stanway Hall in 1968, plus the later birth of three cubs in 1970. The 1972 guidebook includes them, with the map placing them roughly where the Worlds Apart walkthrough now stands. In 1987, a cougar had to be killed, after it escaped its enclosure when the great storm of that year crushed its enclosure with a fallen tree. They are shown on the 1991 map, living in one of the Hornbill Hill cages that is now part of the sun bear enclosure. This species finally left the collection in 1992, according to Zootierliste.

Eurasian lynx, Lynx lynx

This species was definitely present in the mid-1980s, although I am not certain exactly when they arrived at or left the zoo. The 1984 to 1985 map includes a lynx enclosure, while the 1986 IZN issue mentions the construction of the enclosure that was specifically for European lynx.

Fishing cat, Prionailurus viverrinus

The first record of the fishing cat that I can find is from the 1991 zoo map. They seem to have remained to the zoo until around 2004, with a photograph from that year on Flickr. Throughout their time at the zoo, they lived in an enclosure attached to the Rivers Edge building, roughly beneath the current footprint of the gibbon enclosure.

Leopard cat, Prionailurus bengalensis

This species was definitely kept from at least 1972, as it is mentioned in the guidebook and shown on the map living where the Worlds Apart walkthrough is now located – the guidebook refers to it as the Indian leopard cat. The 1986 IZN report records the unsuccessful breeding of the leopard cat in that year. Non-subspecies leopard cats are recorded on Zootierliste, with a pair present in 1992. The guidebook and map from 1998 and the map from 1999 to 2000 all show Amur leopard cats as being present in the lowest enclosure on Hornbill Hill, now part of the sun bear enclosure. It is not certain when the species finally left the collection.

Rusty-spotted cat, Prionailurus rubiginosus

Zootierliste records this species living at Colchester Zoo between 1990 and 1998. The only map showing these tiny cats is from 1994, which shows them living in the small cat enclosure tucked down the side of Stanway Hall that was used for Geoffroy’s cats for many years and has now been demolished for part of the sun bear house.

Pallas’s cat, Otocolobus manul

Zootierliste records this species arriving at Colchester Zoo in 2005, with animals arriving from Moscow Zoo. The last references I can find are photographs from around 2009 to 2010. In April 2007 these cats successfully bred, producing five kittens. They lived in the former fishing cat enclosure, now part of the gibbon enclosure.

Ocelot, Leopardus pardalis

According to The Story of Colchester Zoo, multiple ocelots were present at the zoo’s opening in 1963. An ocelot also arrived at the zoo in 1970 as part of the collection of Nick Nyoka. The 1986 issue of IZN reports the arrival of a male ocelot sometime between January and April, with a successful breeding following sometime between September and December. From at least 1991, ocelots lived in a narrow enclosure on the hill, now part of the Amur leopard enclosure. They remained until around 1999 or 2000.

Margay, Leopardus wiedii

The Story of Colchester Zoo records a margay as one of the animals that arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1970 with Nick Nyoka. Later, Zootierliste records that, in 1986, Colchester had a single male margay in its collection. Sometime later, they made a return, with the species moving into the former ocelot enclosure in 2000, where they remained until 2009, when their enclosure was demolished as part of the Amur leopard extension.

Geoffroy’s cat, Leopardus geoffroyi

This species probably arrived in 1998, as this is the first zoo map that includes the species – it moved into the former rusty-spotted cat enclosure tucked down the side of Stanway Hall. The species remained on-display in one of the old bear dens until around 2014, but the last female stayed off-show at the zoo until at least 2018.

Jungle cat, Felis chaus

The zoo map from 1984 to 1985 shows an enclosure for jungle cats at the bottom of Hornbill Hill, now part of the sun bear enclosure. The maps from 1991 and 1994 also show the jungle cat being kept in the same location. I am not certain when this species left the collection.

Sand cat, Felis margarita

This species of cat first arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1996 and first bred in 1997. They lived in the Desert Life building in the Beginning Zone for the entire duration of their time at the zoo, and left the collection when the exhibit was shut in 2008.

Black-footed cat, Felis nigripes

This small cat was kept at Colchester Zoo at least from 1991, with a pair recorded in 1992 and a second female in 1993. The species was no longer kept by late 1993 or 1994. The only map record is from 1991, which shows them living in the small indoor space that would later become Snakes and Lizards, the now-closed indoor annex between what is now the mangabeys and the former hyaena enclosure.

