Into the unknown: zoos of western France

Couldn't that have something to do with them being listed as invasive species?

I think that is unlikely and has more to do with a long husbandry of pinioning birds, which in France is much more notorious than in Central Europe.

Many thanks for these new reviews. I am quite surprised by your opinion on la Bourbansais. I was there five/six years ago and there was few to save with some real horror and a lot of quite simple enclosures. Well, maybe I will come back to make my own opinion !

I really enjoyed it here, but there are still some areas where you can see what kind of zoo it once was. It is only the Lynx enclosure that was really shabby, but Giraffes also ugly and too small... There are some of the older cages in use still, but the inhabitants at least have a fitting size...

Regarding Tregomeur I have to say that it's not the same owner than for la Bourbansais. Tregomeur is the local county's property. At the beginning it was a private zoo and was closed during the 2000's. The local county decided to refurbish all the zoo and the exploitation was given to la Bourbansais' owner.

My bad, the Bourbansais guidebook had Tregomeur as " notre site partenaire", so assumed they would have the same ownership...

The lemur islands are an heritage of the previous zoo and the lemurs remain in the park during closure and the building works.

That explains it then. Is this a model with an end in sight, or is it a permanent "memory"?
 
@lintworm Permanent from what I know. I think there are some breeding groups in there and lemurs are a great must see for visitors so...

I forgot to say that Tregomeur has some lands for extension but all the new exhibits (except the lions) since the re-opening were done on the original area.

How is the new malayan tapir exhibit. Looks good but in real ?
 
@lintworm Permanent from what I know. I think there are some breeding groups in there and lemurs are a great must see for visitors so...

I forgot to say that Tregomeur has some lands for extension but all the new exhibits (except the lions) since the re-opening were done on the original area.

How is the new malayan tapir exhibit. Looks good but in real ?

The Tapir exhibit is quite large, but the land part is quite narrow (but long) and I am not sure whether there are 2 outdoor enclosures. It looks like it was intended for the Pelicans only, but is still larger than e.g. Antwerp and others...
 
Brest, Océanopolis

If there is one zoological institution in France that is located at the end of the line, it must be Brest. In a remote corner of western Europe near the tip of Bretagne lies an aquarium that must ring a bell for anyone who has spent a bit of time on Zootierliste. There is no place on the continent where one can see more seal species and with Sea & European Otter present as well, it holds a good set of aquatic carnivores. It is very unfortunate that this place is so far away from everything, as it is an extremely interesting and mostly very good aquarium.


The aquarium consists of two separate buildings (or pavilions), the first contains the local aquariums (only Bretagne and surrounding waters), as well as the shops and restaurant. There is a huge bookshop on site, with relevant literature, unfortunately for most of us only French titles are sold, but it is an impressive feat nonetheless. The second building houses the polar and tropical sections. When it comes to amount of litres, this is not a big aquarium as the total water volume is only 4 million litres. But it is not quantity that makes this aquarium stand out, even when it is by no means a small aquarium. Starting in the Bretagne pavilion, there is a large number of aquaria highlighting different ecosystems along the Bretagne coast and the NW Atlantic. These single aquaria are mostly of a very high level and do a great job in replicating these ecosystems. I especially liked the Eel Grass meadow tank, which is not a very big tank, but does a great job in showing its inhabitants in natural surroundings. These inhabitants include Sea Sticklebacks, Three-spined Sticklebacks, Garfish, Pipefish and smaller gobies. A great example of how the small can be beautiful. A not huge, but deep tank holds Gray & Harbour Seals as mammalian representatives. Overall there must be around 25 tanks here, showing a wide array of local species. It is clear that the visitor area has gotten a major renovation and displays look very smart and species are shown on bilingual touch screens, which is always a plus.

