I've just noticed that Zootierliste has now listed Cotswold Wildlife Park as having Southern Cassowary now, is this true?
The reference is the cassowary studbook, so one would presume it is accurate. It may be one of those "off-show new animals" which the UK zoos seem to like havingNo sign of any on my visit in mid September
Well, either way I'm surprised that they have got them on the list now. Especially since I wouldn't normally be expecting a zoo like Cotswold or anywhere to suddenly go into keeping them.The reference is the cassowary studbook, so one would presume it is accurate. It may be one of those "off-show new animals" which the UK zoos seem to like having![]()
Why is that?Well, either way I'm surprised that they have got them on the list now. Especially since I wouldn't normally be expecting a zoo like Cotswold or anywhere to suddenly go into keeping them.
Why is that?
I went there yesterday, for the first time. I didn't see any cassowary?
I went there yesterday, for the first time. I didn't see any cassowary?
There are enough reasons why animals are kept behind the scenes and any zoo will have species on site that are not visible, I would trust an official studbook in these cases.
Agreed, given Cassowary have been on the decline in the UK in recent years ( Twycross and Bristol / Wild Place have lost them, no gainers until now), this is excellent news and Cotswold is as good a place as any to be a new holder!Cotswold already has a very nice bird collection, including several rare species, why is cassowary out of the question?
~Thylo