Afro-Asian wildcat, Felis libyca

While it is not known exactly when they arrived or departed from the zoo, a copy of International Zoo News from 1986 shows that between September and December of that year an enclosure was constructed for Indian desert cats.

European wildcat, Felis silvestris

The Scottish wildcat was kept at Colchester Zoo. The 1986 IZN copy shows that a new enclosure for these cats was constructed sometime between January and April, with a successful breeding taking place sometime during May to August of the same year. Sometime in the early to mid-1990s, a pair of Scottish wildcats were stolen from the zoo and later released by the Animal Liberation Front. It is not clear if these were the only individuals at the zoo at the time, or whether the wildcat persisted at Colchester after that time.

African civet, Civettictis civetta

The 1984 to 1985 map shows a general mark for ‘civets’ without specifying what species. The first confirmed record of this species I can find is from the 1986 IZN issue, which mentions the arrival of a pair of African civets between May and August of that year. There is a photograph of this species taken at Colchester in 1990, while the 1994 map also mentions it. While the 1980s map shows the civet in the former Small Mammal House, these later records show the civet in an awkward enclosure where the squirrel monkeys currently live – apparently, they were only visible through the mesh back of another enclosure. I am not certain of the exact year in which this species left the collection.

Large-spotted civet, Viverra megaspila

Other than an information-free listing on Zootierliste, no further details exist about this species’ history at Colchester including its years of arrival and departure from the zoo.

Common palm civet, Paradoxurus hermaphroditus

While it is not known if the species was kept previously, a single palm civet arrived at the zoo in early 2017 to be in the animal display. It left in around 2019, when the shows were ended.

Banded mongoose, Mungos mungo

It is difficult determining exactly when this, and indeed most of the other mongoose species, actually arrived at Colchester Zoo – the first evidence I can find is from the 1998 zoo map, which puts them in the Patas Plains area where the squirrel monkeys currently live. They moved around a bit – around 1999 to 2000, they moved into a custom-made enclosure called Mongoose Mound in the children’s zoo until at least 2008, they briefly were mixed with the mangabeys and by around 2009 were living in the Small Mammal House. It seems they left the zoo at around this time.

Common dwarf mongoose, Helogale parvula

This species is first mentioned, as far as I can tell, from the 1999-2000 map, although the Small Mammal House that they always lived in has existed and been labelled since at least 1991, so they may well have been around much longer. They are definitely shown on the 2003 map and maybe also the 2007 map, but probably left soon after.

Yellow mongoose, Cynictis penicillata

On the 1999-2000 map, yellow mongooses have replaced the banded mongooses in Patas Plains. By 2003, they had moved to the Mongoose Canyon exhibit by the gelada baboons. They were probably still present around 2007, but left the zoo in around 2008 to 2009.

Marsh mongoose, Atilax paludinosus

The earliest reference I can find to the marsh mongoose is from the 1994 zoo map, where they lived in part of a network of enclosures that is now part of the Heart of the Amazon housing. There are also shown on the 1998 and 1999 to 2000 maps, now shown living in an enclosure right at the zoo’s northeastern boundary. The species was no longer present in the collection by 2003. Part of their enclosure can still just about be seen – to the left of the entrance to the Playa Patagonia sea lion tunnel, a rock-lined depression can be seen in the planted border, which was once the marsh mongoose’s pond.

Indian mongoose, Herpestes sp.

According to The Story of Colchester Zoo an unidentified species of Indian mongoose, predictably named Rikkitikkitavi, arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1964. It is not known how long it lived at the zoo for, nor where it was kept within the zoo.

Fossa, Cryptoprocta ferox

The first fossa arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1994. They bred once in 1999, and the species remained at Colchester Zoo until 2009. Their enclosure, called Foret de Madagascar, was the former home of the snow leopards that is now part of the sun bear enclosure.

Fanaloka, Fossa fossana

Zootierliste mentions this species under former holdings for Colchester Zoo. There is no information on when they arrived at or left the collection, with the only additional note being that this species did not breed while at the zoo.

