Design a Zoo

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Well first, if you wanted to, you could add these species in with the ibises and waterfowl:
Cattle Egret (Bubulcus ibis)
Ruddy Shelduck (Tadorna ferruginea)
Marbled Teal (Marmaronetta angustirostris)
If you don't have any other plans for them you could add greater and/or lesser flamingos in there too.

Pyramid aviary:
Chukar (Alectoris chukar)
Common Quail (Coturnix coturnix)
Chestnut-bellied Sandgrouse (Pterocles exustus)
European Wood-pigeon (Columba palumbus)
Oriental Turtle-dove (Streptopelia orientalis)
Laughing Dove (Streptopelia senegalensis)
Namaqua Dove (Oena capensis)
European Roller (Coracias garrulus)
European Bee-eater (Merops apiaster)
possibly another bee-eater species
Hoopoe (Upupa epops)
Skylark (Alauda arvensis)
Garden Bulbul (Pycnonotus barbatus)
Graceful Prinia (Prinia gracilis)
Arabian Babbler (Turdoides squamiceps)
Tristram's Grackle (Onychognathus tristramii)

All or some of these could work, though I think if you added all of them it'd have to be an outdoor exhibit!
There are also many other species that could work (basically any perching bird that is common there and that isn't a crow or similar), but most of these are kept in collections already. You could also have some separate aviaries for other partridges, ravens, shrikes etc.
 
All interesting ideas. I think I would add your suggestions for the Ibis and Egyptian Waterfowl aviary except for the Flamingos (I seem to remember including greaters in the African Grassland, and I want Chilean and Caribbean elsewhere in a different biome park.
As for the Pyramid, I would go for Chestnut-bellied Sandgrouse and Hoopoe (I looked at these one but wasn't sure if they would work), Graceful Prinia, European Roller and Laughing Dove.
Hopefully will have my next part done tomorrow night :)
 
My Dream Zoo

Africa:

You come in through our hand made straw arch to come and see a wonderful Lion Fountain with antelope statues looking like running away from the lion that is roaring. As you continue down the trail, the path has large savanna grass on both sides until you see the path ends and you hear whistling to see a entrance to a large savanna avairy where Vulturine Guineafowl, African Sacred Ibis, Helmeted Guineafowl, Spotted Thick-knee, Temminck's Courser, Red-billed Buffalo-weaver, Yellow-billed Stork African Openbill, African Spoonbill, Lesser Flamingo, African Crake, African Darter, Cattle Egret, Great Bittern, Abdim's Stork, Crested Francolin, Buff-crested Bustard, in a beautiful enviroment where you are in a dry savanna at first then to a lush wetland with a 25ft water fall and greenery every where and majority of the birds live at with a river going down through the avairy while you cross over it on a bridge. When you come out the exhibit, you see a smaller avairy with a Dracaena aletriformis with a large nest home to our Milky Eagle Owl and next to it is a Verreaux's Eagle in a lush enviroment with little suprise in some of the trees.

We continue down our path out of the aviary to see the a secluded area to

Scavenger Encounter

Here you smell the odor of death all around and you see an artifical elephant skull on one side and you turn around to a window in the dry bush to see White-backed Vultures and Marubo Storks gather around a fake zebra carcass out in the open with a tree where you a pair of Lappet-Faced Vulture that already ate their fill.

Now you are back out of the open savanna to see an Kilpspringer and a Rock Hyrax on a rocky Kopje thats covers 1/4 of a acre with a mob of Meerkats cover the ground level of the exhibit always looking out for Birds of Prey.

You walk to a safari lodge with an african style resturant and a few murals of the great african wildlife to see educators with some african animal ambassors where you can learn about the species and the threats pose to it. There is a loading station to jeeps like the ones that DAK have where you get the safari of your life.......

Next is the Field Exhibit safari and trail.

Safari Trek:

Once you get on our Jeeps, you will go pass a sign saying: Welcome to Safari Trek.
You are in a densly vegated forest with Vervet monkeys, Nyala, Bongos, Sitatunga, Gerenuk, and sometime a Lesser Kudu. While driving down in the forest, you will come pass a shallow river where most visitors see the elusive Black rhino browsing on some nearby trees and bushs or wallowing in the mud, with a Saddle Bill Stork hunting some fish in the river. Following the river is the a huge lake home to our Greater Flamingos, Hippos, Great White Pelicans, African Darter, Shoebill,Goliath Heron Pair , and some Hammerkop but the river still continues to our crocodile pond basking in the sunlight. Now, finally we get out of the forest to the open savanna with trees dotting the area. You can find Warthogs, Patas Monkey, Porupines, Masai and Reticulated Giraffe Giraffes, Blue Wildebeest, Topi, Hartebeest, Soemmerring's, Thomson's, and Grant's Gazelle, Cape Buffalo, Common Eland, Ostrich, Greater Kudu, Waterbuck, Sable Antelope, Roan Antelope, Impala, East African Oryx, Grey Crowned Cranes,Grevy Zebra and Hirolas living in a seperated exhibit for breeding purpose, but people can't tell. The main field exhibit is a 80 arce savanna with a main water hole from the river that we saw before. We turn to see a huge Kopje and when lucky enough to see a Lion surveying the savanna, and down the path, you get a glimpse of the African Elephant Reserve exhibit where we are very successful in breeding elephants and we go back to the station to where they tell you can leave and go to the path to get upclose to the animals.

