Were they previously saying they’d be showcasing African Leopards? I assumed they would have Amur Leopards as stand-ins as most zoos do that participate in the SSP.The zoo has been teasing the new exhibit with short reels, we have seen ones for the lions, painted dogs, and cheetahs, but they finally showed of the African Leopard....and its a melanistic, which all but kills any hope they will have pure African Leopards
RUN, don’t walk. Predators of Asia & Africa opening June 22| Fort Worth Zoo |
Everything they posted specifically mentioned African Leopards, even the giant sign they had posted at the zoo, and the recent announcement of the exhibits release still said African Leopards. This is what gave me hope they were going to import some pure ones from Africa, FT Worth Zoo has a history with african imports as their lion pride and striped hyenas were imports.Were they previously saying they’d be showcasing African Leopards? I assumed they would have Amur Leopards as stand-ins as most zoos do that participate in the SSP.
I just seen that when looked up the exhibit on their website, it does make mention of African Leopards. Is it possible they actually imported some? Maybe they did but I presume they’re going to use Amurs. I know when San Diego was doing Africa Rocks, at least a couple different places made mention of African Leopards, especially one of their design plans. But turns out they’re really Amur LeopardsEverything they posted specifically mentioned African Leopards, even the giant sign they had posted at the zoo, and the recent announcement of the exhibits release still said African Leopards. This is what gave me hope they were going to import some pure ones from Africa, FT Worth Zoo has a history with african imports as their lion pride and striped hyenas were imports.
I plan to visit the week after the exhibit opens(and hopefully this heatwave will be over) so I will hopefully be able to confirm which type of leopard it is. The video they posted does match closely with pictures of melanistic african leopards found in nature so it is still possible it's a pure african just a morph. Amur's have longer fur than african's. African's would do way better in Texas's hot summers than Amurs would, but I guess we will have to wait until the exhibit is open to know for sure.I just seen that when looked up the exhibit on their website, it does make mention of African Leopards. Is it possible they actually imported some? Maybe they did but I presume they’re going to use Amurs. I know when San Diego was doing Africa Rocks, at least a couple different places made mention of African Leopards, especially one of their design plans. But turns out they’re really Amur Leopards
Predators
Woah that’s indeed amazing news! I bet some zoochatters will be very much excited to plan a trip there soonQuick update to my post from yesterday. Fort Worth Zoo responded to my question on Facebook. and confirmed that both their African Leopards are 100% pure African Leopards, both are siblings and one is melanistic.
Then again, if they went through all the time and effort to import African leopards in the first place, there's a high chance that the zoo picked out which cats'd be the most showy. That said, don't wanna extend this debate further and just bask in the fact that an AMERICAN zoo has legitimate African leopards.Given the great rarity of melanism in wild African leopards, I am not sure a zoo reply on facebook is enough evidence....
Then again, if they went through all the time and effort to import African leopards in the first place, there's a high chance that the zoo picked out which cats'd be the most showy. That said, don't wanna extend this debate further and just bask in the fact that an AMERICAN zoo has legitimate African leopards.
Then again, if they went through all the time and effort to import African leopards in the first place, there's a high chance that the zoo picked out which cats'd be the most showy. That said, don't wanna extend this debate further and just bask in the fact that an AMERICAN zoo has legitimate African leopards.
It's also possible that these leopards came from a farm in Africa that bred them, which could explain the melanistic one.They are so rare that a black leopard in Kenya a few years ago was the first confirmed black African leopard in 100 years. See the link below:
https://www.escapesafarico.com/post/the-discovery-of-the-africa-black-leopard
So unless the origin of these animals becomes clear, I remain doubtful....
I don’t know, unless the zoo is clear about where they got these leopards from, this sounds like a “dude trust me bro” from them. I am sure the most accurate answer regarding the lineage of these leopards is either from ZIMS or a DNA test.Quick update to my post from yesterday. Fort Worth Zoo responded to my question on Facebook. and confirmed that both their African Leopards are 100% pure African Leopards, both are siblings and one is melanistic.