Striped hyaena, Hyaena hyaena

The striped hyaena was one of the species present when Colchester Zoo first opened in 1963. The 1972 map and guidebook both mention the species, living roughly where the zoo entrance building now stands. The zoo maps from 1985 through to 1987 all list ‘hyaenas’ without specifying the exact species. However, the striped hyaena definitely returned sometime around 2004-2005, living in the Edge of Africa and rotating through the space with the last of the spotted hyaenas. In 2007, this pair reproduced but the single offspring did not survive. This species left the zoo in 2011 in preparation for the arrival of the new pair of spotted hyaenas.

Present holdings:

Tiger, Panthera tigris

The first tigers at Colchester Zoo arrived three years after opening in 1966 - two female tigers named Ranee and Ranjit. The Story of Colchester Zoo describes them as Bengal tigers, which could be an accurate subspecies identification. The following year, three tiger cubs arrived at the zoo. The 1972 map shows the tigers living roughly where the chimpanzees now live. By 1989, the tigers moved to Tiger Valley, now the Lost Madagascar lemur walkthrough. Tigers have remained at Colchester ever since their arrival, so now the focus is on major additions or changes. In 1998 a pair of white tigers arrived from ZooParc de Beauval. The male, named Sasha, became a minor celebrity when he killed his mate in 1999. He remained at the zoo until his death in 2010. Meanwhile, Siberian tigers arrived in 2003, moving into the Tiger Taiga enclosure that they still inhabit to this day. The Amur tigers bred in 2019, the first time Colchester Zoo had ever bred the species.

Lion, Panthera leo

One of the animals present at the opening of the zoo in 1963 was a male Asiatic lion by the name of Rajah. Lions have been at Colchester ever since, with one particularly famous individual being Simba, the largest lion ever recorded, who arrived in 1970 from Sandown Zoo with Nick Nyoka. The lions at first lived roughly where the chimpanzees now live, and also lived in an enclosure next to Stanway Hall in the 1970s. In 1992 the lions moved into the Serengeti Plains exhibit, where the mangabeys now live. They remained there until the opening of Lion Rock in 2004. Today, there is a single older male African lion named Bailey at the zoo – presumably, the plans for a new enclosure for the lions in Edge of Africa will involve the arrival of new individuals.

Leopard, Panthera pardus

A wild-born male Indian leopard, with the name Chief Horrible Noise or Chiefy for short, was present at Colchester Zoo at its 1963 opening. Leopards have been around at Colchester for a long period of time – The Story of Colchester Zoo records the arrival of a breeding trio of black leopards sometime between 1966 and 1968. In the 1972 map and guidebook there are enclosures for both Indian and black leopards, while the IZN issue for 1986 records the birth of two black leopard cubs sometime in the May to August of that year. There were leopards present until sometime between 1994 and 1998, living in an enclosure roughly where the pileated gibbons now live. Leopards remained absent from Colchester Zoo until the arrival of Amur leopards in 2005. This subspecies has remained at Colchester to the present-day, with a single successful breeding in 2019.

Cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus

Cheetahs have been part of Colchester Zoo’s collection since its 1963 opening, with tame female Kinna resident at the time. By 1965, there was a male and two female cheetahs at the zoo but, despite the best efforts at Colchester at the time, they did not manage to become the first British zoo to breed cheetahs. The 1972 zoo map shows that the cheetahs at that time lived in an enclosure on the site of the entrance building. By the publication of the 1984 to 1985 map, they had moved to the site of Cheetah Country, an enclosure that included the land currently home to the wreathed hornbills and red pandas – later, it was expanded to also include the space now home to binturongs and small-clawed otters. By 2002, the cheetahs had moved to Edge of Africa, where they remain to this day. Several litters have been successfully born in this enclosure. In 2023, a secondary enclosure for cheetahs was opened, in the former African painted dog enclosure. There are possibly plans for the cheetahs to get the current warthog enclosure, so that the breeding pair can be on-display simultaneously.

Binturong, Arctictis binturong

The Story of Colchester Zoo reports the arrival of the zoo’s first pair of binturongs in 1965. They are included in the 1972 guidebook, and the map from that year lists them as being part of the zoo’s Nocturnal House, roughly where Worlds Apart now stands. The IZN issue for 1986 records the arrival of a pair of binturongs sometime between September and December of that year. The species was present in at least 2003 in the Small Mammal House, on the site of the former Nocturnal House. By around 2007, the species moved into an enclosure that had previously housed the langurs, roughly where the current gibbon enclosure now stands. They remained here until around 2011-2012, when the species moved into its current enclosure near the lemur island.