Once we get out of the lodge, we go down the path into the forest. Here, you get views of the forest at certain places, at a common foraging area, at the river and ponds and on the way there are some side exhibits. The first that you will encounter will be the Golden-rumped Elephant Shrew, Eastern Yellow-billed Hornbill, Angola Colobus, African Green-tinkerbird, Tree pangolin, Yellow-backed Duiker,Parrot-billed Sparrow,Green Sunbird,Grey-headed Sparrow, and some Southern Grosbeak-canary living in a tropical forest enviroment with a small pond on the lefthand side with swinging vines and hollow logs. Down the trail is the view of the Black Rhino's and up ahead to the right is a rocky outcrop for our Olive Baboon exhibit with some bushes, scrubs, and trees in the 1 acre exhibit. Now you are at the Hippo's paddock look over the exhibit and watching the birds and Hippos cooling off in the pool. There is a underwater viewing area where there is an array of fish in the water. Back on ground level, you pass the crocodiles exhibit to come to the Reptile House hidden in some scrubs and bushes. The Reptile House holds: Leopard Tortoise, Savanna Monitor, Black Mamba, Nile Monitor, Green Mamba, Rock Python, Pancake Tortiose, African Bullfrog, East African Rainbow Lizard, Striped Skink, Jackson's Chameleon. After Leaving the Reptile House, you come upon the Open Savanna, here you have 5 large views of the Savanna. Going to the 2nd viewing area is the Savanna Avairy home to:
Chestnut Sparrow, Kenya Sparrow, Brimstone Canary, Cape Canary, Cinnamon-breasted Bunting, Pin-tailed Whydah, Variable Indigobird, Grosbeak Weaver, White-browed Sparrow-weaver, Greater Blue-eared Glossy-starling, Fork-tailed Drongo, White-eyed Slaty Flycatcher, Mombasa Woodpecker, Red-billed Hornbill in a dry savanna woodland where you see many kind of savanna trees, srcubs, and bushs.
and now we continue to the 2nd viewing area of the savanna and marvel again at the diverse wildlife, after we saw all the viewing areas, we go to the Lion Kingdom, which focus on Africa's predators

Lion Kingdom:
You have now arrive to Lion Kingdom, you hear the laughing hyenas and roaring Lions ready for dinner. As you enter, there is a Antelope skull (artifical) under a bush. The first exhibit you will see is a African Clawess Otter in a lush River Exhibit where there are live fish for the otters.There is a high clay ledge with many holes on the side to see it is home to the White-fronted Bee-eater a;ways hunting bees for their young. The next exhibit down the path holds the Secretary-bird in a open exhibit with few trees giving them shade and a zip line that the birds chase for some mices. At the next exhibit, you see a sign pointing to the Mongoose Complex:, here you see all time of Mongooses from the savanna: Banded, Slender, Common Dwarf, Yellow, Jackson's,Bushy-tailed, and White-Tailed Mongoose. They all live a lush green habitat with many trees, scrubs, and bushes. After we finish those exhibits, we head off to the bigger predators.......


We continued down the path to hear the Lions roaring even better but they will have to wait later. You turn to a glass window into a dry savanna woodland and you spot a Caracal sleeping under the shade with a little pond near the right with a log over it between two medium size Kopje. Next will be the African Civet a another dry savanna woodland but with some long grass where the civet hides when he hears a lion roar. When he comes out, there are plenty of treats in the logs and some toys in his exhibit. The Serval exhibit though, is a open field cover by long green grass with a Acacia Tree near the middle of the exhibit and climbing logs so they can get to the top. You hear a commontion going on so you go to the next exhibit, the Ratel. This exhibit is a open savanna woodland with to logs with alot of honey and some meat hidden the plants for the predator to find. Now we come to the Canines section of the exhibit. The Bat-Eared Fox has a large open savanna exhibit with a few bushes and a with a few burrows here and there ti see a head pop out and a couple of little ones and they run out to the toys and the little treats buried in the ground. The next thing you smell is death like before to come to the Black-backed Jackal in a savanna/woodland habitat with a dead wildebeest in the middle of the exhibit. We are finally to get to Africa's bigger predators, the African Wild Dog is first. This species lives in a savanna in the front but a lightly woodland in the back, usually where they have their pups, but the front is where the zipline carrying fake impala with meat stuff inside is given every two days to these animals. The Spotted Hyena are next in a open green savanna with a few trees and srcubs plus a river running my to seperate the humans and the predators and a fence. Our next exhibit is home to our fastest land animal, the Cheetah. These cats have a wide open green savanna with a few long grass, few termites mound, trees and a bush with a zipline like the African Wild Dog but a Gazelle though. The next big cat is the African Leopard living in a lush green forest, allowing the cats to climb the trees and look out for prey and zoo keepers with food. Here is one of our star attraction, the Lions. The big cats have a large 3 arce exhibit with a large climable Kopje giving them a great shot of their favorite prey. There is a small river giving them drinking water. a small green woodland for shade and a open savanna to bask in the sun. Now it is time for the African Elephant Reserve! Next time though

African Elephant Reserve:

