Lincoln Park Zoo Lincoln Park Zoo 2008-2014

zoogeek@ Welcome to Lincoln Park Zoo, Blackrhino. Altho elephants can be viewed at Brookfield Zoo, it is a trek to go out there and their exhibit is outdated.

Lincoln Park Zoo turned the elephant yard into a rhino yard but it will be awhile (at least 5 years) before we see any rhino births due to the young age of the females.

Care to explain the situation with black rhinos at Chicago LP?
 
@kifaru bwana, we had an incompatible pair of rhinos. The female, Navaisha, was sent to Little Rock. You can see a video of her arrival at Little Rock at youtube.com.
 
@kifaru bwana, we had an incompatible pair of rhinos. The female, Navaisha, was sent to Little Rock. You can see a video of her arrival at Little Rock at youtube.com.

That Naivasha was shipped out I have known since its occurrence. What I meant here was the current situation. Which female replaced her and is the current pair compatible, what age constraints ... et cetera et cetera ?????? :confused:
 
Only one very old individual. One of the last of its kind in the U.S.

I posted pictures of our Afghan leopard at the gallery. He is originally from the SF Zoo and several years ago he was one of 9, I think, remaining Afghan leopards in NA zoos. I don't know what the current number is. The keepers do a fantastic job taking care of him.
 
I posted pictures of our Afghan leopard at the gallery. He is originally from the SF Zoo and several years ago he was one of 9, I think, remaining Afghan leopards in NA zoos. I don't know what the current number is. The keepers do a fantastic job taking care of him.

Your Afghan leopard is from the same source population as other former SSP animals. I do not understand the fad here with Afghanistan (or it must be all that ISAF .....). It is the Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor you are talking about.

Re populations: the SSP has made the determined policy/rationale phase out for Persian leopard conservation breeding in US zoos in favour of Amur leopard Panthera pardus orientalis only.
 
Your Afghan leopard is from the same source population as other former SSP animals. I do not understand the fad here with Afghanistan (or it must be all that ISAF .....). It is the Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor you are talking about.

Re populations: the SSP has made the determined policy/rationale phase out for Persian leopard conservation breeding in US zoos in favour of Amur leopard Panthera pardus orientalis only.

We call it the Afghanistan leopard. We use to call our pumas mountain lions, Andean bears spectacled bears and Amur tigers Siberian tigers. Maybe we can start a thread on discontinued species names?

Yes, I know we are phasing out the Afghanistan leopard in favor of the Amur leopard. Is it still 40 remaining in the wild?
 
Lincoln Park Zoo shedding its penguins, raising money for new animal houses

The Lincoln Park Zoo is closing its Penguin and Seabird House. They will soon be launching a capital campaign to renovate the Penguin House and the Kovler Lion House.

Lincoln Park Zoo shedding its penguins, raising money for new animal houses: Shia Kapos | Consumer | Crain's Chicago Business

(Crain's) — Lincoln Park Zoo is getting ready to close its popular penguin house, disbursing the birds to zoos elsewhere.

The zoo board is in the early stages of a capital campaign that also will update its landmark lion house.

"It's all in the conceptual stages," said a zoo spokeswoman, who said it was too early to put a price tag on the improvement efforts.

Work will begin on the Kovler Penguin-Seabird House as soon as zoo officials can find homes at other zoos and aquariums for the 22 penguins, 43 puffins and other sea birds now living there. The transfer will be easier on the birds during colder weather and could mean the polar birds will be gone before the annual ZooLights program, which runs from Nov. 26 to Jan. 2.

(Note: The Shedd Aquarium still has penguins if you need a waddling fix.)

Lincoln Park Zoo will have penguins again once a new home for the birds is built, but it's not yet known when that will be.

In a later stage of the capital campaign, zoo officials hope to redo (to some extent) the popular lion house, too. What it will look like and what the zoo can do to alter that historic building remains to be seen.

"In the lion house, we're constrained by landmark status," zoo Director Kevin Bell told me before the zoo was ready to announce the capital campaign. "We'd like more off-exhibit holding spaces (for the lion house); places for animals to breed and raise young. Sometimes you need off-exhibit space for that."

The revamp of the penguin house comes full circle for Mr. Bell, who oversaw the zoo's last capital campaign — a $125-million effort. As a young curator 31 years ago, he oversaw construction of the Penguin-Seabird House as well as the other bird facilities at the zoo.

As popular the penguins are, the facility must be closed and new one built. Age is taking its toll, acknowledges Mr. Bell.

"It's hard to believe 30 years have passed so quickly," he said. "I can honestly say I'm just as excited today about our plans as I was several decades ago when we laid the groundwork for the penguin house."
 
The Closing of the Kovler Penguin/Seabird house is long overdue I don't think I have been able to see the penguins through awful condenstion since I was a kid.The building is like a cave and way to small for its inhabitants.It's great to see an effort being made for its improvement.Hopefully the Kovler Lion House and the Helen Brach Primate House are next on the zoo's agenda.

Team Tapir
 
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