It remains a mystery to this day where the opossum came from, though there is a feral colony of red-necked wallabies living in the area. As you said Patrick marsupials can live in cold climates.
Eventually a spokesman from Stoke museum correctly identified it.The local paper contacted Chester Zoo for a comment. A spokeswoman said it could not possibly be an opposum because the are only found in hot climates. She was the press officer and had no knowledge of animals. Nevertheless the paper put all their faith in her statement (she was from a zoo so she must be right), disregarding the person from the natural history department of the museum.QUOTE]
That's pretty classic too! Press Office(r)s in some zoos do have a lot to answer for sometimes. The ZSL one put out some pretty erroneous info when Gorilla Kingdom opened recently- how it was the first time the gorillas had 'seen the open sky since they were babies in Africa' A nice idea but totally untrue for all three of the animals- so where are they coming from...?
...As you said Patrick marsupials can live in cold climates.
Still on the subject of Wallabies- Yellow footed ones...
Some years ago I saw photos of a big colony of Yellow-footed Rock Wallabies in a rocky enclosure at Adelaide Zoo. Is this colony still surviving/thriving and how many are in this group nowadays?
I also saw this most attracive species for myself at either Melbourne or Taronga Pk, I can't remember which one but it was only a small group- pair or trio-at that time. Does this zoo still keep them nowadays and are they thriving.... or just surviving?
you should see the koalas we have down here in victoria (if you haven't already). much thicker furred and larger than the northern races you see in most overseas zoos. i imagine they can deal with some pretty cold weather for short periods..