You come to see a huge babob tree with many green foliage around it a river with papyrus on its border on the tree's side. Then you come to a streamside exhibit with a green open savanna and woodland to see Kob, Steenbok, Oribi, Gerenuk, Southern Ground Hornbill,Gemsbok, Stanley's Crane ,Lechwe, Puku, and Red Forest Duiker. Then you come to this open plain exhibit with a few green bushes and borrows to see an Aardvark pop out and go to a termite mound to eat their favorite treat. Next we come to the White Rhino's exhibit, This exhibit is a wide open field exhibit with savana trees and bushes dot the savanna with a meduim sized water hole for the rhinos, Burchell's Zebra, Springbok, Bontebok, Black Wildebeest, Crested Guineafowl, and Southern Bald Ibis. Now you come to a large safari hut to see its a the Elephant Center with many info boards of the Elephants, bones, footprints and a large elephant stall where you might see the mothers and babies before they go out to exhibit. Then you see a huge window to see one of the three 6 arce elephant exhibit. This one is a river side exhibit, to show the wetlands of the savanna that elephants gather around for drinking and play. Once you go outside, you see the same exhibit with one of the three African Elephant groups. The next exhibit will be a large green forest with a pond for the elephants need for drinking. This exhibit is design for the elephants to browse the area. The last exhibit is a large open savanna with a few trees, bushes, and scrubs dotting it, plus a pond for the same reason. Here the elephants have room to graze, play, and when rains, a mud bath.
Now that is the end of the African Savanna Area, time for the Ethopian Highlands, but latter of course.

Ethiopia Highlands:
You come into an artifical valley with rocky ledges on both side and you get to see a smoother ledge with open flat land with green bushes and grass where you find Yellow-spotted Rock Hyrax, Yellow-necked Spurfowl, Hartlaub's Bustard, Black-faced Sandgrouse, Bailey's Shrew, and African Giant Shrews. Now we continue to see the land is getting flatter and flatter to see a huge open plain African Wild -butt- (yes it is a real animal) exhibit where the zoo breeds them every successfully and there is a open high mountain green woodland where you can find the Mountian Nyala and Menelik's Bushbuck. The next door neighbors are the Gerenuk and Somali Wild -butt- in a dry savnna woodland. Now we come to see a cave on a Mountain side where you come in and see a door and see its dark but with some lights so you can see Morris's Bat, Noack's Roundleaf Bat, Patrizi's Trident and Leaf-nosed Bat then you see a hole in the sides for the outside walkthrough avairy where the Straw-coloured Fruit Bat, East African Epauletted Fruit Bat, Egyptian fruit bat, Moloney's Mimic Bat, Schlieffen's Bat, Chapin's Free-tailed Bat, African Giant Free-tailed Bat, Lesser Honeyguide, Brown-backed Woodpecker, Black-throated Barbet, Crowned Hornbill, African Grey Hornbill, Bamboo Scrub-warbler, Somali Shrew, and Striped Kingfisher live in a moist savanna woodland with a smooth rocky ledge on the side of the cave with a small stream. Once we leave the avairy, we come to bigger mountain with a huge smooth hill with grass and a few trees to see Gelada Baboons and Walia Ibex grass or climbing the mountain ledge. Our second to last exhibit is the Aardwolf exhibit where they live in a green grassland with termite mounds and a fake carcass under one of the few bushes, trees, scrubs. Here is our star attraction of this exhibit area, the Ethiopian Wolf. Here the wolves live on a large green hillside exhibit with many burrows and a few trees, scrubs, and bushes. The wolves have some treats in some of the burrows and a fake ibex carcass under one of the bushes where the public can't see.

Next is the Ituri Forest/Congo Forest

Congo Forest:
You finally get out of the sun rays into a densly packed forest with mist coming out every 30 mins. You see a meduim sized waterfall with a rocky ledge in the distance but to your suprise is a exhibit in a tropical moist lowland forest where you see mesh and a glass window seperating you and the animals. This exhibit holds Western Tree Hyrax, Golden Angwantibo, Checkered Elephant Shrew, Long-tailed Pangolin, African Grey Parrot, Blue-headed Bee-eater,Guinea Turaco, and Ross's Turaco. We continue to a large building camaflouge the forest, you enter a climate control forest with a river going pass the middle of the exhibit with water lilies and green plants that cover the sides and a bridge that goes over the river while you are in a mesh tunnel for safety reasons. This exhibit holds White-tailed Mongoose, African Clawless Otter, Peters's Duiker, Black-fronted Duiker, Bates's Pygmy Antelope, Four-toed Elephant Shrew, Allen's Swamp Monkey, Angolan Talapoin, Pygmy Hippo, Greater Spot-nosed Monkey, Long-eared Flying Mouse, Kivu Climbing Mouse, Short-palated Fruit Bat, Peter's Dwarf Epauletted Fruit Bat, Tarella Shrew, Blue-breasted Kingfisher, Narina Trogon, Blue-breasted Bee-eater, Blue-throated Roller, White-crested Hornbill, Trumpeter Hornbill, Great Blue Turaco, Yellow-billed Turaco, Bare-faced Go-away-bird, Red-headed Lovebird, Black-collared Lovebird, Greater Flamingo, and Hadada Ibis. Next will be the forest's bigger land animals.

