Find zoo photos which could be taken in the wild!

Jurek7

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
I was fascinated by this photo of baboons at Cabarceno, which could well be on a rocky outcrop in Africa:

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What photos in the gallery fascinate you, because they could be taken in the wild?
To make it more difficult, the photo should:
- Show quite a lot of surroundings (so not just an animal portrait)
- Show animal not native to the zoo area
- Cannot show only water, only sky or other featureless surface.
 
And these, all taken at BirdWorld Kuranda

Pale-Headed Rosella (just ignore the Java Sparrow lol)
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Radjah Shelduck
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Nicobar Pigeon
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Black-Masked Lovebird
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Hmmm, going through my photography gives few results - which I may just take as a challenge the next time I visit a zoo. This is probably the closest result, Fiona and Panda at Assiniboine Zoo. AZ doesn't have too many natural exhibits where I could get an angle that would hide the fencing - truly the curse of living in the flat prairies. I do have plenty of photos of the bears that would qualify if they weren't from Manitoba :p
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A picture I took at the North Carolina Zoo
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The fact that the trees are obviously not African mean this one doesn't really fit either.

Sorry if it sounds like I'm being harsh but this thread has really strayed from its original purpose - this isn't a place to just post zoo photos, they have to look they could have been taken in the wild - not all of the photos on this thread currently look like that. If you think a random person looking at the photo would probably conclude that the photo was taken in captivity, it doesn't belong here.
 
Yeah. The fact that no barrier/fences can be seen doesn't mean it looks like it could be taken in the wild.

For the thread, i'm pretty sure more than some photo in the Highland wildlife park gallery could qualify,
 
The fact that the trees are obviously not African mean this one doesn't really fit either.
There are also some pretty clear fencelines behind the elephant and right in the back of the photo; the larger trees in the background have guards around their trunks; and the deciduous Northern Hemisphere habitat is obviously also wrong for the antelope at the back.
 
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