Kinds of Birds Not Seen in Captivity

Crotalus

Well-Known Member
5+ year member
I've been browsing around American zoo collections and a few foreign ones and I've noticed a conspicuous lack of grebes in captivity. As far as I know, they aren't particularly hard to keep. Do they require loose grass or other special conditions to do well in an aviary or exhibit?

Grebes inspired me to make a thread about kinds of birds not seen or rare in captivity. If you know anything about why these birds aren't kept, please let me know.

PLEASE NOTE
-This is not for species; it is for groups of birds or genuses; however, monotypic genuses are alright, like hoatzins or something similar

Crotalus
 
There are some captive grebes in Japan, although without my photos I couldn't tell you what or where. I think Little Grebes at Tama?
 
Lake Biwa Aquarium:
full

Lake Biwa Museum's aquarium - ZooChat

Inokashira Park Zoo:
Little grebe, October 2017 - ZooChat
full


As far as I know, only little grebes are in captivity in Japan.
 
I have seen Australasian grebes at Taronga Zoo and Territory Wildlife Park in Australia.
 
A facility or two hold Pied-billed Grebe here in the US.

However I've never heard of Gaviiformes in any collections.

I haven't either... only longer term captive references to loons I've seen have been a couple research facilities.

As far as other families go, shearwaters and petrels come to mind, as well as the storm-petrels. Albatrosses currently only represented by a pair of Laysan Albatrosses at Monterey Bay Aquarium. Hoatzin is another. Other notables would be tropicbirds, mesites, oilbird, finfoots, sheathbills, crab-plover, skuas, todies, jacamars, honeyguides, and a wide variety of passerine families.

Nightjars, swifts, swallows, frigatebirds, ground-rollers are only very rarely kept for various reasons.
 
Seen quite a few captive grebes:

Black-eared at Walsrode and Augsburg.
Little at Dresden, Koln, Frankfurt, Olching and Innsbruck.

Never seen a captive loon/diver but they pop up occasionally in European collections, usually as short-lived rescue animals.
 

At least a single rescued individual of the Great Skua is/was on show in Ecomare in the Netherlands.

I've seen single, presumably rescued, skuas at Artis, Walsrode and Mablethorpe over the years - think these are all long gone now though.


Black-eared at Walsrode and Augsburg.

Black-necked (aka Eared), presumably, rather than Black-eared! :D

Black-necked were at Zurich and Stuttgart on my last respective visits as well, but are certainly not common in captivity. Little Grebes are a bit more common, but still not very, very. Don't think I've seen any others (even Great Crested, which being widespread and conspicuous you'd think would turn up as a rescue from time to time).
 
On my visit to the Montreal Biodome in September 2017 there was a stunning summer plumage red-necked grebe in their beaver enclosure, but I don't think it has been seen since so it might not have been that long-lived. It was an absolutely fantastic bird to see up close and even from an underwater viewing window, though!

The only other captive grebe I've seen is black-necked in Walsrode, as mentioned above.
 
On my visit to the Montreal Biodome in September 2017 there was a stunning summer plumage red-necked grebe in their beaver enclosure, but I don't think it has been seen since so it might not have been that long-lived. It was an absolutely fantastic bird to see up close and even from an underwater viewing window, though!

The only other captive grebe I've seen is black-necked in Walsrode, as mentioned above.

That's a shame! I wanted to plan a visit to Canada in the nearish future and was hoping to see the grebe.

Personally I have seen Black-Necked (Walsrode) and Pied-Billed (Aquarium of the Pacific) in captivity, though I'm unsure whether the latter is still present.

I know skimmers, genus Rynchops, do very poorly in captivity. I've only seen one in a zoo ever, a Black Skimmer rescued by the Bronx Zoo. I saw it only once, and I actually wasn't sure if it was even still alive until I could confirm it was breathing. My understanding is it died after a very short span at the zoo.

~Thylo
 
I've seen single, presumably rescued, skuas at Artis, Walsrode and Mablethorpe over the years - think these are all long gone now though.

Zoogiraffe pointed out a skua to me at Mablethorpe, and I was like, so what, there are gannets. I never photographed it.
 
I've seen single, presumably rescued, skuas at Artis, Walsrode and Mablethorpe over the years - think these are all long gone now though.
London Zoo had Antarctic skuas during the 1970s and 1980s. (I remember them best housed in one of the old Birds-of-Prey Aviaries but they were also kept in the Eastern Aviary too.)

Personally I would love to see both species of Picathartes again but, regrettably, I doubt I ever will.
 
I don't know I would say never, but birds that are rare (comparatively):
swifts, hummingbirds, woodpeckers, albatrosses and petrels,
 
Do scoters do well in captivity? Eiders of course do, they're in a fair few collections...
 
Nice to know they are still there. What would be my chances of seeing them?

The aquarium posts photos/videos of them fairly frequently on social media. However, I'm unsure of the chances of seeing them. When I visited in March I couldn't find any reference to the albatross encounter they used to do or any way to see one of them... was quite disappointed. :(

Never seen a captive loon/diver but they pop up occasionally in European collections, usually as short-lived rescue animals.

Any clue why they're short lived?

I know skimmers, genus Rynchops, do very poorly in captivity. I've only seen one in a zoo ever, a Black Skimmer rescued by the Bronx Zoo. I saw it only once, and I actually wasn't sure if it was even still alive until I could confirm it was breathing. My understanding is it died after a very short span at the zoo.

~Thylo

That I didn't know, curious if anyone knows why they don't do well?

Do scoters do well in captivity? Eiders of course do, they're in a fair few collections...

I've wondered about that, very few collections seem to hold them. Surf scoter in particular seems like it would be a showy exhibit bird from the wild ones I've seen, but I've never heard of them being kept anywhere.
 
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