After leaving the forest house, you are still in the in the jungle but the foliage gets denser and denser to come to a large window in the vines to see the Okapi exhibit where they have dense forest with a small waterfall in the background. Now we come to a large wetland clearing with forest in the background and some grassy area is the home to the Sitagunga, Bongo, Red River Hog, African Forest Buffalo, Yellow-backed Duiker, Bates's Pygmy Antelope, Hartlaub's Duck, White-backed Duck, Southern Pochard, Pink-backed Pelican, Reed Cormorant, Goliath Heron, White-crested Tiger Heron, Glossy Ibis, Handsome Francolin, Blue Quail, Congo Peafowl, Black Guineafowl, and Wattled Crane. After that exhibit, we walk down the path to come to the African Forest Elephants exhibits. There are two exhibits, one for the females and another for the males. They switch nearly every 4 hours, the first exhibit is a large wetland clearing it a few trees and a grassy area. While the second exhibit is a dense jungle with a clay cave where they can get minerals and treats in the trunks of trees. Now we move on to the primates area.

We continue down the path in the deep jungle with beautiful flora and scenry. While walking down the path to a window in a forest to a beautiful dense forest with swinging and climbing ropes from the canopy. Here lives the Red-tailed Guenon and Moustached Guenon. Our next exhibit is home to the Critically Endangered Dryas Monkey, live in a riverside exhibit, with wetland plants and a thick forest in the back. The river continues to the Drill, De Brazza's Monkey, and the Crested Mona Monkey living a riverside exhibit with rock on the part of the river with forest in the back.After the Monkeys, we go across a river seen at the Dryas Monkey's to see the Great Apes. First off is the Bonobo living in a dense forest hillside. Next is the Chimpanzees living in a dense forest exhibit with a mountain side plus a waterfall that has a wetland clearing. Now we continue to our last but not least exhibit, the Western Lowland Gorillas. First we come in a building with trees covering it. Inside is the Congo Center with a huge window to see the Gorillas. The Gorillas have 3 exhibit, one is troop number 1 where they have a dense forest who also have a waterfall with a river going down the smooth hillside to the next exhibit plus logs going over the river to cross the shallow river. The center has many interactive areas for the kids and many info boards on the problems the Central African Jungles are facing. Outside we come to a overlook for the first exhibit. Next we come to Troop 2 where they have a large wetland clearing. Our last exhibit is the Bachelors living in a hillside exhibit in a dense forest and a cave where they can find treats at. The gorillas switch every 5 hours.
 
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Wow, very detailed JaxElephant, I like it :). It sounds like a brilliant place to visit, with many species and good-sized, naturalistic paddocks.

On a side note, I am currently working on another area for Grasslands and Deserts biome. This will be 'Australia Outback.' I have now decided that I will follow a route going around, so one area will move into another, rather than just describing them in no order. After this, expect to see an Asian Steppe/Plains, (possibly something from Europe, ideas welcome (has to be grassland), North American Prairie (only small), Death Valley (may mix with Prairie to make a large 'North America' area, and a South American grassland (ideas welcome).
 
I would mix the 2 North American areas together. It would be sort of weird to have these large African, Egyptian, European, Australian and South American areas and 2 tiny North American exhibits.
 
I would mix the 2 North American areas together. It would be sort of weird to have these large African, Egyptian, European, Australian and South American areas and 2 tiny North American exhibits.

Good point, the only real reason for the prairie was Bison. So, new plan scraps American Prairie and severly extends Death Valley. European Bison can now be found in the Woodlands and Mountains (for a later date).
 
Right, I have Australia Outback ready :). Hope you enjoy, though I struggled to find too many species (particularly birds) that were suitable for scrubland/desert Australia (I have loads thought of for woodlands and for rainforests, but that's a different story :)). Anyway, without further delay:

Australia Outback


Coming back down from the Lands of the Pharaohs (and to the east of the African Grasslands), the visitors arrive in Australia Outback. A twisted arch made to look like a dead log marks the entrance, and is inscribed with Aboriginal carvings.

Past the arch is a large, open paddock (mainly grassy, with patches of sand) to the right. This is a mixed paddock, which will include Red Kangaroo (Macropus rufus) and Emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae). There are a number of enrichment items, as well as a protected nesting area for the emus (which can be fenced off when eggs are present). There are four small, off-show pens for isolation of the emus, as well as a smaller (yet still decent sized) sandy paddock. This paddock is generally open to allow all species the option of sandy ground; however it can be closed off to hold the kangaroo seperately. A roundhouse lies between the sandy paddock and the first emu isolation paddock and acts as off-show indoor accomodation to both species. There is also an area of hard-standing infront of the house.
There are patches of sand for dust baths, as well as a few large trees that will provide shade for the animals. Enrichment would come from salt-licks, scatterfeeds and a few toys.

To the left of the path is a second paddock that mostly follows the same design as the previously mentioned one (large grassy paddock, off-show roundhouse and sandy paddock). The only major change to layout is the removal of the four emu isolation paddocks, which are replaced by two fenced off pens. This paddock is again mixed, this time containing Western Grey Kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus), Malleefowl (Leipoa ocellata) and Australian Brush Turkey (Alectura lathami).

Upon passing the two kangaroo paddocks, the visitor arrives at the Aboriginal Terraces. Here there is a cafe and a gift shop, as well as statues, a fountain, grassy gardens and a play area. After unwinding here for a while, the visitor can continue to explore the exhibits that are present on the terraces.

