After watching the latest Attenborough series,"Madagascar" on BBC2, I was wondering if Indri have ever been kept in any UK collections at all?
Richard Weigl's book "Longevity of Mammals in Captivity" gives 7 DAYS as the longevity record for an Indri in captivity [San Diego; Sept. 1965]. Either he was unaware of the Paris Menagerie animals, or else Crandall was wrong about (implying) some of them lived for almost a month. Can anyone shed more light on the Paris specimens?In his book “The Management of Wild Mammals in Captivity” (1964) Lee Crandall mentions that “eight or ten specimens were received at the Paris Menagerie in 1939, all of which died within one month”
Very few indri have ever been maintained in captivity.
There are a few - and breeding - in semi captivity on Madagascar ..
(off-topic) Baldur pm me ... on these + sifaks.![]()
Can anyone shed more light on the Paris specimens?
As zoos are now keeping Sifakas successfully, does that mean Indri would nowadays survive in European zoos too- if they ever became available?
I wonder if the success rate for keeping Sifakas in zoos in the past was any better than with Indri(s)?
As zoos are now keeping Sifakas successfully, does that mean Indri would nowadays survive in European zoos too- if they ever became available?
Very few indri have ever been maintained in captivity.
There are a few - and breeding - in semi captivity on Madagascar ..
In his book “The Management of Wild Mammals in Captivity” (1964) Lee Crandall mentions that “eight or ten specimens were received at the Paris Menagerie in 1939, all of which died within one month”.
Can anyone shed more light on the Paris specimens?
Nah, he was at andisabe, the national park where most people go to see indri.