The enclosure is nearly ready and animals are due to arrive as I have said before its Clouded.
Sand cats arrived in 2001 when John Knowles was still around,a Black footed cat arrived in 2002 but only lived for less than a year.Amongst John's first animals were the Przewalski Horse, Scimitar Horned Oryx and Siberian Tiger.
To me they are the legacy species Marwell should never go out of.
He was as fond of the cats as he was the hoofed mammals from what I recall.
It was a long list-Hybrid Asian/African Lions, Leopards, Jaguar, Serval, Cheetah, Ocelot, Caracal, European Lynx, Snow Leopard, Clouded Leopard, Siberian and Sumatran Tigers. There were black Leopards and Jaguars at various times.
I believe the Desert cats came in after his time but I may be wrong on that.
1999Does anyone know if the Fennec Foxes died or left, and when?
Sand cats arrived in 2001 when John Knowles was still around.
I can never remember any births, most of the time just had males but they did have one female so I may be wrong.And bred I believe?
There are many species I miss at Marwell, but this comes close to the top.
I agree with Okapis that the Sand cats did not breed - certainly no births are recorded. The species - same group - was there for around 12 years which does not endorse short longevity. Amongst other species that had been kept in the building - which included Dwarf mongoose, Cuisimanse and even tortoises - they were often moved into accommodation elsewhere which ,meant they were not in the building for that long, but that is not the same as short longevity. The only short-lived species was the Black-footed cat which, like the Sand cats, are from areas with low humidity. The house was designed accordingly with mechanical ventilation and de-humidifiers to control the environment, but the building was later modified to meet the requirements of the different species that have been kept there since.It seems that none of The Aridlands small mammals lived very long/were sustainable.
I'm not counting meerkats......
Yes a pair of Goral were held not far from Marwell hall close to Tigers in what is now the area for the last Anoa at Marwell the male died in 1975 the female was due to move to France I think but died while being crated up.New question, and probably for the oldies-in the early days, the guidebook said Goral were held, but I don't recall ever finding them in the indicated section.
Does anyone have any info/recall of them actually being in place, or was it like the Red Kangaroo, that they never actually arrived?
I need the sable, of course. (Who needs the sable ? The sand cat)I miss the sand cats.One not well known species that often got a great reaction from visitors due to the cuteness factor.
I saw the goral when I visited Marwell on the 9th June 1972, shortly after it opened. The guidebook says that they were probably hybrids between the grey and Himalayan subspecies. Their enclosure is actually shown in the photo that I took on that day: it was just uphill from the Hall and they shared the new stable block with a group of blackbuck, whose outdoor paddock is just out of the photo.New question, and probably for the oldies-in the early days, the guidebook said Goral were held, but I don't recall ever finding them in the indicated section.
Does anyone have any info/recall of them actually being in place, or was it like the Red Kangaroo, that they never actually arrived?
...and if I remember correctly they had a box-like structure of steps to allow them something to jump about on.I saw the goral when I visited Marwell on the 9th June 1972, shortly after it opened. The guidebook says that they were probably hybrids between the grey and Himalayan subspecies. Their enclosure is actually shown in the photo that I took on that day: it was just uphill from the Hall and they shared the new stable block with a group of blackbuck, whose outdoor paddock is just out of the photo.
Grevy's zebra herd 1972
Zebras in the big field in front of Marwell Hall. If I remember correctly the herd of...
Yes your right and years later I remember they turned up in the lemur areas....and if I remember correctly they had a box-like structure of steps to allow them something to jump about on.