The first of these exhibits is the ‘Invasion Army,’ which consists of a small aviary for Common Myna (Acridotheres tristis), and a vivarium for several Cane Toad (Bufo marinus). Around these enclosures are boards talking about invasive species and the negative impact they have on native wildlife.

After viewing this, the visitor is invited to see some of the native wildlife in the Reptile Roundhouse and the Australia Complex.

The Reptile Roundhouse exhibits the following species: Inland Bearded Dragon (Pogona vitticeps), Frilled Lizard (Chlamydosaurus kingii), Thorny Devil (Moloch horridus), Western Blue-tongued Skink (Tiliqua occipitalis), Perentie (Varanus giganteus), Black-headed Python (Aspidites melanocephalus), Desert Death Adder (Acanthophis pyrrhus), Bandy Bandy (Vermicella annulata) and Tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus). There are two glass-fronted and netted outdoor exhibits, one for the perentie and one for the tuatara. Both of these use a sandy substrate, with naturalistic heat lamps and heated rocks for basking.

The Australia Complex is a large, spectacle-shaped building with several outdoor enclosures and houses small Australian mammals.

The entrance to this building is on the ‘bridge’ of the ‘spectacles,’ with an outdoor enclosure for Short-Beaked Echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) to the left, and an enclosure for Greater Bilby (Macrotis lagotis) to the right. These are both sandy; however they are heavily planted with desert grasses, dry logs and rocks to provide plenty of hiding places. Inside, the visitor can see the indoor viewing for the two aforementioned species, as well as indoor viewing for Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) and Common Wombat (Vombatus ursinus).

Behind the Austalia Complex are the outdoor enclosures for the wombats and the Tasmanian devils. These are about three-times the size of the front enclosures (echidna and bilby), with burrows and long grasses in the wombat enclosure and heated rocks and a ‘kangaroo carcass’ in the Tasmanian devil enclosure. Both of these enclosures feature isolation areas.

To leave this area, the visitor can take one of two routes. They can either take the ‘wallaby free route,’ which passes the wallaby paddock if people are not comfortable to walk through it (this still makes for some great views), or they can head through ‘Wallaby Walkthrough.’

Wallaby Walkthrough allows the visitor to walk through the two acre wallaby paddock, which is home to Brush-tailed Rock Wallaby (Petrogale penicillata), Parma Wallaby (Macropus parma), Red-Necked Wallaby (Macropus rufogriseus) and Tammar Wallaby (Macropus eugenii). This paddock is a mix between grassy parts and sandy parts, and visitors must follow the path that is laid out. However, at certain times of the day visitors have an oppurtunity to help the keepers feed the wallabies. Away from the main path (and out of sight) are three isolation pens and the off-show wallaby house.

After leaving Wallaby Walkthrough, and thus leaving Australia Outback, you again head north into the Middle-East and the Eurasian Steppes.

So, what do you all think? Agreed, there are too few bird species, but many (kiwi, kookaburra, cockatoo, parrots etc.) I have planned for the woodlands and mountains and the rainforests and swamps parks.
 
Sorry for multiple posts in a row, but I have my next section done :D. This has altered somehow, and is now an Asian Grasslands area, rather than just focusing on the steppes and middle-eastern deserts. Hope you like it :):

Asian Grasslands and Steppes

After leaving Australia Outback, the visitor finds themself on a trek across the Asian Grasslands and Steppes. This trek takes the visitor from east to west, through areas such as Nepal, the Middle-East, the Gobi Desert and the Eurasian steppes.

The first enclosure the visitor will see is a vast, 8 acre Asian plain that showcases the fauna of flooded grasslands in Nepal. The main attraction to this exhibit is the small herd of Indian Rhinoceros (Rhinoceros unicornis), though visitors can also enjoy the sights of a herd of Blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and a troop of Rhesus Macaque (Macaca mulatta) that share the exhibit.

This exhibit is generally grassy, with areas of dirt and sand. There is also a pool and a large, heated mud-wallow. Enrichment includes a large pursuit ball, smaller toy balls, scratching posts, salt-licks, browse feeders, feeder balls, tyre swings, rope swings, climbing structures and scatter-feeds.

Isolation includes a seperate, netted enclosure for the macaques (which can be accessed via a rope crossing the fence. This enclosure also has several individual pens which are off-show within a fake ‘rock structure.’ There is also a smaller, seperate paddock for the blackbuck and a seperate paddock for the rhinos.

The indoor quaters is on-show to the north of the main paddock, and holds indoor accomodation for all species. Ropes leap up into open windows for the macaques (similar to Chester’s ‘Monkey Islands,’ and this is the first indoor exhibit that the visitor sees. Opposite this are the stalls for the blackbuck (a tunnel leads the macaques over the pathway). In the next room (which is similar to Chester’s ‘Tsavo: Black Rhino experiance’ in design and shape) are the indoor areas for the rhinos. There is a small heated pool in one of the three pens (the rhinos generally have access to all three (two on-show/one off-show); however they can be closed off when the rhinos need seperating). The fourth segment to this ‘cross’ design is an off-show keeper area. Outside of this house is a good-sized area of hard-standing for the hooved animals.