Slender-tailed meerkat, Suricata suricatta

The earliest record I can find of meerkats at Colchester Zoo is from the 1984 or 1985 map, where they are shown living in the former Small Mammal House on the site of the Worlds Apart walkthrough. The IZN report from 1986 records the arrival of a pair of meerkats between May and August of that year. The next confirmation of meerkats is from 2003, again showing them in the Small Mammal House – however, several maps list the house without mentioning the animals within it, so it is fairly likely they were there throughout this time. Soon after this time, a secondary group of meerkats moved into an all-indoor enclosure in Kingdom of the Wild. The meerkats left the Small Mammal House for their custom new Suricata Sands enclosure in 2009 to 2010 Suricata Sands. By 2013, the meerkats had left the Kingdom of the Wild enclosure and now only live in a single enclosure in the zoo.

Spotted hyaena, Crocuta crocuta

Zootierliste records this species first being held at Colchester Zoo in 1988. The first map to show them is from 1991, when they lived in their former enclosure in the Serengeti Plains complex (the enclosure is now a picnic site, between the mangabeys and Barbary macaques) – they remained in this enclosure until 1998. The 1999-2000 map shows the spotted hyenas moving to their current enclosure in Kingdom of the Wild. One of these original animals, a male named Mbembe, lived at the zoo until 2010, sharing the enclosure on rotation with the striped hyaenas. In 2011, a new pair returned to Colchester Zoo and bred successfully on multiple occasions, with the male and two of his descendants at the zoo currently.

View attachment 685748
Colchester Zoo once had one of the most extensive collections of small cats in the country, but following the departure of the last Geoffroy’s cat, there are now only four species of large cat remaining.
Thanks again for this amazing thread that is only just getting started! Quick question, where abouts was the Kingdom of The Wild Meerkat enclosure?
I still remember the Geoffrey's cats in the bear dens fairly well, a lot better than I do with many things that have become part of the zoo's history more recently, it would be nice to see the arrival of some small cats to build up a nice collection of felines again with this thread a reminder of what it once was. Maybe there may be some space available even just in the bear dens once again soon?
 
Thanks again for this amazing thread that is only just getting started! Quick question, where abouts was the Kingdom of The Wild Meerkat enclosure?
I still remember the Geoffrey's cats in the bear dens fairly well, a lot better than I do with many things that have become part of the zoo's history more recently, it would be nice to see the arrival of some small cats to build up a nice collection of felines again with this thread a reminder of what it once was. Maybe there may be some space available even just in the bear dens once again soon?

The Kingdom of the Wild meerkats lived in the enclosure that the African rock python now lives in. I don't think they ever had that many in there - maybe three or four at most - which is probably a good thing, considering its small size.

As for new small cats, I definitely think at least a couple of species could be kept - before the hyraxes moved into it, I thought that the old scarlet ibis aviary (along with the indoor tamarin enclosure by Penguin Shores) would have been great for something like margay. The enclosure would certainly allow them to get up high off the ground, which would be excellent for an arboreal species.
 
An undated postcard from Colchester Zoo shows an adult and a baby of a porcupine said to be native to India......either of the Indian porcupines would be a newly-recorded species for Colchester’s list.
I've an early 1960s booklet from Colchester Zoo that is comprised of reprints of articles about the zoo from the Colchester Express.

An article dated 13th June 1963, states the zoo has five porcupines, all of them from India.

The paca is mentioned as one of the species present at Colchester Zoo when it opened in 1963. It is not known how long they lived at the zoo, or where they were kept.
The booklet mentioned above also features an article dated 16th January 1964 that states, the zoo has a pair of paca that "have been with us for about three years".
 
The Kingdom of the Wild meerkats lived in the enclosure that the African rock python now lives in. I don't think they ever had that many in there - maybe three or four at most - which is probably a good thing, considering its small size.

