Kamo's last cheetah was euthanised yesterday at the age of 18: Log into Facebook | Facebook*Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) – Kamo (Zion); Auckland; Hamilton; Wellington; Orana
Kamo's last cheetah was euthanised yesterday at the age of 18: Log into Facebook | Facebook*Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) – Kamo (Zion); Auckland; Hamilton; Wellington; Orana
*Capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaerus) – Auckland; Brooklands; Wellington; Willowbank
Auckland Zoo no longer hold Capybara:
Following my visit to Auckland Zoo on Sunday, I can confirm Auckland Zoo no longer hold Capybara. Several deaths reduced their colony to a single female, who was subsequently transferred to Wellington Zoo.
Quite shocking. They only began breeding them just over five years ago, and had quite nice success.
The last female i'd imagine would've been one of the offspring of the original trio (1.2). Do Auckland have any plans to receive more in the future? That area may be due for redevelopment soon.
I too was shocked to hear so many had died. I see the average life expectancy is 8-10 years, so at eight years old the founder females (born April 2014) would have been up there in terms of age.
A volunteer mentioned a disease had killed some, but was a little vague on details so I can’t confirm this. She thought the surviving Capybara that was transferred to Wellington was called Maria. The zoo previously had two young females born 27/08/2018, so I suspect she was one of them.
Auckland did have quite a successful group. When I visited in 2019 they had about six or seven individuals.
Maria definitely wasn't the original two females, although she could've been the female born in 2017.
Auckland had all males in 2016; a trio (2.1) in 2017 and then a female pair in 2018. The male died a while back i'd assume, due to a halt in breeding. The first males born were sent away, and the males of the trio (born 2017) were sent away as well. This means the two original females and two of the younger females (and possibly the original male) have recently passed.
NZ zoos seem prone to viral outbreaks like this, it seems to be related to the number of pests and feral cats/possums that have access to our zoos?
Toxoplasmosis ran rife at Auckland Zoo around the late 90’s with multiple meerkats and wallabies dying from it. It was spread by cats entering their open air exhibits.
Both Auckland and Hamilton Zoo lost several otters around this time, though I don’t know if this was caused by Toxoplasmosis or something else.
Zoos like Taronga have similarly been afflicted by TB and Encephalomyocarditis, the latter of which was spread by rodents.
I know the Otorohanga kiwi house is surrounded by a predator free fence since I visited in 2022. but yeah i dont see why larger zoos wouldn't considering how helpful it would be with reducing the spread of these like EncephalomyocarditisSad but useful information, hope. The capybara didn't experience similar issues. The pest problems we seem to have are a bit inexcusable.
Given the proliferation of predator free fencing in NZ it is surprising none of our zoos have adopted it. I guess technically Hamilton is on the comanaged waiwhakareke swamp, but it needs to be extended to the main zoo.
*Ring-tailed Lemur (Lemur catta) – Auckland; Hamilton; Wellington; Orana; Willowbank
I really don't know much about the Ring-tailed Lemurs in New Zealand other than broad generalisations. Most stock seems to be derived from Australian imports and locally-bred animals. Auckland has had them since the mid-1990s, Hamilton since the late 1990s/early 2000s, Wellington since May 2021 [from Hamilton], Orana since 1993 [their original animals came from Taronga and Melbourne Zoos], and Willowbank since the mid-2000s [from Hamilton]. They have bred at all these zoos except Wellington, although not all of them have breeding groups now.
Natureland has temporarily held Orana-bred animals before export to Australia.
*Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) – Auckland; Hamilton; Wellington; Orana
*Sumatran Tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae) – Auckland; Hamilton; Wellington; Orana
All the Sumatran Tigers are part of an international/regional managed breeding programme and individuals are moved around regularly between zoos and countries. The ones kept in New Zealand in recent decades have been imported from Australia (and Israel in one case) or are local-bred. They have bred at Auckland, Hamilton and Wellington, but Orana has only ever held males.
A pair of male yaks recently arrived at Natureland Wildlife Trust: 登录 Facebook | FacebookDomestic Yak (Bos grunniens) – Orana; in some private-run zoo collections (farm parks); farmed in New Zealand in small numbers
So will no collection is NZ be holding elephants again or is there a future possibility?
New Zealand's last leopard at Kamo has died following a rapid decline in health - reported on Kamo's FB page.*Leopard (Panthera pardus) – one at Kamo (Zion)
*Serval (Leptailurus serval) – Auckland; Wellington
A pair of male yaks recently arrived at Natureland Wildlife Trust: 登录 Facebook | Facebook