Only 5 females were listed on the 2021 census.
They aren't necessarily the most interesting animals for the public, not in quantity anyway. The current organisation is left with the legacy of previous owner John Knowles who envisaged a Catskill Game Farm type of set-up. Its not necessarily what general public are most interested in- they want big cats, primates, all the ABC species.On the contrary ...
I read one review recently where the reviewer was seemingly complaining about how antelopes constituted a considerable fraction of Marwell's animal collection, asking that the antelopes would deserve their own section whilst the 'more interesting animals' are easier to find !
Yes only three female Arabian Oryx, no male.They aren't necessarily the most interesting animals for the public, not in quantity anyway. The current organisation is left with the legacy of previous owner John Knowles who envisaged a Catskill Game Farm type of set-up. Its not necessarily what general public are most interested in- they want big cats, primates, all the ABC species.
I assume this entails:Go back twenty years, had ten species cat.
I was wrong it was eleven had both Amur and Persian Leopards the rest are correct.I assume this entails:
Cheetah
Sand Cat
Black-Footed Cat
Ocelot
Serval
Caracal
Jaguar
Leopard
Tiger
Snow Leopard
From what I recall, the Black-footed cat lived less than a year ...
And not kept at Marwell at the same time.But different subspecies.
The Marwell AGR for 2002,list both Amur and Persian Leopards held at Marwell, When the new Leopard enclosure opened in 2003, and after the tragic death of one of the Amur Leopards, for a short time you could see an Amur Leopard on one side of the Leopard enclosure and on the other a Persian Leopard, as seen by me and also mentioned in the Marwell Zoo newsletter of the time.And not kept at Marwell at the same time.
As much as I appreciate your posts on the thread, this is one of the times I think it calls for a correction:And not kept at Marwell at the same time.
I stand corrected and most interesting to "discover" that these two sub-species were housed in the same building.The Marwell AGR for 2002,list both Amur and Persian Leopards held at Marwell, When the new Leopard enclosure opened in 2003, and after the tragic death of one of the Amur Leopards, for a short time you could see an Amur Leopard on one side of the Leopard enclosure and on the other a Persian Leopard, as seen by me and also mentioned in the Marwell Zoo newsletter of the time.
Just seen theyre ripping the train track up at Marwell. Im hoping theyve got plans and they arent just taking it away.
Marwell seems to have gone down hill alot in the past few years sadly.
There is talk of plans for next year but not Wetlands do not think the money to do it is there, I am sure when the zoo is ready it will reveal them, the rail train again was just to expensive to keep going, and would cause problems for any new development.The article on the website does mention new developments for that part of the zoo.
With the financial hit they would have taken during the pandemic I guess expecting the Wetlands plans to be resurrected is unrealistic. Could it be a subset of wetlands or a completely different lower cost development?
They replaced the track train with a road train already
Road Train at Marwell Zoo | Plan your visit
“After more than 40 years service, our Princess Anne loco, carriages and track have sadly come to the end of their life. The zoo layout has changed a lot during the last four decades and the railway no longer gives our guests the best possible views.”
The tracks aren’t required by the road version.
That is ... a bit ominous ...The pair of Marabou Storks have left and moved to Whipsnade.