Hamilton Zoo Hamilton Zoo News 2014

Hamiltons Sumatran Tiger Pair Oz and Sali have been introduced to each other.
An eight-month COURTSHIP is almost unheard of nowadays, but it's paid off for nine-year-old Oz.

The Sumatran Tiger was brought to Hamilton from Australia last year TO MEET six-year-old Sali, as part of an international breeding programme.

The couple spent months in separate enclosures with a fence between them, to get ''used to each other'', and were placed together a week ago.

''Sali is definitely the dominant one in the relationship,'' said zoo-keeper Aaron GILMORE. ''She's really playful.''

Hamilton Zoo director STEPHEN Standley said the zoo was well prepared for cubs and staff hoped for a spring litter.

''Tigers carry for 3½ months and these two have been meeting for around five hours a day, so hopefully she's pregnant. If not, there's always the NEXT cycle.''
Tigerly love: When Oz met Sali - waikato-times | Stuff.co.nz
 
New Masterplan To Be Drawn Up

The Hamilton City Council have announced plans to develop a master plan for the Hamilton Zoo, which is definitely a good idea!

Story here: Plan to strengthen city?s cycle network | Stuff.co.nz

Meanwhile, councillors Angela O'Leary, Philip Yeung and Rob Pascoe have been appointed to a working group to oversee a strategic review of Hamilton Zoo and the development of a master plan for the facility.

The three councillors will be assisted by council staff and Seattle-based Studio Hanson Roberts, regarded as international experts in zoo design.

A draft zoo master plan is expected to be presented to the council's strategy and policy committee in November.

A community survey will be held this month to help determine if there are any gaps in services provided by the zoo.

A report by council staff warned that patronage at Hamilton Zoo could decline if there were no fresh reasons to visit.

A drop-off in visitor numbers would impact on the zoo's revenue and increase costs to ratepayers.

Speaking at the council's strategy and policy committee meeting, councillor Ewan Wilson queried the $80,000 budget allocated to the zoo strategic review and master plan.

In reply, Hamilton Zoo director Stephen Standley said Studio Hanson Roberts had more than 20 years experience in creative partnerships with zoos.
 
Meerkat's Colourful Poo

Why do the meerkats have multi-coloured poo???

Story & Video here: Inquiry into meerkat munchings - national | Stuff.co.nz

Normally cast in drab shades of brown, the droppings of Hamilton Zoo's meerkats took on an unnaturally colourful hue this week - much to the alarm of their keepers.

A close inspection of one of their tiny turds revealed an inquisitive meerkat had eaten an assortment of rubber loom bands.

The colourful bands are a must-have accessory for schoolchildren, leading some schools to ban them.

Zoo curator Sam Kudeweh said staff had no idea how the bands got into the meerkat enclosure but suspected they could have been accidentally dropped over the railing by a young visitor.

Meerkats are omnivores, eating plants, insects and smaller animals.

The pint-sized mammals are also expert foragers.

"Meerkats are relentlessly inquisitive and anything novel has to be investigated," Kudeweh said. "If one of the bands was broken, it would have looked all wiggly and meerkats will consume anything. Typically the adults will find food and the babies will nick it off them."

Hamilton's meerkat family includes three adult males, an adult female and two young offspring.

Kudeweh said it was rare for foreign objects to find their way into the animal enclosures and he asked visitors to be mindful of their belongings and rubbish.

"The vet is happy that no harm has been caused but our keepers will keep a close eye on the meerkats and if they start to look under the weather we will act quickly," she said. The tiny rubber bands could potentially cause a blockage in the animals' bowels.
 
An article on some of Hamilton Zoo's future plans.
Hello new neighbour - news - waikato-times | Stuff.co.nz
Camping under the stars and waking to the sight of giraffes drinking at a watering hole and hearing the distant roar of lions could become a reality under a plan to transform Hamilton Zoo.

From its humble beginnings as a game farm, work has started to reinvent the city's second-most-popular visitor destination over the next decade which could see the return of several popular species.

City councillors will be presented with a draft zoo master plan in November with the overall goal to maintain and boost visitor numbers.

Ideas to come out of zoo discussions so far include: "glamping" [luxury camping] on the zoo grounds; building a cafe or function centre overlooking the entire site; the reintroduction of otters and lions; and creating a shared entranceway with nearby Waiwhakareke Natural Heritage Park.

The master plan is budgeted to cost $80,000.

Hamilton Zoo director Stephen Standley said the draft plan was "still only ideas" but was an attempt to refresh the zoo. "Zoos inevitably have to keep reinventing themselves, but we don't want to be another Auckland Zoo, we want to be Hamilton Zoo and that's the critical thing."

In one initiative, corporate groups and visitors could camp overnight at the zoo and do "animally" activities during the day.

"You can imagine waking up in the morning, drawing the curtains back and there's a giraffe, legs splayed out, drinking at a watering hole and in the background you may have lions roaring," Standley said.

But any master plan had to be sustainable and cost controls had already ruled out pandas and elephants.

"We want to come up with a plan that's not uber-expensive but makes the most of the site and makes the most of the species we have," Standley said.

Former Hamilton mayor Russ Rimmington, who campaigned to bring pandas to the city in 2001, said such an initiative would have attracted hundreds of thousands of tourist dollars to the Waikato. However, he added that bringing pandas to Hamilton needed a champion to drive it and the opportunity was now lost.

