Laughingthrushes, Bulbuls, & White-eyes in North America

The problem with many of these species lists is that there are no good comprehensive sources of information.
Most AZA zoos in US use ZIMS but some use Tracks. If you have access to ZIMS you will get most of the AZA animals but not all. Institutions using Tracks are set up differently and there's no way to check animal holdings. It's mostly used by aquariums but Denver, Lincoln Park and Fort Worth are all major zoos that use Tracks.
If there's an AZA SSP for the species the latest program posting tells you what's where but that's not necessarily up to date if the last time the population was planned was a couple of years back.
None of this takes into account non-AZA zoos/privately owned etc.
Zoo websites are often useless because most places only list a percentage of their collection. For my institution there are 350 species but only 90 on website.
Good luck to those who post lists, it's still worth doing!
 
The problem with many of these species lists is that there are no good comprehensive sources of information.
Which I’ll just throw out there is precisely the reason these lists are being made in the first place :p. We American zoo-goers acknowledge that we don’t have a tracking website for species at facilities in both the entirety of North America and North American territories, like Europe has with Zootierliste.

None of this takes into account non-AZA zoos/privately owned etc.
I know I and other ZooChat list makers don’t constrain ourselves to AZA-only facilities: There are several high profile facilities that aren’t AZA that are still definitely worth checking.

Zoo websites are often useless because most places only list a percentage of their collection. For my institution there are 350 species but only 90 on website.
This is why me and other species list creators on ZooChat are wishy-washy with zoo websites and have to go based on reputation and observation: If the website is consistently known for not providing coherent and reliable lists of species they have (Columbus is a good example of this), that’s when skepticism comes into play. If it’s a well-known and renowned facility, though, we usually can get confirmation from people on ZooChat alone.
 
Did some looking in to Golden White-eye - wasn't particularly fruitful. Most I've found is as of last year there were c. 25 birds at 10 AZA facilities; haven't confirmed who any of those are. They're not an AZA recommended program so we'll probably see them continue to dwindle out.

It seems there are no longer any at Sedgwick County Zoo
 
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