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Bretagne pavilion with the seal rescue in front

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Eel Grass tank

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Harbour & Grey Seal tank

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Atlantic tank

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Bearded Seal


The second pavilion houses the species that will interest zoochatters most. The polar section focuses on two major tanks. The first houses Southern Rockhoppers, Gentoo Penguins and King Penguin in what is one of the larger all-indoor penguin enclosures in Europe. The real interest is however the second tank which holds a pair of Bearded Seals and a pair of Ringed Seals (no Harp Seal anymore though). Ringed Seals are a small species anyway, but they are absolutely dwarfed by their bearded cousins, which look and behave like small Walruses. At 700.000 litres this tank is certainly not small and it is relatively deep, but for the Bearded Seals it is already on the small side. A lack of enrichment makes for a relatively boring display underwater though. The land part has however a large portion of real ice, but might not be to everyone’s taste with a few colourful “polar” buildings. A few smaller cold water aquariums are also present, as is a lot of education and taxidermy specimens, like Polar Bears, Albatrosses and Elephant Seals. The tropical pavilion hosts a very impressive collection, of sometimes rarely shown fish. The downside here is that there are multiple species kept in aquaria that are too small for them. The biggest tank is almost one of the first encountered and may not be huge, but is well structured and with a Sawfish holds a species rarely shown in Europe. The Sawfish is however almost too big already for this 1 million litre tank. Another highlight is a long living coral reef tank, with a high diversity of smaller fish. There are several other larger and smaller tanks around and the collection is definitely the strong point here, as in terms of presentation a renovation in the same style as the Bretagne pavilion would do a lot to increase appearances. A small tropical hall with the obligatory Piranha rounds off this part and feels like a weird closing act. Outside are two smallish enclosures for the Sea Otters and European Otters. The Sea Otter pool is however extremely deep and was home to a trio of hyperactive otters, which didn’t show any stereotypical behaviour.

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Tropical pavilion and polar pavilion (on the right) from outside

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Antarctic Penguin enclosure

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Arctic seal enclosure (the pool continues underneath all the land parts)

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Arctic Aquaria

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Entrance to Tropical pavilion

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Main Shark tank

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Main coral reef tank

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Sea Otter enclosure

Overall this is one of my favourite aquaria and it is almost strange that Nausicaa added a 10 million litre extension, where Brest didn’t. As apart from that tank Brest is easily the superior of the two. So even though it lacks the mega-aquarium type of stuff, there is a lot to see and appreciate here and it is certainly worth spending some time to make your way to Brest (I used >3 hours here). Not only because all those rare seals won’t be around for ever….

There are more pictures in the gallery:
Océanopolis Brest - ZooChat
 
Aquarium de Vannes


Originally my plan was to combine Océanopolis with the zoo of Pont-Scorff, but I found out that the animal rights activists who had taken over this zoo, closed it for visitors (and they now seem to find out running a zoo costs money). I had a longish drive east to the next larger zoo, but I decided to visit a smaller institution along the way in Vannes.

There is almost next to no information on this aquarium, zootierliste only listed 7 species, of which one was a Sawfish. Fortunately the Sawfish is no longer there, as there is no suitable space here and fortunately there were a great deal more than 7 species on show. The aquarium is not big and not particularly modern. All in all it has about 40 small tanks, which show local species, coral reef species and some tropical freshwater species. The aquarium has a distinct 80ies look and it most reminded me of the aquarium of Ouwehands Dierenpark. Which means there is nothing much wrong with most tanks, except that they should/could have been bigger. There are two larger exhibits here. The first is a 115.000 litre tank housing Blacktip Reef Sharks, Green Sea Turtle and some other species. This is the centrepiece of the aquarium and is really too small for its inhabitants. A nearby second shark tank with Zebra Shark is also too small. The strangest exhibit is themed after the Parisian sewers and is the home of a large Nile Crocodile that was found in those sewers in 1984. I guess it is great for such a small aquarium to have such a star. Species-wise the highlight for me were a group of electric rays (fish not radiation), I don’t think I had ever seen those before. All in all there is nothing for which you should flock to this small place. Further down the road is a small butterfly garden, but I decided to skip that in favour of some grocery shopping. Butterfly gardens don’t really interest me anyway and the Netherlands is the home of some of the best (Burgers’, Rotterdam, Artis, Emmen), so I would likely be disappointed anyway…

Pictures will follow once a gallery is created.
 
This is a great thread and it continues the tradition of excellent travel blogs on ZooChat. I particularly enjoy reading about the zoos and aquariums that I didn't know existed and those are the reviews that interest me the most.