As for new small cats, I definitely think at least a couple of species could be kept - before the hyraxes moved into it, I thought that the old scarlet ibis aviary (along with the indoor tamarin enclosure by Penguin Shores) would have been great for something like margay. The enclosure would certainly allow them to get up high off the ground, which would be excellent for an arboreal species.
The rock python enclosure was what I have always thought could have been the one to hold meerkats previously, though I agree it was probably for the best if small numbers were only ever kept in there.
I'm not sure what the indoor tamarin enclosure by Penguin Shores is, but I agree the old scarlet ibis aviary would have been as equally suited to Margay as it is to Rock Hyrax as a nice little space, still not entirely sure why the hyrax were moved out of Aardvark Burrow in the first place though, but I do like their new enclosure.
 
Tiger, Panthera tigris

The first tigers at Colchester Zoo arrived three years after opening in 1966 - two female tigers named Ranee and Ranjit. The Story of Colchester Zoo describes them as Bengal tigers, which could be an accurate subspecies identification. The following year, three tiger cubs arrived at the zoo. The 1972 map shows the tigers living roughly where the chimpanzees now live. By 1989, the tigers moved to Tiger Valley, now the Lost Madagascar lemur walkthrough. Tigers have remained at Colchester ever since their arrival, so now the focus is on major additions or changes. In 1998 a pair of white tigers arrived from ZooParc de Beauval. The male, named Sasha, became a minor celebrity when he killed his mate in 1999. He remained at the zoo until his death in 2010. Meanwhile, Siberian tigers arrived in 2003, moving into the Tiger Taiga enclosure that they still inhabit to this day. The Amur tigers bred in 2019, the first time Colchester Zoo had ever bred the species.
I'm not sure if the above was intended to read as if Siberian Tigers first arrived in 2003 ("Meanwhile, Siberian tigers arrived in 2003, moving into the Tiger Taiga enclosure that they still inhabit to this day"), but they are specifically mentioned in Anthony Smith's Animals On View which was a guide to British zoos published in 1977. It lists them amongst the Big Cats at the zoo ("Siberian and Bengal Tigers, Cheetahs, Pumas, Panthers") and then again when it says "in the last five years various new houses have been built, such as ... the Siberian Tiger enclosure ..."

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.
Woolly Monkeys are also mentioned in Animals on View from 1977.
 
I'm not sure if the above was intended to read as if Siberian Tigers first arrived in 2003 ("Meanwhile, Siberian tigers arrived in 2003, moving into the Tiger Taiga enclosure that they still inhabit to this day"), but they are specifically mentioned in Anthony Smith's Animals On View which was a guide to British zoos published in 1977. It lists them amongst the Big Cats at the zoo ("Siberian and Bengal Tigers, Cheetahs, Pumas, Panthers") and then again when it says "in the last five years various new houses have been built, such as ... the Siberian Tiger enclosure ..."
Perhaps it is referring to how they arrived to move into Tiger Taiga but weren't at the zoo prior to the new enclosure, instead the only tiger/tigers was Sasha in White Tiger Valley before the construction?
 
I'm not sure if the above was intended to read as if Siberian Tigers first arrived in 2003 ("Meanwhile, Siberian tigers arrived in 2003, moving into the Tiger Taiga enclosure that they still inhabit to this day"), but they are specifically mentioned in Anthony Smith's Animals On View which was a guide to British zoos published in 1977. It lists them amongst the Big Cats at the zoo ("Siberian and Bengal Tigers, Cheetahs, Pumas, Panthers") and then again when it says "in the last five years various new houses have been built, such as ... the Siberian Tiger enclosure ..."

I certainly had never heard of Siberian tigers prior to 2003, but it would also make sense if they were kept - the 1972 map does show that there were two tiger enclosures right next to each other, so there could have been space for both Siberians and Bengals.
 
Canadian Lynx is probably an addition to the list of cats. My guidebooks from 1980 +/- 3 years (I wish they'd put dates on them!) show "N American Lynx" next to the lions on the map. And the guides have an entry headed "Northern Lynx", which starts with the words "The Canadian Lynx is a powerful animal". (The scientific name given, Felis rufus, is perhaps best ignored as a likely mistake!)

It's dangerous to include animals based on their inclusion in the text of these guidebook editions, as they include Gorilla which never made it to the collection as far as I know. But I'm assuming the maps are more reliable as to what was actually there on the ground.

Siberian Tiger and Serval were also definitely around then according to the map.

