On February 26th, the zoo announced that (0.0.4) North American river otters were born on February 14th.
We have a Pupdate! We are otterly thrilled to announce that our #yegZoo family has grown again! Our North American River Otter, Najoua, recently gave... | By Edmonton Valley ZooFacebook
On August 2nd, the zoo announced that 2 red pandas were born on July 7th.
Red Panda Cubs | It's PANDA-monium here at the #yegzoo - our family has grown by two! Along with proud parents Kiki and Tango, we are excited to announce the birth of two... | By Edmonton Valley ZooFacebook
In the annual review of Asian elephant Lucy's fitness for transport, she is yet again unfit to move and most of the experts reviewing her agree she never will be, which has been the opinion for years.
'Zoo staff is extraordinary:' Lucy the elephant at 47 not fit for relocation | Edmonton Journal
In other news, it turns out that old Lucy is still alive. And better still, her health has recently improved.
Health report re-affirms Lucy the elephant should not leave Edmonton Valley Zoo - Edmonton | Globalnews.ca
Up next for the zoo is the 'Arctic' Wolf exhibit, which is discussed at length in this almost 5-minute video from December.
Edmonton Valley Zoo looks to welcome Arctic wolves in new year | Watch News Videos Online
Do they hold purebred Arctic/polar wolves (in Europe most if not all the Arctics are basically of mixed origins...)?On February 4th, it was reported that the zoo acquired a (1.0 serval after it was confiscated from an illegal breeding situation and was later named Blade*.
Okotoks woman fined $15,000 for possession of wild cat | Calgary Herald
Alberta woman fined for illegally importing serval cats
On March 21st, the zoo opened the new Arctic wolf exhibit to the public.
Edmonton Valley Zoo
* Another news article from CTV says the zoo acquired a 2nd serval but I am not sure if the report is accurate.
Their current wolves are all from Europe, and as such are of the "mixed ssp but arctic phenotype" variety.Do they hold purebred Arctic/polar wolves (in Europe most if not all the Arctics are basically of mixed origins...)?
RED PANDA YARD PROJECT
Budget: $50,000 | Beginning: 2025
The Red Panda Yard Landscape Project will bring fresh life and adventure to the Edmonton Valley Zoo’s red panda habitat. This initiative will design and install new plantings, boulders, and climbing features—carefully planned to minimize disturbance to the existing environment—while creating a dynamic, enriching space for these charismatic animals.
Ah, I've been waiting and hoping to see the Edmonton Valley Zoo's 2025 Master Plan, so I'm excited that they made most of it accessible!
My overall impressions are it's a good master plan. I fully support the short term push to increase husbandry and living spaces for their existing animals, transfer other animals out, and obtain AZA accreditation in September 2027! That's the most important thing that I was hoping to see from them.
I agree with the tightened focus on colder climate regions and their animals. The Edmonton Valley Zoo does not have the existing infrastructure nor the means to make substantial investments in less winter hardy animals. They should be able to build good homes for the select few small tropical animals that were identified in the Master Plan.
What surprised and impressed me the most are the extremely high standards for animal enclosure sizes! The exhibits for some of the smaller and medium animals are particularly high. They plan on providing over 20,000 square feet of exhibit space for arctic foxes! Many polar bear exhibits built within the past 25 years in the USA aren't that big!
The drawback of all those exceptionally large exhibits and tight focus on cold hardy species is a very limited animal collection plan. I counted less than 30 species of mammals (excluding a few domestics and ambassador animals), less than 15 birds, 1 reptile, 1 amphibian, an aquarium for arctic fish, and some invertebrates. Some of the species they selected will be difficult to obtain and only a few are managed by SSP programs. Notable cold hardy Asian animal species that aren't part of the Master Plan include snow leopard, manul, Przewalski's horse, Bactrian camel, markhor, Japanese macaque, and pheasants. It reminds me of recent Zoochat conversations about the limited species in AZA zoos and phase-outs. The Edmonton Valley Zoo is much more focused on cold hardy species than the vast majority of AZA facilities. If they don't have the space and resources for some of the more common and interesting cold-hardy animal species, then what hope is there for the future of animal species diversity in AZA zoos and aquariums?
I would never advocate for a 50-year old lone Asiatic elephant move to another facility and bring forward her remise because what any transfer would entail and impact upon the general healthy of an end-of-life care individual. Further, I do not think that changing a routine this individual elephant Lucy has known for the past few decades needs changing in relation to current AZA policy with elephant housing and husbandry. Lucy, for all intense purposes - I do hope -, will stay put ..., no matter what AZA defines policy nor AW-activists in their tunnelvision rides would advocate. Thank goodness that is so ...I'm extremely curious to see how they plan to obtain AZA accreditation within less than 2 years, when they currently hold a singleton female elephant in free contact (with a guide to boot) that they take on walks around zoo grounds/in public proximity, with no plans of action (as far as I'm aware) to change that so long as Lucy is alive - both of which are a huge no no by today's AZA standards.
I suppose they'd get grandfathered in very specially? I can't see a lot of other facilities who've made drastic changes to their programs in order to comply with standards be all to happy with that if it does come to pass.
That said - I totally think Edmonton is AZA material! And are totally deserving, especially given these changes to come.
I would never advocate for a 50-year old lone Asiatic elephant move to another facility and bring forward her remise because what any transfer would entail and impact upon the general healthy of an end-of-life care individual. Further, I do not think that changing a routine this individual elephant Lucy has known for the past few decades needs changing in relation to current AZA policy with elephant housing and husbandry. Lucy, for all intense purposes - I do hope -, will stay put ..., no matter what AZA defines policy nor AW-activists in their tunnelvision rides would advocate. Thank goodness that is so ...
Anyhow, what I am now hearing from Edmonton Valley Zoo in their current masterplan looks great and is a quite realistic approach to the future path for the zoo. I do however hope that they may get a wider diversity of birds, reptiles and amphibians from the more temperate climes.
BTW: Would be nice if they might at some point have an aquarium with freshwater fish fauna and invertebrates.... (well just dreaming ...)!
If AZA TAG are than they have lost slightly a sight on realities on the ground. AZA will have to deal with odd ones out elderly elephants that are not adaptable or even outright anti-social to natural herd structure. To think of animal welfare and animal wellbeing IS part and parcel of AZA Elephant AW Guidelines and Protocols, so a move down south or one of these dead end Elephant Sanctuaries.Yeah, I'm not advocating for a change either. I'll just be a bit surprised if AZA goes along with this, given how rigid they can be.