Does anyone have an accurate total of the number of zoos in France? The ZooChat gallery only has a small portion of the overall list, with zootierliste a good resource but that site often includes establishments with domestic animals. What would be the total number of French zoos and aquariums with exotic species? Jonas Livet, via his website Les Zoos dans le Monde, has hundreds upon hundreds of French zoos listed, although he is generous in what he deems to be a 'zoo'. In fact, there are more than a thousand French zoos listed on that site, but some are now closed and others are more related to farms.

Does anyone have an estimate of the zoos in France that are currently open to the public and contain exotic animals? Is there a list somewhere that can be reproduced here? Thanks!
 
Brest, Océanopolis

If there is one zoological institution in France that is located at the end of the line, it must be Brest. In a remote corner of western Europe near the tip of Bretagne lies an aquarium that must ring a bell for anyone who has spent a bit of time on Zootierliste. There is no place on the continent where one can see more seal species and with Sea & European Otter present as well, it holds a good set of aquatic carnivores. It is very unfortunate that this place is so far away from everything, as it is an extremely interesting and mostly very good aquarium.


The aquarium consists of two separate buildings (or pavilions), the first contains the local aquariums (only Bretagne and surrounding waters), as well as the shops and restaurant. There is a huge bookshop on site, with relevant literature, unfortunately for most of us only French titles are sold, but it is an impressive feat nonetheless. The second building houses the polar and tropical sections. When it comes to amount of litres, this is not a big aquarium as the total water volume is only 4 million litres. But it is not quantity that makes this aquarium stand out, even when it is by no means a small aquarium. Starting in the Bretagne pavilion, there is a large number of aquaria highlighting different ecosystems along the Bretagne coast and the NW Atlantic. These single aquaria are mostly of a very high level and do a great job in replicating these ecosystems. I especially liked the Eel Grass meadow tank, which is not a very big tank, but does a great job in showing its inhabitants in natural surroundings. These inhabitants include Sea Sticklebacks, Three-spined Sticklebacks, Garfish, Pipefish and smaller gobies. A great example of how the small can be beautiful. A not huge, but deep tank holds Gray & Harbour Seals as mammalian representatives. Overall there must be around 25 tanks here, showing a wide array of local species. It is clear that the visitor area has gotten a major renovation and displays look very smart and species are shown on bilingual touch screens, which is always a plus.

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Bretagne pavilion with the seal rescue in front

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Eel Grass tank

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Harbour & Grey Seal tank

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Atlantic tank

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Bearded Seal


The second pavilion houses the species that will interest zoochatters most. The polar section focuses on two major tanks. The first houses Southern Rockhoppers, Gentoo Penguins and King Penguin in what is one of the larger all-indoor penguin enclosures in Europe. The real interest is however the second tank which holds a pair of Bearded Seals and a pair of Ringed Seals (no Harp Seal anymore though). Ringed Seals are a small species anyway, but they are absolutely dwarfed by their bearded cousins, which look and behave like small Walruses. At 700.000 litres this tank is certainly not small and it is relatively deep, but for the Bearded Seals it is already on the small side. A lack of enrichment makes for a relatively boring display underwater though. The land part has however a large portion of real ice, but might not be to everyone’s taste with a few colourful “polar” buildings. A few smaller cold water aquariums are also present, as is a lot of education and taxidermy specimens, like Polar Bears, Albatrosses and Elephant Seals. The tropical pavilion hosts a very impressive collection, of sometimes rarely shown fish. The downside here is that there are multiple species kept in aquaria that are too small for them. The biggest tank is almost one of the first encountered and may not be huge, but is well structured and with a Sawfish holds a species rarely shown in Europe. The Sawfish is however almost too big already for this 1 million litre tank. Another highlight is a long living coral reef tank, with a high diversity of smaller fish. There are several other larger and smaller tanks around and the collection is definitely the strong point here, as in terms of presentation a renovation in the same style as the Bretagne pavilion would do a lot to increase appearances. A small tropical hall with the obligatory Piranha rounds off this part and feels like a weird closing act. Outside are two smallish enclosures for the Sea Otters and European Otters. The Sea Otter pool is however extremely deep and was home to a trio of hyperactive otters, which didn’t show any stereotypical behaviour.

