Lost, rare, and non-existant media of Indonesian zoos and public aquariums

Actually this reminded me of a book I've regrettes not buying on sale, "Tiga Macan Safari" written by the Taman Safari Group about how Taman Safari evolved from a travelling circus consisting of 3 tigers. It was published in 2019, I'll have to check if it's still in stock

Toko Buku Online Terbesar | Gramedia Digital
Same! I was trying to get a hand on the book for a while now and it were always out of stock in online stores. Judging from the cover and theme, I would guest it centered around the travelling circus days, but I hope some info on TSI's early years are also fleshed out.

I always thought the "three tigers" are the two Manansang and Toni Sumampau o_O
 
Talking about species which existence in a zoo are ambigous, another case that I took notice of is the warthog at Taman Safari Bogor.

An stuffed warthog housed in a glass casing is present in one of sheltered resting platform in the Meerkat-Mandrill complex. It have no sign at all, but it can be easily spotted just behind the meerkats exhibits.

This specific complex has always kept meerkats and mandrills for a long time, so I didn't really found no place on where the warthogs would be located if they're truly been displayed at some point.

These are my theories from what I think to be likely to unlikely, but still possible. Though all of these couldn't explain the lack of signage:
  1. This is just a random stuffed animals that aren't related to the former park's collection at all. Worth noting that atleast in the early 2010's (Around 2011-2012), this complex is heavily marketed as a "Lion King" exhibit, with the meerkats and mandrills to represent the characters of Timon and Rafiki, respectively. Pumbaa the warthog is also a very popular character from the series and is associated with Timon the meerkat. Maybe they couldn't get a warthog to complete the roster for some reason and instead make up for that by adding and stuffed, possibly fake warthog instead.
  2. The warthog is one of the warthog or even the one warthog that was already acquired by the park when its alive, but passed away during the habituation period for some reason. Since warthog is probably quite a prized animal in zoos, the park doesn't simply threw away the warthogs and instead used them for other purposes, like for an stuffed collection.
  3. The warthog at some point was kept and displayed by the park in the past, died atleast somewhere in the 2000's or even earlier in the late 90's, and later put on display again as a stuffed animals. Not really much explanation aside from the fact that they do did the same thing with their former polar bears (Bjurn and Tasha) in the now Humboldt penguin exhibit.
An image of the hut containing the stuffed warthog from @snowleopard.
African Hut - near Meerkat Exhibit - ZooChat

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Bison dan Beruang di Kebun Binatang Surabaya Kritis
There was a time when Surabaya Zoo had American bison btw, maybe now the enclosure is filled with watusi cattle.
The "Grizzly bear" was an American black bear, named Beno, that was imported from Canada in 2000, alongside an female named Eliza (Which died earlier in 2010). Both Beno and Eliza contracted skin cancer. Despite the cancer probably coming from natural sources, the living condition of Beno was reportedly horrid.

It also need to be reported that the lone plains bison was already an old individual by around 2012 (25-27 years old). The old news also reported than an leopard and an "white" Sumatran tiger named Santi had died during that time. Dying, sick, and neglected animals were huge problem in Surabaya for a long time.

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Beno, Beruang Grizzly yang Kena Kanker Kulit - Greeners.Co
 

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An drive thru exhibit for lemurs located near the park's exit. It has waterfall and a sign with ilustration of a lemur skull in it. The exhibit is possibly removed at some point in the mid-2010's and the lemurs were moved to Australian Outback.
This "drive-through" lemur exhibit is most likely the current Müller's gibbon exhibit, which does indeed housed a pair of ring-tailed lemurs for a short time in December of 2023.

The road that the exhibit can be cleary viewed at is also the road that would lead further down to the exit if you're parked further up into the park. I do vaguely remember seeing the early 2010's lemur exhibit even with the ilustrated lemur skull, though the exhibit was larger and more lush in foliage (Complete with said waterfall) as I remember it. Though it was probably because I was only seven during that time.

Photo of the exhibit by @snowleopard.
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Muller’s Gibbon Exhibit - ZooChat
 

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A footage of SeaWorld Indonesia in 2004 showing an aquarium located at the current car aquarium site housing bamboo sharks.
To cut off some time and the awkwardly long footage of a kid, here's some summary of the video as well as some stuffs that aren't mentioned;
  • Several footages of the former freshwater section with old tanks for red-bellied piranha, rainbowfishes, and electric eel (Current super red arowana tank), as well as old footage of the arapaima aquarium.
  • A long footage of one of the former dugong.
  • As @Caribbean Flamingo said, there's a now-removed bamboo shark tank as shown in the video.
  • More footage of the former saltwater crocodile group, additionaly this footage shown that the now-mangrove exhibits were open-topped.
  • An small tank designed based around submarine window with jellyfish, before the opening of the Jellyfish Sphere area.
  • An large reef fish tank with a couple of platax and surgeonfishes, an small tank with damselfish and cardinalfish (As well as an small crab), the former milkfish tank, moray eel tank, pufferfish/porcupinefish tank, lionfish tank, former spiny lobster tank, the former large coral reef tank (Including a group of razorfish), and the former large seahorse tank.
  • An former gallery commemorating some sort of "cooperation" with aquarium.
  • The museum display; including a tiger shark jaw (Possibly of their former sandtiger shark), jaws for other sharks (tawny nurse shark, hammerhead, and, interestingly, mako shark)
  • The former massive pool with blacktip reef shark, flapnose ray, and starfish, as well as touch pools for horseshoe crab and hawksbill sea turtle.
  • Footage of the iconic main tank and the underwater tunnel, including notable former inhabitants like wedgefish and Parni the giant stingray.
 