The next exhibits in this area are two paddocks for the Middle-East and Gobi Desert. In the eastern paddock are a herd of Arabian Oryx (Oryx leucoryx); whilst in the west paddock are a group of Bactrian camel (Camelus bactrianus). Although these paddocks are attatched, the animals do not form a larger mixed exhibit. However, the two species can rotate if necessary. Within these paddocks are scratching posts and salt-licks, as well as areas of hard-standing outside a large stable that covers both paddocks. The hard-standing can be closed off when isolation is required.

Opposite these paddocks is an enclosure for Caracal (Caracal caracal). This enclosure uses wood and glass for fencing, as well as having a netted cover. It uses a sandy substrate, and is heavily planted with rocks and desert grasses. There are raised platforms and heated rocks for resting, as well as ‘batting devices,’ several small toy balls, feeder balls and scratching posts for enrichment. Indoor accomodation is a hut split into five rooms. Two rooms are on-show indoor areas via a glass window, two are off-show indoor areas (all four are concrete floor with hay as bedding), whilst the fifth is another keeper area, with a small food-prep area, information boards, a desk/computer and other necessary items. A yard outside the keeper entrance holds brushes/wheelbarrows etc.

Further along is a similar enclosure for Pallas’s Cat (Felis manul). This uses the same fencing as the caracal enclosure, as well as the same substrate and similar enrichment. The main difference is a small pool with a rock wall and a trickling waterfall that feeds the pool. There are many logs and branches for climbing, as well as heated rocks and resting platforms. The indoor accomodation is similar to the caracals; however there are only two rooms, both of which are off-show indoor areas for the animals.

The final exhibits to this area are three more paddocks that are attatched (like the previous paddocks for camels and oryx). These three exhibit wild horses of Eurasia, with the east paddock holding Persian Onager (Equus hemionus onager), the middle paddock holding Przewalsi’s Horse (Equus ferus przewalskii) and the west paddock holding Kiang (Equss kiang). These are similar in design to the camel and oryx paddocks, and the species here can rotate when needed. Again, the species share a large, off-show stable and each paddock has an area of hard-standing that can be fenced off when there is need for seperation.

After passing these paddocks, the visitor finds that they have crossed the Atlantic and are now in North America.

So, again apologies for the lack of birds, however I hope to make up for it a little later on with a couple of aviaries in Death Valley. What are your opinions on my latest areas? And does anybody have anymore exhibits that they would like to share?
 
Javan Rhino: Are you still describing the Grasslands and Deserts park? Because even though it sounds like a really nice zoo, you might want to take a bigger charge than £5.00, otherwise you'll probably go bankrupt in no time, seeing that £5.00 tends to be standard admission for a small zoo. Of course, I know it's not a real zoo you're planning so you don't have to worry about economy, but I find it a little funnier to plan a zoo when you're taking some realistic measures.
But if you could really manage to run an enormous park like that with that small admission fee, you would probably have a VERY popular zoo ;D
 
Javan Rhino: Are you still describing the Grasslands and Deserts park? Because even though it sounds like a really nice zoo, you might want to take a bigger charge than £5.00, otherwise you'll probably go bankrupt in no time, seeing that £5.00 tends to be standard admission for a small zoo. Of course, I know it's not a real zoo you're planning so you don't have to worry about economy, but I find it a little funnier to plan a zoo when you're taking some realistic measures.
But if you could really manage to run an enormous park like that with that small admission fee, you would probably have a VERY popular zoo ;D

I think the price would probaby go up, since my ambitions have gotten quite steep :D. The main reason for £5 was because it was split into 4 parks, and I wanted to make a standard 'multi-park pass' affordable. However I think the price does need to come up, maybe £40-50 for a pass into all four parks? And £15 like a standard zoo into one park?
 
My turn

I want to try and keep mine to a sort of budget (so no giant panda's, douc langurs or elephants) and small-ish

Entrance:
This is basically a couple of ticket booths, like all the buildings this contains soruces of renewable energy which are made blatantly obvious as the visitors walk in. Upon entering the zoo they are faced with a large netted aviary supported by various wooden poles. This large enclosure is for oriental white storks (and anything else i can mix with them!). The enclosure is pretty basic and wild with no fancy planting (however ivy is deliberatly grown up the back net to provide a leafy shield to the exhibits behind it. To the left of the visitors is the shop and exit and this is connected to the stork aviary.

To the right of the visitors they are faced with a small stretch of lawn and flower beds and then come to the caribbean house. this is the start of the first 'proper' exhibit of the zoo. CARIBBEAN WILD!. the building is the same sort of structure as Chester's bat cave (i.e. curved roof and warehouse sort of thing). Visitors enter through two sets of glass automatic doors each bordered by banana trees. Entering the house they find themselves as part of the roots of a lage tree with glass panels giving an underwater view of the famous tropical water with numerous caribbean fish in their tank resembling a coral reef. the aquarium water depth is just above head height so visitors can just see tropical planting in the back ground. Visitors follow the path out of the tree roots and away from the tank into the main hall. Here there is a large indoor enclosure for Howler monkey's this is fenced by glass panels up to about 3m from which netting taked the enclosure all the way up to the ceiling. the enclosure is square shaped with a bark chip floor (same as the visitor paths), extensive climbing facilities and some planting. next to this and down the side of the enclosure is glass panels showing an outdoor cage enclosure for the monkeys. At the back of the aqaurium are two netted enclosure's for ocelot (not quite caribbean but near enough) and for demarests hutia. these are fenced by glass panels to about head height. Sight between the occupants is restricted by a pallisade fence between the enclosures. These enclosures is extensively planted and also feature boxes for the animals to escape the glare of visitors. Set in the wall are tanks for various animals. Larger tanks are for mountain chickens, lesser Antilles iguana's, cuban boa and jamaican boa's. Also found here are trinidad stream frog and puerto rican crested toad. Iron benches are situated throughout the hall. Tropical planting can be found all along the visitor paths. At the centre of the hall are various educational aspects including Caribbean culture, history and then details of projects to conserve the solenodon and montserrat oriole.