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Tropical pavilion and polar pavilion (on the right) from outside

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Antarctic Penguin enclosure

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Arctic seal enclosure (the pool continues underneath all the land parts)

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Arctic Aquaria

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Entrance to Tropical pavilion

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Main Shark tank

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Main coral reef tank

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Sea Otter enclosure

Overall this is one of my favourite aquaria and it is almost strange that Nausicaa added a 10 million litre extension, where Brest didn’t. As apart from that tank Brest is easily the superior of the two. So even though it lacks the mega-aquarium type of stuff, there is a lot to see and appreciate here and it is certainly worth spending some time to make your way to Brest (I used >3 hours here). Not only because all those rare seals won’t be around for ever….

There are more pictures in the gallery:
Océanopolis Brest - ZooChat

Thank you so much for the trip down memory lane here! I visited Oceanopolis with my family when I was very young, and have always clearly remembered the Arctic pavilion. It's great to see pictures of the enclosures again to remind myself that it's not me imagining seeing harp, bearded and ringed seals in a large Arctic harbour set up :D
 
Thank you so much for the trip down memory lane here! I visited Oceanopolis with my family when I was very young, and have always clearly remembered the Arctic pavilion. It's great to see pictures of the enclosures again to remind myself that it's not me imagining seeing harp, bearded and ringed seals in a large Arctic harbour set up :D

The Bearded Seals are relatively "new", so that might be your imagination ;) although they shortly kept them in 2000/1 according to ZTL.
 
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Butterfly gardens don’t really interest me anyway and the Netherlands is the home of some of the best (Burgers’, Rotterdam, Artis, Emmen), so I would likely be disappointed anyway…

And the one at Orchideeënhoeve tops them all imo :)

Nice trip reports, although the surges of envy are annoying :p
 
The Bearded Seals are relatively "new", so that might be your imagination ;) although they shortly kept them in 2001/1 according to ZTL.

They definitely had a third type of seal - I clearly remember the small ringed seals and the larger harp seals, and then a third seal type that was also large in size. Though you're right I could be imagining things...

EDIT: having just checked with my parents, we visited in early 2000, so I will indeed have seen bearded seals :)
 
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Does anyone have an accurate total of the number of zoos in France? The ZooChat gallery only has a small portion of the overall list, with zootierliste a good resource but that site often includes establishments with domestic animals. What would be the total number of French zoos and aquariums with exotic species? Jonas Livet, via his website Les Zoos dans le Monde, has hundreds upon hundreds of French zoos listed, although he is generous in what he deems to be a 'zoo'. In fact, there are more than a thousand French zoos listed on that site, but some are now closed and others are more related to farms.

Does anyone have an estimate of the zoos in France that are currently open to the public and contain exotic animals? Is there a list somewhere that can be reproduced here? Thanks!
I think the most complete you can find is this one : La liste des zoos, parcs animaliers et aquariums en France - Zoonaute.net
There are MANY zoos and aquaria in France !

As for the enclosures at la Bourbansais : I visited this zoo in 2013 and 2017. It got better in between, with several of the old and ugly enclosures gone. I plan to visit again next month.

Oceanopolis is my favorite aquarium :) Visited in 2017.
 
Le Guerno, Parc de Branféré


This modern zoo has some clear similarities with Pairi Daiza, but is in most important respects completely different. Like Pairi Daiza the goal of Branféré is to show nature and people in perfect harmony. This is not reached by an abundance of cultural theming, but rather by having an attractive garden setting with loads of free-ranging species (which off-course can be fed popcorn) and there is a complete absence of larger carnivores. There are some similarities with Parc de Cleres, as the zoo is also built around a chateau and with Mara, Red-necked Wallaby, Reeves’s Muntjac, Chinese Water Deer (10+), loads of waterfowl and multiple crane species, there is a lot of overlap in free-ranging species. Branféré is however more ambitious than Cleres and that shows. What is striking from the moment you enter the zoo is how smartly everything is designed. Education, buildings, the planting and all the renovated buildings; they all breathe the same sophisticated modern approach. The design and landscaping teams are definitely to be complimented.



