Sounds like a great addition.According to the master plan, it is planned to be demolished and replaced with an "Equatorial Africa" Exhibit.
Sounds like a great addition.According to the master plan, it is planned to be demolished and replaced with an "Equatorial Africa" Exhibit.
That is good to hear, but my main point was that it is a bit too preliminary to exclaim Omaha is one of the top five zoos on the planet...
Ranking zoos is a subjective exercise but one that always interests many ZooChatters. Tim Brown, chairman of the IZES, emails with me back-and-forth at least twice a week and he just told me this morning that he has now visited exactly 763 zoos and he would put Omaha in the world's top 5....with Berlin at #1 and then San Diego, Bronx, Berlin Tierpark and Omaha rounding out the list. Other than Jonas Livet, I've never known of anyone having visited more zoos than Tim and so I think that his view holds a lot of weight. However, each to their own and I can respect many other opinions on the matter as zoos such as Leipzig, Vienna, Saint Louis and Singapore also get a lot of attention.
The crazy thing about Omaha is that it was already an extraordinary zoo (with some serious flaws, much like all zoos) before the $73 million African Grasslands, $27 million Children's Adventure Trails/Bird Amphitheater (opening in August) and next year's $21 million Asian Highlands complex. Other zoos around the world must be astonished at the rate of progress in a zoo found in Nebraska...of all places!![]()
Muller's Gibbon@GraysonDP what species is Gray Gibbon?
I was there on Wednesday. Blue monkeys (saw 2) were on exhibit in Gorilla complex, right next to black macaques.Yesterday I visited the zoo and interviewed its director Dennis Pate for my blog Zoophoria, which should be up shortly. I visited again today before flying out of Omaha. I have posted several pictures to the gallery including ample ones from African Grasslands (which is beyond exceptional and transcendent.) A full review is coming soon but here are a few notes:
- Gray Gibbon is in the first habitat in Lied Jungle.
- No sign of blue monkeys. Have they been phased out?
- Wolf's Guenon in side habitat in Lied Jungle.
- I saw the Malayan tapir using the upper part of the land area, not just the bank
- I saw all six elephants on my visit. When I was there they were in the family quarters and south habitat closest to the barn. Zebras and impalas were in the larger elephant yard.
- The white rhinoceros was in a part of the savanna closed off from the giraffes, impalas and ostriches.
- Komodo dragons and squirrel monkeys can now be fuond in the Cat Complex. Amur tigers live in the habitat that once featured lions.
- Construction on Asian Highlands is well underway.
A candidate for breeding (if ... a little youngish given that wild bulls normally are 20-25 years when joining the fray). Hopefully, this will produce good tidings in a year or 3 from now!