Outside of this hall (through another set of automatic doors) is a bit of space (and alternative path) but the main feature is 1 acre netted enclosure. This is a caribbean walkthrough. Inside is a large pool where caribbean flamingo wade and roseate spoonbill look out from the live trees (naturally found on site). little egret can be found along with scarlet ibis. Squirrel monkey's are the main attraction enthralling isitors with acrobatic antics. agouti's can also be found here

Leaving the walkthrough aviary are a series of cages for macaws, more agouti, and montserat oriole.

Caribbean Wild
Total species: 18+ (uncounted fish species)
estimated size: 5 acres (1 acre walkthroguh, 2 acre house 2 acre additional enclosures and private areas)
estimated costs: 1 - 2 million (costs are kept down by locally sourcing material, little extravagent theming and only basic themed planting)
 
Cool exhibit! You could probably add a few free-flying birds in the Caribbean House though or some amazon parrots. I don't think any zoo has designed an exhibit specifically for Caribbean animals before.

Also about the outback exhibit there are a lot of common Australian birds that can be found in the outback. This might also be a good spot for a lorikeet/budgerigar/cockatiel/whatever aviary if you decide to have these species.
 
Also about the outback exhibit there are a lot of common Australian birds that can be found in the outback. This might also be a good spot for a lorikeet/budgerigar/cockatiel/whatever aviary if you decide to have these species.

That is true, but would lorikeets not be more tropical? I was going to do something similar to Rainbow Landings at Edinburgh in the tropical area. I may put in budgies :).
 
Next from the oriental stork aviary so ignoring the path leading to the Caribbean wild exhibit. Ivy and a privet line the back walls of the aviary. A wooden ramp carefully curves with the aviary and leads up to the LIFE CENTRE. This is a large modern building containing a variety of exhibit space. In here smaller animals such as Chilean rose tarantula, giant millipedes, jewelled wasp, leaf cutter ant, red bellied piranha and partula snail. There are also a variety of interactive features including a smell box for foxes, various skeletons and fossils. away from the main hall is an exhibition space for local artists and wildlife films (not at the same time). The upper floor features convention facilities and office space. There is also space for a display on global warming and features the ability to order renewable energy technology.

Life centre:
Total species: 6
Estimated size: 1 acre
Estimated cost: 500,000 (its not that big or particularly fancy)

Back outside the life centre another privet leads away from the stork aviary and the ramp of the life centre. here is a long netted enclosure for Buffy cheeked gibbon. This netted enclosure backs onto a large building situated next to the life centre. This is the ape centre. There are two gibbon enclosures so that separation can occur if required, but can be merged into one. Around the rectangular gibbon enclosure is a grove of large mature trees. There is a brass orangutan statue that hangs from a trunk just above the heads of the visitors. From here the path splits at a right angle to enter the ape house (but we're not going to do that right now). The path carries on around a large still moat. at the centre of the moat is two large islands of mature, naturally occurring trees. Here reside Sumatran orangutan The islands are pretty wild so no lawns or anything. stress on the trees is reduced by additional climbing facilities and carefully placed, temporary electric cable. for part of the exhibit the visitors walk across a wooden bridge on the other side of which is a paddock for Malayan tapir, the moat makes up the pool for the tapir. At the centre of the pool is a third, smaller island for orangutans. At the centre of this island is a tall platform from which several cables extends over the visitor path. this means that the orangutans are able to climb over the heads of the visitors. For anyone who hasn't a clue what I'm talking about see the o line at the Washington national zoo. The path continues around the moat. At the centre of the path is a large circular hut with views across the islands. In here there are lots of educational props for ape conservation leading away from the exhibit at a dead-end tangent is an exhibit for endangered duck species. there are several connected netted enclosures each heavily planted and with a pond. Natural planting obscures vision, so that the enclosures can only be viewed from carefully placed hides. Species here are Kagu, Madagascan teal, Mellers duck, Hawaiian duck, Hottentots teal, . There are off show breeding facilities. The duck centre is a corner of the zoo and the space between this and the orangutan path is a large picnic lawn. Back to the orangutan path there is a small lawn between paths and a cage enclosure for spectacled langur.

Inside the ape house the visitor is very dark, contrasting with the bright indoor facilities for the orangutans (glass ceilings). The visitor path is bark chip and features quaint iron benches. The gibbons and orangutans can be viewed through large glass panels. In total there are 2 large indoor enclosures and 4 smaller enclosures, also there are holding facilities and off show quarantine facilities

Orangutan and Duck exhibit:
Total species: 9
Estimated size: 20 acres
Estimated cost: 4 million
 
Love it Foz :D. A great sounding area and featuring one of my fave animals (orang-utans). Can't wait to read some more ideas :).