My list of cats seen personally on 7th May 1983, as written at the time: puma, northern lynx, caracal, leopard, black panther, jaguar, African lion, Royal Bengal tiger [which we'd now know as hybrid], Siberian tiger, cheetah. The other carnivorans I listed that day were: red fox cubs, coatimundi, Asiatic black bear, brown bear, skunk.
 
CANIFORMS

Comprising the dogs, bears, pinnipeds, procyonids, red pandas, skunks and mustelids, this diverse group of carnivores also has a fairly rich history at Colchester Zoo. Altogether, no fewer than twenty-eight species have been kept throughout the zoo’s history, with ten present in the modern day. This includes some animals that cannot be identified to species level, such as the ‘Russian pine marten’ kept in the late 1960s. The smaller size of several of these species has meant that this group has weathered slightly better than the feliforms – while never kept in such great numbers, they are now the main carnivore group at the zoo. Whether this will last depends on how the masterplan proceeds, with the enclosure for one of these animals (the grey wolves) located roughly where the new orangutan enclosure is planned to be. The zoo’s former owner did attempt to procure giant pandas in the early 1970s, but, perhaps fortunately, these attempts did not go anywhere.

Past holdings:

Black-backed jackal, Lupulella mesomelas

The earliest records I can find of the black-backed jackal are photographs from 2005. For many years this group of jackals were only visible from the road train. The last individual from this group died in 2018. Back when they arrived, this species may have been much easier to see – photographs on Flickr seem to show these animals were living in what was possibly the current giant anteater enclosure.

African painted dog, Lycaon pictus

It is not certain when the species first arrived at the zoo, but an enclosure for them is labelled on a 1984-85 map and the IZN reported that a pair arrived at the zoo in the period of May to August 1986. The dogs were labelled on every map since, until they left in around 1994. The species returned in 2005, remaining in an enclosure opposite the Dragons of Komodo house until the last animals left in 2021.

Dhole, Cuon alpinus

A small group of these colourful and endangered wild dogs were kept at Colchester from around 1999-2000, where they are mentioned on a zoo map for the first time. The last record I can confirm is from a 2003 zoo map, although they may have been present for a couple of years after that – the next map I have found, from 2007, makes no reference to the dholes so they were absent by this time.

Maned wolf, Chrysocyon brachyurus

It is not certain when this species arrived at the zoo, but a map from 1991 shows they were definitely present from at least that time. The last maned wolf left the collection sometime between 1999 and 2000. Throughout this period, they lived in the area now used for the giant anteater’s enclosure.

Red fox, Vulpes vulpes

The European red fox is listed as being a species present at Colchester Zoo in the 1967 to 1968 guidebook and were also present later on during the 1980s. I do not know exactly when this species arrived at or left the collection, or where it was held.

Brown bear, Ursus arctos

The first confirmed reference I can find to brown bears at Colchester is from 1983, but the two Syrian brown bears were already present at the zoo at the time. There are many references in The Story of Colchester Zoo to generic ‘bear cubs’ arriving as far back as 1965, with brown bears certainly among that number. Zootierliste reports that, as well as Syrian, there were also Eurasian brown bears at Colchester at sometime in their history. The last brown bear, female Syrian ‘Susie’ died in October 1998. The old brown bear den is now blocked up, but is next to the squirrel monkey enclosure.

Asiatic black bear, Ursus thibetanus

Asiatic black bears were present at Colchester Zoo at the opening in 1963, with two cubs that had originated from Whipsnade. In the next few years, more sets of black bear cubs arrived, with a trio arriving in 1965 and another pair sometime between 1966 and 1968. The last Asiatic black bear at Colchester, a female named ‘Mandy’, died in April 2002. As with the brown bears, the last Asiatic black bears lived in the old bear dens, with the black bear enclosure now a temporary enclosure for a small group of capuchin monkeys. The zoo map from the 1972 guidebook, which also includes the Asiatic black bear, shows that bears lived in that location since at least that year.

California sea lion, Zalophus californianus

California sea lions arrived at the zoo not long after it opened, around the end of June 1963. The species was still present in the 1970s, but had left the collection prior to 1986. The 1972 guidebook shows that these animals lived in the enclosure that is now home to the smooth-coated otters.

Grey seal, Halichoerus grypus

Zootierliste mentions the grey seal as a species formerly held by Colchester Zoo, but gives no further details about when they arrived at or left the zoo.

