Buckeye092
Well-Known Member
Does anybody have any information on the dholes of Taronga? I was interested in specific information about the current adult pair and their litter that, I think, was born in 2006. Thanks!
the current animals are the mother and her son from the last litter. Unfortunately the last pregnancy was really hard on her and she had her womb totally removed so no more breeding could occur. the father and the daughter from the previous litter have gone to another zoo.
I'm frustrated by the way that zoos in our region expect to keep only a pair of any species and rely on other zoos to also keep a pair. That's NOT the way to save any species.
No-one expects a zoo to keep big numbers of large animals - the "charismatic megafauna" which bring the public in and which are kept primarily for display, but any zoo worth the name should be prepared to maintain whole colonies and not just a pair of any smaller and endangered species such as dholes, tree kangaroos, fishing cats, Francois' langurs etc. which they adopt. It shouldn't break the bank, particularly if most were kept off-display.
In the face of strident Animal Rights criticism, zoos stress their commitment to conservation breeding. Its time that they follow through!
the current animals are the mother and her son from the last litter. Unfortunately the last pregnancy was really hard on her and she had her womb totally removed so no more breeding could occur. the father and the daughter from the previous litter have gone to another zoo.
I'm frustrated by the way that zoos in our region expect to keep only a pair of any species and rely on other zoos to also keep a pair. That's NOT the way to save any species.
No-one expects a zoo to keep big numbers of large animals - the "charismatic megafauna" which bring the public in and which are kept primarily for display, but any zoo worth the name should be prepared to maintain whole colonies and not just a pair of any smaller and endangered species such as dholes, tree kangaroos, fishing cats, Francois' langurs etc. which they adopt. It shouldn't break the bank, particularly if most were kept off-display.
In the face of strident Animal Rights criticism, zoos stress their commitment to conservation breeding. Its time that they follow through!