Whaaaat!? I love surprises!Wild Animal Encounters now has two Caracal.
Darling Downs Zoo no longer has Barbary Sheep (at least on display).
I actually just tried to look on their Facebook page earlier today (when I posted the above about Currumbin) to see if they had Cheetah yet - but Facebook now does that thing where you need to log in to see anything and I don't Facebook.Wild animal encounters received their first cheetah today!
I actually just tried to look on their Facebook page earlier today (when I posted the above about Currumbin) to see if they had Cheetah yet - but Facebook now does that thing where you need to log in to see anything and I don't Facebook.
Most (all?) zoo sites are open-access so anyone can view them even if they aren't on Facebook (like me). Usually there is a banner which covers the page when you open it, but if you click "not now" where it says to sign in, the banner moves down the page. It's still there but only covers the bottom of the page.I only joined Facebook to look at zoo pages and a few specialists sites. But having joined I don't find I have to 'log in' further to access any of the zoo ones or the others either. A few(not the zoo ones) are 'closed' sites you have to apply to join but once you are 'in' you are able to access them without further log-in, or I can anyway.
Most captive bat spp tend to be flying foxes, which Aust has plentiful supply of. Why import a spp that looks roughly the same? The fact that Ghost bats (a 'microbat'; admittedly a large microbat) appear to do well in captivity, is a bonus for visitors to Aust zoos.So Australia has never had an exotic species of bat? I find that hard to believe...
And now (from their Facebook page) two more Cheetahs, a pair of sisters named Ziva and Zane from South Africa. The other Cheetah they have is also a female from South Africa, named Blanca.Wild animal encounters received their first cheetah today!