On a side note, I am doing my second to last area for the Grasslands and Deserts park, so I want to know which one you'd all like to see next (just write in a post which one, and if there is a draw I'll pick one of them at random:

Rainforests and Swamps: Features the Congo, Australian Islands, Indonesia, Asia, the Everglades and the Amazon.

Woodlands and Mountains: Features Ethiopian Highlands, Australian Woodland, Europe, Britain, North America Conifer Forests and the Andes.

Oceans and Tundra: Features Arctic and Antarctic, Coastlines and Oceans.

Also, I'm doing a map for Grasslands and Deserts at the moment, when it is done where can it be posted on here? (Is there a general gallery, or other?)
 
Well, here we go again :D

Cowboys and Indians: Native America

Cowboys and Indians: Native America takes the visitor out of Eurasia, across the Atlantic (via a bridge over a naturalistic river) and into North America. The first thing that the visitor sees here is a Native American village covering part of the lawn, whilst the larger part of the lawn is bare for New World Vulture displays.

Opposite the lawn is a large Bison Pasture, with a main paddock for North American Bison (Bison bison) and a smaller enclosure for Black-tailed Prairie Dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus). The bison paddock is grassy, with bulky oak trees for shade. Indoor accomodation is a large barn at the far end of the paddock, and a secondary, off-show paddock is located behind this barn. The Prairie dogs have a good amount of enrichment with burrows dug into the sandy substrate, logs and rocks for climbing and a number of toys. These have access to several hutches which are hidden within large rocks.

Below the Native American Lawn and the Bison Pasture are two large aviaries. The one below the lawn houses Turkey Vulture (Cathartes aura), whilst the one below the Bison Pasture houses California condor (Gymnogyps californianus). The condor aviary uses an elevated path so that it can be viewed at two different levels. There is also a hide with a feeding skeleton right infront of it, allowing for great close-ups with the birds. Both of these aviaries are made to look like a North American desert, with a sandy substrate, reddish rocks and feeding skeletons. These are the two species used in the display.

Next is an enclosure for a pack of Red Wolves (Canis lupus rufus). This enclosure again uses a sandy substate and is made to look like a North American desert, though there are several patches of long grass and a second enclosure is completely grassy. There indoor accomodation is a shed-like building which is off-show, and enrichment includes a number of toys, heated rocks and meat hanging from ropes.

Opposite the Red Wolf enclosures is the centrepiece to this area of the park, the Death Valley Biodome. Visitors enter this large, glass dome to find themselves in the middle of a scorching desert, with free-range birds, large cacti and a number of vivariums and enclosures for reptiles. Exhibited in here are free-roaming Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) and free-flight Burrowing Owl (Athene cunicularia), Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius ludovicianus), Elf Owl (Micrathene whitneyi), Gila Woodpecker (Melanerpes uropygialis) and Gambel’s Quail (Callipepla gambelii). There is also an enclosure for Desert Tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) and vivariums for Mexican Red-Knee Tarantula (Brachypelma smithi), Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum), Common Chuckwalla (Sauromalus ater) and Western Diamondback Rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox).

Upon leaving the dome, the vistor can enjoy a stay on the lush picnic lawn before crossing the bridge into South America.

So, what does everybody think? I look forward to hearing your views and can't wait to hear some more of your own ideas, these have all been brilliant so far :D
 
I'd like to see the rainforests park next, because that'll probably contain lots of birds and primates! :)

Free-flying Burrowing Owls? I doubt anyone would ever see them...woodpecker, quail, etc might be better for free-flying birds. In my exhibit I had a walk-through desert aviary. Here are the birds that were in it:

Scaled Quail
Gambel's Quail
Mourning Dove
White-winged Dove
Inca Dove
Greater Roadrunner
Gila Woodpecker
Vermillion Flycatcher
Green Jay
Verdin
Cactus Wren
Northern Mockingbird
Curve-billed Thrasher
Lark Sparrow
Green-tailed Towhee
Lark Bunting
Purrhuloxia
Lesser Goldfinch

Haven't seen any exhibit specifically for Death Valley before, so that was cool.

The zoo I'm coming up with will definitely specialize on birds and primates...

And if you think that's a lot of birds, you definitely don't want to see the huge Asian aviary with around 80 species in it!
 
Can't wait to see it :D. As I have mention, birds are not my speciallity (not as much as mammals anyway), so hearing about all of these other birds allows me to rethink some exhibits and improve them with these species.

As for the burrowing owls (and the elf owls, I'm sure they would be difficult to spot as well) would have them anyway and people can play Chester's Duiker with them :D. For the more casual zoo-goer though there would be cameras in strategic points to show the harder-to-spot species.

(And yes, there will be lots of birds and primates in Rainforests and Swamps :D).
 
As for the burrowing owls (and the elf owls, I'm sure they would be difficult to spot as well) would have them anyway and people can play Chester's Duiker with them :D. For the more casual zoo-goer though there would be cameras in strategic points to show the harder-to-spot species.

For an alternative solution on how to keep burrowing owls in a large desert hall, look at the Burger's Zoo gallery.
 
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