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First view after entrance



The park can be roughly divided into four different zones: the castle and surroundings, the Indian valley, an archipelago of primate islands and the hoofstock zone. With large carnivores being absent the collection focuses heavily on hoofstock, primates, some larger rodents, waterfowl and large birds. Interestingly I did not miss lions or bears, I only noticed later that there weren’t an. Upon arrival I kept left, which quickly took me past two typical primate islands. The design of these islands is quite simple with plenty of living plants and basically every primate enclosure had a few large living trees. The White-cheeked Gibbons, Ring-tailed Lemurs and Red-fronted Lemurs living on these islands had nothing to complain. It was also obvious immediately that a large number of waterfowl species is kept. In this area it was a high diversity of goose and shelduck. Two large grassy lawns for Llama, Yak & Bactrian Camel complement this area. What follows is the first view on the small chateau around which the zoo is built. The lawns are completely filled with Mara and Wallaby, but many birds and a larger number of Chinese Water Deer are also easily seen. There is also a bird show here, which mainly shows non hunting species (parrots, ibises, pelicans, vultures), which is necessary as loads of snacks lie on the lawns around it.

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Gibbon Island

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Park landscape

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Free-ranging Red-crowned Cranes (with Sarus, White-naped also free-ranging)

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Chateau


Past a smartly renovated area of older buildings lies the only aviary of the zoo. It is not large, but well-planted and has an interesting selection of SE-Asian birds. Simple but spacious enclosures follow for the obligatory Red Panda and Asian Small-clawed Otter. Around the corner is the huge Indian valley. At first sight it looks like a simple square meadow, but there is a large muddy area, a big pool and tall grass cover on the sides. The main attraction for normal people are the Indian Rhino, but large herds of ungulates are here as well. Whereas Nilgai and Blackbuck might not be too interesting, the 15 Barasingha and the group of Hog Deer, which keep to the cover on the sides, are much more interesting. There are two spacious enclosures here and a multitude of viewpoints. Even the stables are more than just functional and are quite spacious compared to the competition. A large empty wetland area begs for a huge walkthrough aviary, but the only other enclosure here is for Indian Muntjac and Chinese Water Deer (and a lawn with more Blackbuck and Emu). Unfortunately I did not see the muntjac as the enclosure is huge and full of vegetation, so sightings are down to luck…. Slightly uphill is a rocky area, which has two very pretty and tastefully designed enclosures for Harbour Seals (with crystal clear underwater viewing) and a large group of Humboldt’s Penguin. The seal pools could be larger and the penguin pool deeper, but overall the design with only real rocks is very pleasing and the enclosures are already quite good.

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SE Asian aviary

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Indian Valley, part of first enclosure

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Indian valley, second enclosure

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Hog Deer foraging in tall grass

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Indian Muntjac enclosure

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Path to Harbour Seal underwater viewing

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One of two Harbour Seal pools.

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Part of the Humboldt's Penguin enclosure

With the Maned Wolf enclosure currently empty (except for some more Chinese Water Deer) the next enclosure is a large island for Cotton-topped Tamarins, with large numbers of ducks in the moat. What follows is a great enclosure for Pygmy Hippos. There are two enclosures, both with lots of shade, land area and a large pool. The indoor enclosures are more functional, but far better than in CERZA. I don’t think the Marabou and Great White Pelicans like to share their space with the hippos, but that fits in the general problem of having birds as ornamentals. The route then passes the first fantastic Siamang island, with again a large number of live trees. The forested area next door will be developed for Okapi soon, and I look forward to that. The path then winds slightly upwards and you get a first view of the savannah. CERZA should have a look here as with smart landscaping the edges are hidden away and the relief is used to avoid fences elsewhere. The savannah is split in two, but visually they are the same. On one side live the more aggressive Grant’s Zebra and Blue Wildebeest, on the other side there are Blesbok, Greater Kudu, Scimitar-horned Oryx, Giraffes and Ostrich. Stocking levels are relatively low, but that at least means that the vegetation is not overgrazed… In this area there are also large paddocks for Somali Wild Ass, Guanaco + Lowland Tapir + Capybara + Rhea (with a large pool) and large wooded enclosures for Reindeer and Visayan Warty Pig. Black-tailed Prarie Dogs are also present. The petting zoo apparently has the only Hampshire Sheep in European zoos according to ZTL. The path then winds back towards the entrance.