Harbour seal, Phoca vitulina

It is not known exactly when this species arrived at Colchester Zoo, but the earliest reference to seals on a park map comes from 1984. One seal that arrived that year, a male named Babyface, remained at the zoo until his departure for the Cornish Seal Sanctuary in Gweek in 2010, which also marked the end of the true seals at Colchester. Babyface survived at the sanctuary until 2022. The species bred several times, and from their arrival seem to have been kept in an enclosure alongside the lake that is now home to the smooth-coated otters.

Northern raccoon, Procyon lotor

There were raccoons present at Colchester Zoo when it opened in 1963 – at the time they lived in an enclosure outside the Mammal House, roughly where the Worlds Apart walkthrough now stands. The Mammals of Essex, published in 2014, records a raccoon arriving at Colchester Zoo in November 1969, having been caught in a snare on an estate in Ingatestone. The maps from 1984 to 1985 map and also 1991 show that raccoons were kept roughly where the food outlet next to the tiger enclosure now stands. The species had left the zoo by 1994.

White-nosed coati, Nasua narica

Coatis have been kept at Colchester Zoo since the very beginning of the park, but the first record I can find that specifically mentions this species is from 2003. The last individual, a male, left in 2012 for Paignton Zoo.

Ring-tailed coati, Nasua nasua

Looking more broadly at the history of coatis at Colchester Zoo, they were present from when the zoo opened in 1963. A photograph from the 1960s showing zoo co-founder Helena Farrar with a coati seems to show this species. The 1972 guidebook also says that the animals at that time were of the ring-tailed species. Other zoo maps from 1986, 1991 and 1994 mention coatis, without referencing the exact species. A pair of female ring-tailed coatis came to the zoo in 2011 to be part of the animal display. In 2019, when the shows ended, the species was briefly signed as being an encounter animal in the Sensation Station but is now no longer present.

Kinkajou, Potos flavus

According to The Story of Colchester Zoo, a single kinkajou arrived at Colchester Zoo sometime between 1966 and 1968. In the 1972 guidebook the species is mentioned again. It is not certain how long kinkajous remained at the zoo for, or where they were kept although they may have lived in the zoo’s Nocturnal House in the early 1970s.

Tayra, Eira barbara

A pair of tayra arrived at Colchester Zoo in 1964, according to The Story of Colchester Zoo. It is not certain where in the zoo they lived, or when they left the collection, but Zootierliste notes that the species did not breed while they were there.

Greater grison, Galictis vittata

A male greater grison was present at Colchester Zoo when it first opened in 1963. It is not certain if any others arrived or when the species left the collection, but a grison is also mentioned in the 1972 guidebook. While the opening map makes no reference to them, it was quite possible they lived in the Mammal House, roughly where the Worlds Apart building now stands.

Zorilla, Ictonyx striatus

This species was present at Colchester Zoo in 1972, and is mentioned in the guidebook from that year. It is not known when they arrived or departed, or whereabouts in the zoo they were kept. It could be that they lived in the former Nocturnal House.

Present holdings:

Grey wolf, Canis lupus

The 1984-85 map mentions wolves, being kept in the same area where the species currently lives. From 1991 onwards, they are referred to as timber wolves and the animals do seem to have been Mackenzie Valley wolves. The last individual of this subspecies died in around 2017 to 2018. Later that year, a pure group of European grey wolves arrived and moved into the wolf enclosure. In that time, Colchester also kept Iberian wolves for a number of years – they arrived sometime around 2003, and were visible in the former bear dens. After that, they moved into an enclosure only visible from the road train (or, if you were both resourceful and male, by standing on the seat of the gent’s toilet that backed onto this enclosure) where they remained until at least 2007.

Bush dog, Speothos venaticus

The first record I can find for bush dogs at Colchester Zoo is from the 1991 map – they originally lived in the small enclosure next to Stanway Hall that was later used for rusty-spotted and Geoffroy’s cats. These dogs moved, by 1994, to a small enclosure on the slope by the lake, close to where the Komodo dragons are now housed. They remained in this enclosure until 1998. The species returned in 2017 to an enclosure at the bottom end of the zoo, viewable only from the road train queue. Since their return, they have had fifteen pups across five different litters.