Another footage of SeaWorld Indonesia in 2005 showing a complete view of the old freshwater zone before it was demolished to make a way for aquarapaima in 2007 and also a view of the coconut crab exhibit.
 
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Another footage of SeaWorld Indonesia in 2005 showing a complete view of the old freshwater zone before it was demolished to make a way for aquarapaima in 2007 and also a view of the coconut crab exhibit.
This is the first ever concrete confirmation of the coconut crabs and their exhibit at SeaWorld Indonesia! I noticed that you have quite the skill and time in digging old medias of this specific aquarium, I do wish to hear more informations (I.e timeframes, origin/death, etc.) other than just live footages of them if you just so happen to have that information.
 
Another footage of SeaWorld Indonesia in 2005 showing a complete view of the old freshwater zone before it was demolished to make a way for aquarapaima in 2007 and also a view of the coconut crab exhibit.

Still, that pre-SharkQuarium reef display looks insanely cool, and I saw the marine file snakes in their exhibit that now houses the venomous fishes and sea urchins.
 
What appears to be a frame from a technicaly lost news report by SCTV network of Ragunan Zoo's at the time newly arrived Sri Lankan sloth bear (Circus 2003).

A pair of Sri Lankan sloth bears and a pair of Sri Lankan leopards was acquired by Ragunan from the Sri Lankan National Zoological Garden in 2003, as part of an exchange where Ragunan sent a pair of orangutan to Sri Lanka.

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Penghuni Baru Kebun Binatang Ragunan
 

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What appears to be a frame from a technicaly lost news report by SCTV network of Ragunan Zoo's at the time newly arrived Sri Lankan sloth bear (Circus 2003).

A pair of Sri Lankan sloth bears and a pair of Sri Lankan leopards was acquired by Ragunan from the Sri Lankan National Zoological Garden in 2003, as part of an exchange where Ragunan sent a pair of orangutan to Sri Lanka.

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Penghuni Baru Kebun Binatang Ragunan
Judging from the enclosure with lots of rocks and a cement base, it looks like it is currently occupied by the white lions near the west entrance (now a special employee entrance).
 
Judging from the enclosure with lots of rocks and a cement base, it looks like it is currently occupied by the white lions near the west entrance (now a special employee entrance).
Were there actually white lions in Ragunan?

Looks like this was in one of the carnivores exhibits in the southeast corner of the the zoo near the east entrance. The west entrance is where the main elephant exhibits and giraffes are. If you go to the Ragunan gallery and look at the pictures of the exhibits for the tigers and sun bears by @snowleopard, it does appears that the bear in the video is shown as it roamed the rocky cement slope connecting the main exhibit ground to the water barrier to the fences.

The digital maps for Ragunan is absolutely awful and innacurate, the map shown in the zoo itself on the other hand are incredibly helpful and almost entirely accurate. The area circled in RED is where the main carnivore complex are and is near the east entrance. The area circled in PURPLE is the west entrance area with the exhibits for giraffes and the main elephant area.
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As shown by @snowleopard as the first ever confirmation, Ragunan has apparently houses an grizzled tree-kangaroo in the Schmutzer Primate Centre. It was unsigned in one of the exhibit within the new macaque complex, likely as a temporary animal.

This is more of an confirmation for me rather than a new discovery. It had been noted that one for the Ragunan's staff had posted a picture of an grizzled tree-kangaroo that dates back all the way to February of 2023, with the background and foliage being notably similar to the tree-kangaroo exhibit shown below. This means that Ragunan have displays their grizzled tree-kangaroo for a year now under our nose! Of course because the animal is most likely always unsigned.

Photos by @snowleopard (August 2024).
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Grizzled Tree Kangaroo Exhibit - ZooChat
Grizzled Tree Kangaroo - ZooChat

Photos from Instagram (February 2023).
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Instagram photo source
Sugeng Glider on Instagram: "Kangguru pohon adalah makropod yang beradaptasi dengan lingkungan di atas pohon. Terdapat 12 jenis kangguru pohon. Didunia"
 

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What appears to be a frame from a technicaly lost news report by SCTV network of Ragunan Zoo's at the time newly arrived Sri Lankan sloth bear (Circus 2003).

A pair of Sri Lankan sloth bears and a pair of Sri Lankan leopards was acquired by Ragunan from the Sri Lankan National Zoological Garden in 2003, as part of an exchange where Ragunan sent a pair of orangutan to Sri Lanka.

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Penghuni Baru Kebun Binatang Ragunan
I saw a sloth bear while visiting the zoo in October. Is it a reproduction of past individuals or a newly purchased one?
 
I saw a sloth bear while visiting the zoo in October. Is it a reproduction of past individuals or a newly purchased one?
October of this year? Are you sure you didn't mistook it for an sun bear or an American black bear?

Do you have any pictures? I have no clue if they ever breed while they were in Ragunan and I'm even clueless that they had acquired another sloth bear.
 
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This is obviously a Sloth bear, displayed near the sun bear. I remember it was very close to the area of the Sumatran tiger
 
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This is obviously a Sloth bear, displayed near the sun bear. I remember it was very close to the area of the Sumatran tiger
Thank you for your confirmation and it is indeed and sloth bear! Absolutely no idea that they still maintained this species off-display! Thank you for taking those photos.

To answer your question, this might be the same individual acquired from Sri Lanka in 2003. I see that you have visited Indonesia, new photos are more than welcome in the gallery :)
 
Thank you for your confirmation and it is indeed and sloth bear! Absolutely no idea that they still maintained this species off-display! Thank you for taking those photos.

To answer your question, this might be the same individual acquired from Sri Lanka in 2003. I see that you have visited Indonesia, new photos are more than welcome in the gallery :)
OK, I will:)
 
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