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Smaller Pygmy Hippo enclosure

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Siamang island

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Part of African savannah


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Visayan Warty Pig enclosure


This leaves the centre part of the zoo to still be seen and this is a large area with lots of water and smaller islands. This “archipel” area houses a large number of larger birds (all unwillingly flightless), including White-breasted Cormorant, Sacred Ibis, multiple flamingo and pelican species and more waterfowl. The stars are however the primates. This area has large and pretty islands for the likes of Ruffed Lemurs, Black Howler Monkey, Colobus, Pileated Gibbon, Squirrel Monkeys, Variegated Spider Monkeys and Siamang. All in all the collection of this zoo might be somewhat limited, but the zoo is expanding at a slow but steady rate. What is done, is however done tastefully and mostly right. I can’t imagine there are many better places to be a primate or an ungulate in Europe, but as bird you are still more of a landscaping tool than a valued living animal. Large free-flight aviaries would really be of added value here. Overall I really liked the atmosphere in this place. It shows that design can really enhance the zoo experience. For a zoo nerd there are also enough interesting species on show, so if you are in the area around Nantes, don’t hesitate to stop by here.



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2nd Siamang island

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Caribbean Flamingo enclosure

More pictures are in the gallery (and I apologize for the reddish pictures...):
Parc de Branféré - ZooChat
 
I think the most complete you can find is this one : La liste des zoos, parcs animaliers et aquariums en France - Zoonaute.net
There are MANY zoos and aquaria in France !

The list is not so good there.

You can see on official site of French Zoos an interactive map where you can find every members : Association Française des Parcs Zoologiques - Les zoos en France (on this page clic on "Accéder à la carte" and you will have the map).

It's not complete as all zoos are not members but you will have a large number.

For aquariums, I find another page with an interactive map too : Membres - Aquariums de France uca-asso

Same that with French Zoos association.

The more complete site is Jonas' one but, as @snowleopard said, he put all things with animals. You can have more precize search but it's not easy.
 
Shame on you @lintworm for visiting Branfere without contacting me before. You could have a great visit with some behind the scenes and great explanation of what is done and, maybe, what will be done.

The park has a great turn ten years ago and is still on the good wave.

All is nice on show but it's now the same for off-show. The new technical area built behind the birds show facility is a great addition for the zoo's work and the hoofstock house in the asian plain (behind the rhinos house) is a delight.

There are great plans for future new exhibits and we can hope the best here, including more aviaries !
 
Zoo la Boissiere du Doré

The original plan was to visit the Ocearium in le Croisic after Branféré, but as my experiences with aquaria and COVID regulations were not good, I decided to stay in the open air and drove to the other side of Nantes. This zoo has a slightly older feel than most others until now and in design and species selection had some more German influences. Contrary to many other French zoos, there were Great Apes here, as well as species like Bongo, Malayan Tapir and Javan Langur which I associate with established zoos. This was also the first time since Biotropica that I saw mock rock being used in a zoo, and really bad examples too… There were also efforts at cultural theming in the Sumatran Orangutan enclosure, which largely failed too…

The zoo roughly consists of three zones, which show different steps in their development. The first part of the zoo is a crowded patchwork of enclosures. Single enclosures were mostly fine and spacious enough (Sumatran Tigers excepted), but the design was simple and there was no coherent theme. The collection consisted of a mix of mammals and birds (and Giant Tortoises) and houses some interesting species like Brahminy Kite, Black-necked Crane, Clouded Leopard and Yellow-footed Rock Wallaby. The latter were kept in a long walk-through aviary, which was shared with Emu, Red-necked Wallaby, some parrots and Kookaburra. An enclosure highlight was an island with many trees for Golden Lion Tamarin and a large breeding group of Pink-backed Pelicans

