Edinburgh Zoo Edinburgh Zoo News 2021

Scotland’s only sloths have been revealed for the first time at the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland’s Edinburgh Zoo today, Monday 13 September.

Visitors can now spot two Linne’s two-toed sloths in the wildlife conservation charity’s new Sloths and Armadillos building which is opening gradually to help the pair settle in:

Edinburgh Zoo welcomes Scotland’s only sloths | Edinburgh Zoo
 
Scotland’s only sloths have been revealed for the first time at the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland’s Edinburgh Zoo today, Monday 13 September.

Visitors can now spot two Linne’s two-toed sloths in the wildlife conservation charity’s new Sloths and Armadillos building which is opening gradually to help the pair settle in:

Edinburgh Zoo welcomes Scotland’s only sloths | Edinburgh Zoo
This is my first time ever hearing of a zoo having a building specifically for Xenarthrans! That's certainly unique.
 

Another article that says nothing new, but pretends to be saying a lot :p if one actually reads the article, it merely reports on the fact the 10 year lease is coming to a close soon, but never actually says that the Giant Pandas *are* returning to China.... and in fact closes the article with the same quote we discussed a few days ago originating from the Edinburgh Zoo website:

We remain in discussions with our colleagues in China about Yang Guang and Tian Tian’s future at Edinburgh Zoo as our original ten-year agreement ends in December. We still hope to extend their stay and will keep everyone updated.’

In other words, clickbait based around a re-phrasing of the previously-posted article :P
 
Another article that says nothing new, but pretends to be saying a lot :p if one actually reads the article, it merely reports on the fact the 10 year lease is coming to a close soon, but never actually says that the Giant Pandas *are* returning to China.... and in fact closes the article with the same quote we discussed a few days ago originating from the Edinburgh Zoo website:

We remain in discussions with our colleagues in China about Yang Guang and Tian Tian’s future at Edinburgh Zoo as our original ten-year agreement ends in December. We still hope to extend their stay and will keep everyone updated.’

In other words, clickbait based around a re-phrasing of the previously-posted article :p
Since neither are of any use to Chinese breeding programmes, RZSS are probably hope to keep them for nothing or very little expense. They could probably get 5 years plus out of having the UK's only Pandas. Nowhere has the money currently to pay China the usual fee
 
Since neither are of any use to Chinese breeding programmes, RZSS are probably hope to keep them for nothing or very little expense. They could probably get 5 years plus out of having the UK's only Pandas. Nowhere has the money currently to pay China the usual fee
I thought Tian Tian could still reproduce?
 
As far as I know, there is no immediate plans to replace Brilliant Birds. I know there have been plans for a new tropical house somewhere but I've not heard hard-and-fast plans about that in some time.
I do wonder if the zoo still plans to go ahead with the other big projects they had planned after the giraffe house, or if the lockdowns have affected them so badly financially that those plans will have to be dropped?
I will definitely miss Brilliant Birds, it was one of my favourite areas of the zoo, and I'm also curious to know what is being done with the species that used to be in there.
 
Since neither are of any use to Chinese breeding programmes, RZSS are probably hope to keep them for nothing or very little expense. They could probably get 5 years plus out of having the UK's only Pandas. Nowhere has the money currently to pay China the usual fee
I was interested to see photos of all (most of) the European Giant Panda exhibits. Unlike the others with expensive landscaping both indoors and out, by comparison Edinburgh's second Panda enclosure looks simple in the extreme, a bare-looking den and a grassy outdoors surrounded by an electric fence, more reminiscent of where you might house e.g. cheetahs. Presumably this second enclosure is, by necessity, an economy version of the first one.
 
I do wonder if the zoo still plans to go ahead with the other big projects they had planned after the giraffe house, or if the lockdowns have affected them so badly financially that those plans will have to be dropped?
I will definitely miss Brilliant Birds, it was one of my favourite areas of the zoo, and I'm also curious to know what is being done with the species that used to be in there.
Was one of my fav places at the zoo
 
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