Miscellaneous exhibits:
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I'll cover the Dragons In Danger house in my next post, after I finish work, as it will likely cover more photographs than can be uploaded to a single post. After this point, I intend to cover Monsoon Forest, the Aquarium, and any smaller exhibits which have currently slipped my mind, and then discuss the conservation and captive-breeding record of Chester.
I'll cover this point again later, but it's not "eventual" reintroduction - its ongoing and current reintroduction, much as is the case for the Sand Lizard captive breeding project I already mentioned.
- This exhibit contains a large colony of Western Sand Lizard - a species which is critically-endangered in the UK, and which Chester regularly breeds for reintroduction into the dune habitats of Lancashire, Merseyside and northern Wales; the extreme right of the exhibit is separated-off and contains a smaller open-air terrarium for European Adder:
- There aren't terribly-many photographs of the Butterfly House within the gallery, but it is a sizeable building which not only contains around a dozen species of butterfly, but also free-roaming species such as Trinidad Stream Frog, Tanzanian Red-legged Millipede, Graham's Anole and (I think?) Panther Chameleon. I'll look for better photographs amongst my own shots, but for now:
- Again, we don't have many shots of the Reticulated Python exhibit within the Realm of the Red Ape house, but it is by far the biggest exhibit for the species I have seen - appropriately so, given the fact the zoo holds a particularly large individual. The exhibit provides a lot of vegetation cover and other means by which the inhabitant can escape view, including climbing material on several levels and angles. Interestingly, one entire side of the exhibit comprises a window to the outside - meaning the inhabitant is able to get a large amount of daylight and external view. I shall try to find further (and better) photographs showing the length of the exhibit (about 5 or 6 metres I reckon) as these shots are rather foreshortened:
- Realm of the Red Ape contains about another half-dozen exhibits for category taxa - both vertebrate and invertebrate - which are rather pleasant and well-designed; for instance this exhibit for Forest Dragon and Asian Giant Toad:
- The Jaguar House contains several category-relevant displays, including a large tank for Titicaca Water Frog, and an extremely good aquarium tank for around 30 species of Amazonian fish which is integrated into the base of the sloth exhibit within the house. It is worth noting here that the establishment of the European breeding programme for Titicaca Water Frog (which has spread to 20 European collections in a very short span of time) was the responsibility of Chester, which imported stock from Denver Zoo in 2019.
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I'll cover the Dragons In Danger house in my next post, after I finish work, as it will likely cover more photographs than can be uploaded to a single post. After this point, I intend to cover Monsoon Forest, the Aquarium, and any smaller exhibits which have currently slipped my mind, and then discuss the conservation and captive-breeding record of Chester.
While the breeding work that Chester is doing with Bermuda Skinks and Montsenny Brook Salamanders is very impressive, especially if eventual reintroduction is the long-term goal, I think it is hard to praise their rarity status in captive collections when they are offshow, personally.
I'll cover this point again later, but it's not "eventual" reintroduction - its ongoing and current reintroduction, much as is the case for the Sand Lizard captive breeding project I already mentioned.