Hamilton Zoo's point of difference was its endangered animals such as its white rhinoceros, he said.

Standley said Adelaide Zoo acquired two giant pandas in 2009 but the associated costs had left them with a $23 million debt.

"To get giant pandas, you have to pay $1m a year and a lot of money has to go into not just housing the pandas but all the auxiliary stuff and it has to happen all at once," he said. "Purely from a cost perspective it doesn't make sense."

Elephants were also off the zoo's shopping list because of their high maintenance costs.

"If we had 250,000 visitors a year, then elephants might be an option . . . It's not fair to have one or two elephants, they've got to be in a herd and you have to give them the opportunity to breed. At 120,000 visitors a year we can't go there, we would break the zoo."

The zoo's focus would, however, remain on exotic species.

Only 7 to 8 per cent of visitors were from overseas. "The reality is we are a zoo for New Zealanders and they want to come and see the bigger animals. We do savannah animals very well so let's capitalise on that," Standley said.

The master plan was being developed by a working group chaired by city councillor Angela O'Leary and assisted by United States-based planning and design firm Studio Hanson Roberts.

O'Leary said Hamiltonians had a close connection to the zoo, which housed "the pets we can't have at home".

Hamilton Zoo also had less concrete and more greenery than other zoos and had a special connection to the city's other green gem, the Waiwhakareke heritage park.

Friends of the Zoo member Betty Collins said the zoo was a fantastic recreational and educational resource for the region and hoped the council would support the draft master plan.

Once the Waikato Expressway was complete in 2019 and traffic could bypass Hamilton, visitors would need a reason to visit the city, she said.

"We've seen the support the council has given Hamilton Gardens and I think Hamilton Zoo is equally deserving of support from council.

"It just seems we've been in the backwaters a bit."

Hamilton and Waikato Tourism chief executive Kiri Goulter said the region's largest market was domestic visitors and the zoo was an ideal experience for them to enjoy.
 
A new male Zebra (called Malawi) has arrived from The National Zoo, Canberra
 
Rhinos keep warm with solar energy

Hamilton Zoo has installed a solar panel to provide energy to keep its rhino herd warm and dry at night.

Full story here: Smart Thinking Keeps Zoo?s Rhino Cosy and Dry | Zoo Aquarium Association

Hamilton Zoo’s hefty rhino herd will be kept warmer and drier through the energy of the sun and some smart technology.

The zoo has recently completed installation of a photo-voltaic (PV) solar panel in the savannah enclosure, a large area which is home to several of the zoo’s African species.

Hamilton Zoo Director Stephen Standley says the solar panel absorbs the sun’s energy and converts it into a usable power source to heat the special pads in the Rhinos’ night enclosure.

Mr Standley says the project is a joint initiative, involving zoo staff, Hamilton City Council’s energy team, installation firm S4 Solar and solar energy technology company Enphase. Enphase supplied the microinverters that convert the power from each solar module directly to AC electricity – the same as the power you would get from a wall socket.

Information and signage on-site, including a computer dial, will show the actual power generated at that point in time, as well as information about the amount of power required to run some common household items. The on-site signage then compares the cost of running these specific items with solar panels compared to conventional power, informing the public of the energy being harnessed.

“The result adds to the educational aspect of the zoo experience,” Mr Standley says. “We aim to inspire conservation action, and this project reflects that.”

Although the rhinos’ natural African habitat has temperatures similar to New Zealand, the Hamilton climate is wetter than the African wilderness. The animals – weighing up to two tons –need their stalls to be dried out from time to time.

Council’s Energy Management team supported the project and it’s one of a number of initiatives over the last two years which have focused on Council’s larger facilities. The energy management team aims to save 1,700,000 kilowatt hours of energy by July 2015, and so far 1,100,000 kWh has been made – an 8.5 per cent improvement on the larger facilities’ energy use.

The PV energy supply in this particular project was the ideal technology and approach, due to both the distance of the site from a power source and the opportunity to use it as an educational tool.
 
How does Hamilton rank among the New Zealand Zoos?

I know they have White Rhino, Zebra, Sumatran Tiger. What else in the way of major species can be seen there at present?
 
How does Hamilton rank among the New Zealand Zoos?

I know they have White Rhino, Zebra, Sumatran Tiger. What else in the way of major species can be seen there at present?

I would rank it second best, behind Auckland Zoo, and just ahead of Wellington Zoo, with Orana Park in fourth spot (those being the four major zoos).

Hamilton has a good collection of large mammals, others include cheetah, African wild dogs, chimpanzee, siamang, Brazilian tapir, giraffe, waterbuck, blackbuck, sitatunga & bison. There is also a relatively large collection of monkeys, most of the common smaller mammal species, a fairly decent collection of exotic birds, and an excellent native bird and reptile section.
 
Sumatran tiger, Sali has given birth to 1.1 cubs! A first breeding at Hamilton :D
Stuff

Very exciting news for Hamilton Zoo, and it must be very welcome after their years of being a non-breeding facility. Should provide a boost to visitors over summer.

The father is Oz, who came to Hamilton from Auckland Zoo, where he previously fathered cubs, after arriving there from Israel in ~2006.
 
Great news :)!

Which zoos apart from Auckland, Wellington and Hamilton have bred Sumatran tiger? Or is that just it?
 
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