Just found these old pictures taken at the Bronx Zoo. One of a mountain gorilla according to the description.
=Another thing is that those gorillas (which I may well be mixing with San Diego's) were young and didn't live for long, while this is an impressive adult male.
I think the "crocodilian mix photo" is fascinating!
I'm pretty sure I can see Gharial, Cuban crocodile, Slender snouted crocodile, Specticaled caimen and American Alligator (not 100% about the two animals in the background (the one on the right I suspect is a Nile Crocodile)).
I wonder what happened in this exhibit at feeding time?
To my knowledge, the Bronx Zoo never had Mountain Gorillas.
Besides, these pictures were taken in the "new" Gorilla house which opened in 1950. Certainly no Mountain Gorillas since 1950.I'm pretty certain that male is 'Mambo', the Western Lowland male who replaced 11 year old Makoko after his tragic drowning in 1952(?) Mambo was still a youngster then so this must have been taken at the end of the 'fifties as he's mature in this picture.
Bronx did have 'Mountain' Gorillas at that time- well, Eastern Lowlands at any rate and in those days they were often referred to, as were San Diego's two Eastern Lowland males, as 'Mountain Gorillas.' At the Bronx, 'Mambo' lived with an older Eastern Lowland female called 'Sumaili' until they got a young male, (Pilipili) of the same race from Antwerp. After Makoko's death they 'repaired' their 4 gorillas into respective 'mountain' and Western Lowland pairs- Sumaili & Pilipili/ Mambo & Oka. There's an article about introducing Mambo & Oka together in a very old edition of 'Animal Life' magazine.
'Pilipili' didn't last very long but 'Sumaili' at least, lived to a ripe old age in that Ape House, which I've seen but unfortunately all those Gorillas were dead by then.
That sent me to consult Peter Brazaitis' memoir, You Belong In A Zoo! (2003). He worked in the Reptile House for a few decades starting in the '50s and although he doesn't answer your question (as far as I could discover) he seems to indicate that the mixing of crocodilians there was not an unusual event. he also repeatedly talks of "a good old crocodile fight."![]()
Bronx did have 'Mountain' Gorillas at that time- well, Eastern Lowlands at any rate and in those days they were often referred to, as were San Diego's two Eastern Lowland males, as 'Mountain Gorillas.'
"The San Diego Zoo's male mountain gorilla Ngagi weighed 639 pounds just before his death, and his companion Mbongo is sometimes reported as weighing 660 pounds."
That sent me to consult Peter Brazaitis' memoir, You Belong In A Zoo! (2003). He worked in the Reptile House for a few decades starting in the '50s and although he doesn't answer your question (as far as I could discover) he seems to indicate that the mixing of crocodilians there was not an unusual event. he also repeatedly talks of "a good old crocodile fight."![]()
To my knowledge, the Bronx Zoo never had Mountain Gorillas.
Besides, these pictures were taken in the "new" Gorilla house which opened in 1950. Certainly no Mountain Gorillas since 1950.I'm pretty certain that male is 'Mambo', the Western Lowland male who replaced 11 year old Makoko after his tragic drowning in 1952(?) Mambo was still a youngster then so this must have been taken at the end of the 'fifties as he's mature in this picture.
Bronx did have 'Mountain' Gorillas at that time- well, Eastern Lowlands at any rate and in those days they were often referred to, as were San Diego's two Eastern Lowland males, as 'Mountain Gorillas.' At the Bronx, 'Mambo' lived with an older Eastern Lowland female called 'Sumaili' until they got a young male, (Pilipili) of the same race from Antwerp. After Makoko's death they 'repaired' their 4 gorillas into respective 'mountain' and Western Lowland pairs- Sumaili & Pilipili/ Mambo & Oka. There's an article about introducing Mambo & Oka together in a very old edition of 'Animal Life' magazine.
'Pilipili' didn't last very long but 'Sumaili' at least, lived to a ripe old age in that Ape House, which I've seen but unfortunately all those Gorillas were dead by then.
I've got an old edition of 'Animals' magazine [which eventually morphed into 'BBC Wildlife'] with that article in. Was there one in Animal Life as well? Not being more than usually picky, but it was before I started to get 'Animal Life".