much as I wish I had seen any of them.
This sentence made me think Baby was dead, I had to check ztl and the Duisburg thread just to make sure he was still alive!
much as I wish I had seen any of them.
The squirrels are a no show for me in Burgers, however the Pallas Cat in blijdorp was very easily spotted at the back of his enclosure, chilling.Funny, I see them almost every time.
The pallas cat at Blijdorp (never seen) and the Montserrat orioles in Burgers' Bush (seen once) are no-shows for me.
Sorry for the scare, heh. I was mostly using it because I'd mentioned Harapan, who is no longer on display, combined with my feeling that I won't have the pleasure to see Baby any time in the near future. If I ever book an international zoo trip though, and he's there, it'll be Duisburg. No question in my mind.This sentence made me think Baby was dead, I had to check ztl and the Duisburg thread just to make sure he was still alive!![]()
I think just a nocturnal setting for a kiwi would work wonders. Maybe a nice nocturnal house exhibit or somethingThe first time I went to Stuttgart Zoo, The Kiwi House had CCTV in the inside enclosure, so visitors could see it. Why don't other zoos use this technique?
They were certainly visible there - although the enclosure was far from ideal to my mind. Paignton does have CCTV on its kiwi's nestbox, but all you usually see is a blob of hairy feathers. I suppose there must have been a reason why they put Bruce the echidna into the large enclosure when they had renovated the Nocturnal House - but I don't know why they didn't put the kiwi there instead.London Zoo's Moonlight World once had kiwis.
Columbus does this and the kiwi is quite active.I think just a nocturnal setting for a kiwi would work wonders. Maybe a nice nocturnal house exhibit or something
Columbus does this and the kiwi is quite active.
They rarely breed when on display (in nocturnal houses) because they get stressed by the noise and constant disturbance.They don't seem to be affected by daytime noise levels when kept in outside enclosures because they are "safe" when in their burrows or nest-boxes. In New Zealand almost all display birds are either young birds or adult birds not needed for breeding. Young birds make the best display birds because they don't get stressed to the same extent as adults, and when old enough get removed for breeding and replaced with different young birds.I'm pretty sure that, like Aye-Aye, kiwis tend to breed more readily when kept in a normal say-night cycle, this being the reason zoos do it.