Interesting plans, I'm shocked they don't envision keeping a single 'roundhouse'! Well, not really shocked...
One curious inclusion is the California exhibit's area of 'vineyards' surrounding a hillside path. I would like to see the California condor exhibit brought to the front of the exhibit area, perhaps to that vineyard area, to be more visible along the main walkway; it would also make sense to move it to the area where the grizzly exhibit is proposed, as it would then be adjacent to the existing fine Children's Discovery Center with its extensive California condor interpretive exhibits.
I do seem to see a Peninsular pronghorn group on one of the concept art visualisations of the California canyon exhibit? That does qualify as a local conservation story and hopefully theming, does it not?I think 'theming' is strongest when it is integral to the place and the experience. It's best when it doesn't seem like theming and your mind doesn't register it as such. If there's a fruit salad of wood lodges and vineyards and wild west saloons, it'll be a waste. LA has plenty of 'themed' experiences and the zoo won't stand out if it follows suit. Also most of the imagery that has been presented is clearly Northern California and doesn't really constitute as a 'local' exhibit. It's almost like calling a Bayou exhibit a local species exhibit for a zoo in Kansas.
This might sound lazy, but can someone summarize the main points in the above video for people who don't have time to watch it?
That's horrible news about the ibex herd being euthanized.
Potentially this might affect other endangered Caprinae and Antilopinae taxa at the LA Zoo.That's horrible news about the ibex herd being euthanized.