Kobe animal kingdom has full-flighted pelicans which is rare for a Japanese zoo. To my knowledge most of them are pinioned.
Of courseYou do know that their flight has to be restricted in order to keep them in, right?
I have a distinct feeling that what I said was misinterpreted, but I’m not sure how.
I have a distinct feeling that what I said was misinterpreted, but I’m not sure how.
I am against pinioning and for large netted exhibits. I apologize for not being very clear.Were you in favour or against pinioning? Or do you want netted exhibits for large flighted birds?
So this place having a full grown Saddlebill is an accident waiting to happen???This is likely one of the biggest reasons why large storks, large herons, and cranes are often not kept as walk-in aviary birds: they are capable of doing serious damage with the sword-like bill. There are stories of Saddle-bills and Marabou slicing to the bone in a single lunge. These come from keepers who had to catch up the birds, but that happening to a guest would be a pretty ugly situation.
Here's the link to that story about the person being killed. It was part of a ritual that has been discontinued since the 1920's. I'd like to think that clearly it happened because the stork was being harassed and it was just trying to defend itself. From what I've seen zoos in Southeast Asia/Australasia keep Black Necks behind a 3-4 ft fence with no incidents and there's even one in a bird show in Australia Zoo's Crocoseum.There's at least one incident of an adult human being killed by a black-necked stork, so there's that argument against walk-throughs also.
Which species? Were they only aggressive during the breeding and nesting season? Did you have to use a riot shield when going into their exhibit?I've worked with super-aggressive cranes before
Sandhills - the aggression from the male was pretty much year round, though there was a seasonal peak. I used a rake to hold him at bay while I serviced the exhibit. If he had been something larger, like a whooper, I probably would have wanted better protective gear. I wear glasses, so that at least let me feel like I had some eye protection (my boss at the time loved to tell and retell the story he had of a guy who'd lost his eye to a crane).Which species? Were they only aggressive during the breeding and nesting season? Did you have to use a riot shield when going into their exhibit?
The wild Sandhills I've been near don't show any aggression even at close quarters. I wonder if its possible to rank crane aggressiveness based on the specific genuses as which are the least to most aggressive among Balearica, Anthropoides, Bugeranus, Antigone, and Grus. I have heard no issues with Crowned Cranes. They seem pretty chill unless you're trying to take their eggs.Sandhills - the aggression from the male was pretty much year round, though there was a seasonal peak. I used a rake to hold him at bay while I serviced the exhibit. If he had been something larger, like a whooper, I probably would have wanted better protective gear. I wear glasses, so that at least let me feel like I had some eye protection (my boss at the time loved to tell and retell the story he had of a guy who'd lost his eye to a crane).
This male crane was somewhat adept at hopping his exhibit fence and had to be re-caught fairly often until we finally fixed it. Once he was outside of his enclosure, he was nowhere near as aggressive, even when we grabbed him - perhaps he knew he was out of his territory.
I've also worked with grey-crowned crane, didn't get anywhere near the same levels of aggression.