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Black Panther viewing

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Australian aviary

The second zone feels like the first enlargement of the zoo and there are spacious enclosures for Gorilla, Golden-cheeked Gibbon, Gelada, Sumatran Orangutan + Small-clawed Otter + White-handed Gibbon here among others. The orangutan enclosure is large, but with too little structure and a lot of ugly temple theming. Closeby is also a large S-American walkthrough aviary, which feels distinctly underused as there are only few free-flying birds. This will have to do with the presence of Coppery Titi… Side enclosures here hold Margay and Six-banded Armadillo + Two-toed Sloths and there is a small ugly building with a few terraria here as well.

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Orangutan enclosure

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Part of S-American walkthrough

The second extension zone features mostly African species, but there are also spacious enclosures for Timber Wolves and Snowleopards here. The area further consists of a large lemur walkthrough (Ring-tailed, B&W Ruffed and Red Ruffed) and a nice Squirrel Monkey walkthrough, a huge Serval cage, a pair of large Cheetah enclosures and the bird show arena. The bird show here is well worth seeing and it seems all French zoos copy one another and the general level of these shows is quite high. The main focus of the extension area are however the two African savannahs and the huge African Lion enclosure (Asiatic Lions remain in a smallish enclosure in the centre of the zoo). The Rotschildt’s Giraffe savannah, shared with Nile Lechwe, Blesbok, Scimitar-horned Oryx, Greater Kudu and Watusi cattle is just a large square piece of grass with some trees. The White Rhino savannah is much larger and has nice undulating terrain and is inhabited by a breeding group of White Rhino, Grant’s Zebra, Blue Wildebeest, Gemsbok and a bachelor herd of Nile Lechwe. The latest extension is a long walk to see a huge square clearly fenced enclosure for African Lions, some apparently pure W-African. The design is simple with some higher viewing areas for the lions and a very fake replica of the lion king rock… Here and around the savannahs are lodged that you can rent for the night. The Africa theming is mostly lacking and this is certainly not Pairi Daiza, but these lodges seemed popular enough.

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Giraffe savannah

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part of new African Lion enclosure


Overall this is clearly a private zoo that operates on a tight budget, but it is an interesting enough place with good, ugly and few actually bad parts. For a French zoo the collection is especially interesting and there are even some nice birds present, with more large species than on average. It might not be the best zoo in the area around Nantes, but it is worth a stop along the way. The square Nantes – Tours – Limoges – Royan seems to be the place with some of the highest concentrations of interesting zoos on the continent, so that was to be my home for the next week.

More pictures here:
Zoo La Boissière du Doré - ZooChat
 
There seems to be a complete absence of elephants from the zoos that you are visiting. Do you think that is because they are too expensive and high-maintenance exhibits for these privately owned zoos?
 
Zoo la Boissiere du Doré

The original plan was to visit the Ocearium in le Croisic after Branféré, but as my experiences with aquaria and COVID regulations were not good, I decided to stay in the open air and drove to the other side of Nantes. This zoo has a slightly older feel than most others until now and in design and species selection had some more German influences. Contrary to many other French zoos, there were Great Apes here, as well as species like Bongo, Malayan Tapir and Javan Langur which I associate with established zoos. This was also the first time since Biotropica that I saw mock rock being used in a zoo, and really bad examples too… There were also efforts at cultural theming in the Sumatran Orangutan enclosure, which largely failed too…

The zoo roughly consists of three zones, which show different steps in their development. The first part of the zoo is a crowded patchwork of enclosures. Single enclosures were mostly fine and spacious enough (Sumatran Tigers excepted), but the design was simple and there was no coherent theme. The collection consisted of a mix of mammals and birds (and Giant Tortoises) and houses some interesting species like Brahminy Kite, Black-necked Crane, Clouded Leopard and Yellow-footed Rock Wallaby. The latter were kept in a long walk-through aviary, which was shared with Emu, Red-necked Wallaby, some parrots and Kookaburra. An enclosure highlight was an island with many trees for Golden Lion Tamarin and a large breeding group of Pink-backed Pelicans

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Black Panther viewing

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Australian aviary

The second zone feels like the first enlargement of the zoo and there are spacious enclosures for Gorilla, Golden-cheeked Gibbon, Gelada, Sumatran Orangutan + Small-clawed Otter + White-handed Gibbon here among others. The orangutan enclosure is large, but with too little structure and a lot of ugly temple theming. Closeby is also a large S-American walkthrough aviary, which feels distinctly underused as there are only few free-flying birds. This will have to do with the presence of Coppery Titi… Side enclosures here hold Margay and Six-banded Armadillo + Two-toed Sloths and there is a small ugly building with a few terraria here as well.

