Ahh he water moats are in British zoos. That explains it.
Off the top of my head, on the continent, Apenheul, Arnhem, Leipzig all have water-moated gorilla enclosure (Pongoland at Leipzig is a superb great ape house).
Ahh he water moats are in British zoos. That explains it.
I can tell you that there is no way on earth that Woodland Park, San Diego, Bronx, Toledo, Lincoln Park, and any other American zoo would spend money on a Howletts-style gorilla enclosure. I think that the reason would be that the level of expectation in the United States is for "jungle-like" enclosures for gorillas...
As for the water moats, I was like Ituri and was attempting to come up with a zoo that uses another outdated mode of containing great apes. So London, Bristol, Blackpool and Longleat are 4 examples that continue to have water moats? All British zoos, but then I see that Maguari has come up with Apenheul, Arnhem and Leipzig as well. I'm a little surprised that there are still at least 7 European collections that use water moats with apes, but from photos Pongoland appears to be an amazing set of ape habitats.
That proves my point that zoos only really build what pleases the public, and you could argue about education and that but I bet most of the public who visit zoos couldn't even tell you where gorillas come from. It would sadden me to think that exhibits like gorilla kingdom are indeed the "future".
And Ituri, it's from personal experience, but they seem very calm and are the most active gorillas I've ever seen. I think all you Americans need to come over and see Howletts for yourself![]()
You keep using Gorilla Kingdom as your example of an immersion exhibit. I haven't seen it myself, but from photos it looks like complete rubbish.
Rockwork for the sake of rockwork is NOT what it takes to build an immersion exhibit.
@Maguari: thanks for the list of "ape water moats", and I stand corrected as I said something to the effect that those types of designs were either outdated or on the way out. I stand by that statement in reference to North American zoos, but I see that it is still common practice throughout many top European zoos.
@ashley: I have to agree with Ituri in regards to "Gorilla Kingdom" at the London Zoo. This exhibit has had more criticism than just about any other in recent memory, and so immersion exhibitry it is not.![]()
Sorry, it is a bad example lol. First thing to come to my head since we were on about gorillas. An example is Realm of the red ape, not what I'd call an immersion exhibit, but it's great with no need for hotwired trees or hidden moats. We're going in circles now lol.
I think the ideas of zoos between to UK and USA are too different to compare really, America is more commercialised where as the UK is more traditional if you will.
Redukari, you might as well just say "as long as it looks good I don't care how well the animals fare in the exhibit", because that's the message I get from your posts. I'm sorry, but the Howletts cages for their gorillas rival any nice looking, potentially lethal water moat seen in so many other zoos. The mesh at Howletts is about 2m from the safety barrier, if that were a moat on a regular exhibit that space would be 6m of space all around the edge of the enclosure that the gorillas miss out on, purely because it looks nice. Do you REALLY think that's better?
You're very wlecome - to be honest I'd never realised it was so uncommon in North America! Has it just been and gone as a style of exhibit, or did it never get to be widely used?
I think Orang-Utan Forest at Colchester and Elephant Odyssey at San Diego probably run it close in the criticism stakes!
There have been several high profile instances of apes drowning in water moats, which in the US has led to a major decline in the use of the technique. The old Bronx Ape House originally had water moats until a gorilla drowned and more recently chimps in Detroit and a gorilla in Jacksonville drowned.....
In my book EO takes the cake, based on the huge sums expended (wasted) on it