So what was Highland Wildlife Park’s contribution in Budapest?
An interesting update of HWP's contributions at this year's EAZA conference in Budapest;
So what was Highland Wildlife Park’s contribution in Budapest? Two posters and a video were presented on novel husbandry research to enhance infant survival rates of Pallas’s cats, a feisty kitty from central Asia, as well as an update on the coordinated breeding programme we manage and the support mechanism we have established for Pallas’s cat researchers in the field. Updates and recommendations were discussed for the takin, a large goat-like beast from the eastern Himalayas, and European bison breeding programmes we manage. Four separate presentations were given to explain how we will be able to exchange animals and manage threatened hoofed mammal breeding programmes with our colleagues in North America and Asia; currently we cannot import hoofed mammals from Asian zoos. We chaired a session that oversees all the wild goat and sheep breeding programmes, an increasingly threatened group of mammals, and we were asked to contribute to a policy session that was to address the problem that hybrid tigers present to tigers of known origin. Advice was sought of us on a wide range of topics from Amur leopard enclosure design to how an American institution may be able to get fresh blood for a large captive herd of Nilgiri tahr, an odd hoofed mammal from southern India. I think it is safe to say that we have increased the wave height in our pond.