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Orangutan enclosure

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Part of S-American walkthrough

The second extension zone features mostly African species, but there are also spacious enclosures for Timber Wolves and Snowleopards here. The area further consists of a large lemur walkthrough (Ring-tailed, B&W Ruffed and Red Ruffed) and a nice Squirrel Monkey walkthrough, a huge Serval cage, a pair of large Cheetah enclosures and the bird show arena. The bird show here is well worth seeing and it seems all French zoos copy one another and the general level of these shows is quite high. The main focus of the extension area are however the two African savannahs and the huge African Lion enclosure (Asiatic Lions remain in a smallish enclosure in the centre of the zoo). The Rotschildt’s Giraffe savannah, shared with Nile Lechwe, Blesbok, Scimitar-horned Oryx, Greater Kudu and Watusi cattle is just a large square piece of grass with some trees. The White Rhino savannah is much larger and has nice undulating terrain and is inhabited by a breeding group of White Rhino, Grant’s Zebra, Blue Wildebeest, Gemsbok and a bachelor herd of Nile Lechwe. The latest extension is a long walk to see a huge square clearly fenced enclosure for African Lions, some apparently pure W-African. The design is simple with some higher viewing areas for the lions and a very fake replica of the lion king rock… Here and around the savannahs are lodged that you can rent for the night. The Africa theming is mostly lacking and this is certainly not Pairi Daiza, but these lodges seemed popular enough.

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Giraffe savannah

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part of new African Lion enclosure


Overall this is clearly a private zoo that operates on a tight budget, but it is an interesting enough place with good, ugly and few actually bad parts. For a French zoo the collection is especially interesting and there are even some nice birds present, with more large species than on average. It might not be the best zoo in the area around Nantes, but it is worth a stop along the way. The square Nantes – Tours – Limoges – Royan seems to be the place with some of the highest concentrations of interesting zoos on the continent, so that was to be my home for the next week.

More pictures here:
Zoo La Boissière du Doré - ZooChat
Thanks for this review on my favorite zoo !
The first part of the zoo is the oldest and the director want to get ride of it. Most exhibits in this area will disappear in the next few years. When the old black leopards won't be here anymore their exhibit will go to a smaller species. The tigers won't have their old and too small enclosure for many years too. The bears will have a new enclosure next to the african lions next year, the asian lioness is very old. Old the empty space will be for a new tiger exhibit.
The australian exhibit itself is built on an area where were a few years ago macaws, red-necked wallabies and donkeys.
Sébastien Laurent is very aware of his zoo's problems. Come again in a few years ! :D

I prefer natural rock too. The old wolves exhibit, with a wooden viewing point and water between wolves and visitors was better in my opinion, for example.

As for the orang-utans, they had real trees...before 1999 and the big storm wich destroyed all but one :(
 
There seems to be a complete absence of elephants from the zoos that you are visiting. Do you think that is because they are too expensive and high-maintenance exhibits for these privately owned zoos?
You're right @DavidBrown. All these zoos have between 100.000 and 300.000 visitors each years without public funds. We heard about elephants for CERZA since a long time but the cost and land required are a problem.

On lintworm journey there was Planète Sauvage, a quite important safari drive through with 2/3 elephants but I don't know if our master visited it.

And to be complete, there are a dozen of elephants facilities in France, distributed in all corners, and all except one (Maubeuge) are in private zoos (but we have few public ones).
To compare, it's quite similar to UK but we have less elephants and a few potential breeding groups (la Palmyre, Beauval, le Pal, Plaisance du Touch, Safari de Peaugres).
 
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