Fennec fox, Vulpes zerda

I cannot find a reference to fennec foxes at Colchester Zoo prior to 1996, when the Desert Life building opened in the Beginning Zone. They lived in this small exhibit until around 2004, when they moved into an enclosure within the Lion Rock complex where they remain to this day. They have bred at least once in the newer enclosure.

Sun bear, Helarctos malayanus

This species first arrived at Colchester Zoo in 2010. The pair, a male named Jo-Jo and a female named Srey Ya, are both wild-born bears that came to the zoo from a Cambodian rescue centre via the Rare Species Conservation Centre. They lived in the current capuchin monkey enclosure before moving to the custom-built Bears of the Rising Sun exhibit in 2014. Colchester Zoo run the EAZA studbook for this species.

Patagonian sea lion, Otaria flavescens

Three of these sea lions, a male named Pat and two females named Ago and Nia, arrived at Colchester in 1986. For almost their entire time at the zoo, they lived in the Sealion Experience – their pool is now used as the Inca Trail penguin pool. They moved to their current Playa Patagonia enclosure in 2003, but this trio all died within six months of moving into their new enclosure. An all-female group of five sea lions were brought in, four of which now remain in 2024.

Himalayan red panda, Ailurus fulgens

The earliest reference I can find to red pandas being kept at Colchester Zoo is from 1994. The red pandas lived in the Wilds of Asia section, in a small enclosure at the bottom of a very steep hill. The enclosure still exists, and can be viewed from the Lemur Island bridge, but is only used as a temporary home for a variety of animals. They moved to their new home in Rivers Edge in about 2011. Throughout their time at the zoo, there have been nine red panda cubs born at Colchester Zoo.

Striped skunk, Mephitis mephitis

The Story of Colchester Zoo notes that, sometime between 1966 to 1968, four skunk kits were born at the zoo. The zoo’s 1972 guidebook mentions this species. It is not sure when these skunks left the zoo, but the species returned in 2011 to be part of the animal displays. They are one of the few animals from the displays that remained at the zoo after the displays ended in 2019. They moved off-show, but come out for encounters in the Sensation Station. In 2020, the zoo celebrated the first birthdays of three male skunks – it is likely that these were new individuals that had arrived at the zoo. Subsequent social media releases, including in late 2023, confirm the species is still at the zoo.

Domestic ferret, Mustela furo

While I cannot tell if they were ever kept earlier, the first record I have of these animals is from the 2008 map, which shows them living in the pig house. A group arrived in 2012 to live in the old Mongoose Mound in the children’s zoo area. They left later that same year, and the enclosure was turned into a garden. Another group arrived in 2022, but live off-show and only appear as encounter animals.

Asian small-clawed otter, Aonyx cinereus

A species of otter was present at the zoo’s opening in 1963, which was said to be from the Himalayas – while that is not enough to confirm the exact identity, it could have been the small-clawed otter. From at least 1984, this species inhabited a small enclosure latterly known as Otterama, which still exists as the outdoor golden lion tamarin enclosure next to the Amur leopards. Sometime between 2003 and 2007, the otters moved from this enclosure to their current home, by the bridge over Lemur Island.

Smooth-coated otter, Lutrogale perspicillata

The Himalayan otters from 1963 could equally have been this species, or possibly the Eurasian otter. The first confirmed appearance of these sociable otters from Colchester is from 2010, when a pair arrived following the first closure of the Rare Species Conservation Centre. The pair did very well and bred multiple times. For the first year they lived in one of the old bear dens, but in 2011 moved to Otter Creek, which I think is one of the finest enclosures in the zoo. The original breeding pair have now died and the zoo is home to an all-female group, but the importance of Colchester Zoo to the proliferation of this species across Europe is now clear – several European zoos started their groups with Colchester-born animals.

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Whether Colchester Zoo will continue to display the grey wolf if the masterplan goes ahead remains unconfirmed, as their home is set to become a much-needed new pad for the orangutans.
 

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Asian small-clawed otter, Aonyx cinereus

A species of otter was present at the zoo’s opening in 1963, which was said to be from the Himalayas – while that is not enough to confirm the exact identity, it could have been the small-clawed otter.
The booklet of reprints from the Colchester Express that I mentioned before, includes an article on the zoo's otters (20th February 1964) which states these otters come from S. E. Asia and have much smaller claws than British otters - so they appear to be small-clawed otters (although the article does not identify the species).
 
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