Marwell Wildlife Marwell Zoo news 2025

I have not visited the Native Species area myself... so I will merely go off what I have seen.
Firstly... it's great to see the Village have a cohesive identity again! I think ever since the farmyard went there never really was one... and for the record I do not think of 'exotic animals small enough to hold' as being a cohesive identity. So that is great!

The crayfish area looks well done, but what has me quite excited is the very good quality of the educational material present! I think Marwell has been crying out for more educational signs in the zoo for some time now... [seriously, why does Life Among the Trees have more detailed information about rainforests than the Cretney-era rainforest house?] so to be assured that Read is prioritising more educational signage in the zoo is very good to see for myself! I do hope the Sand Lizards have such educational material too...

I was initially a bit annoyed that the tamarin/rabbit mound is now a pond... but then when I think more about it I can't see it as too much of a net loss. Quite a few petting farms [and zoos to some degree] have domestic rabbits... many pet shops have rabbits... and if one wants to see a rabbit at Marwell they have a good chance of seeing the wild ones who are everywhere. [Which are, as it turns out, endangered in their native area of the Iberian Peninsula... however numerous they are everywhere else!] And the area was never any good for tamarins, who have better quality of life in the zoo's major primate exhibit ... so nothing of much value was lost. What I do think the area could use is a mammal exhibit... quite a few zoos have harvest mouse in their collection so Marwell in theory shouldn't have a problem setting up a harvest mouse exhibit here. But then, I did recall reading how this was phase 1 of the exhibit... so maybe this isn't ruled out just yet.

And one curiosity I had in mind... when Cretney redeveloped the Village area in 2006 and opened it in 2007, CBC [although not called the Cold Blooded Corner at the time] was part of the development. And it was later integrated into the reiteration and expansion of the Encounter Village in 2013[? I think?] when it became known as Fur, Feathers, and Scales. And now the 'village proper' is the new Native Species area, probably separate from FFS... but the area encompassing the walkthrough aviaries and [for now] red pandas and wallabies is labelled as Fur, Feathers, and Scales on the map for the time being. And so this brings into question... which exhibit is the CBC part of now? Is it part of the Native Species Zone because that's what the village proper has become, presumably now a separate thing from FFS? Is it an exclave of the FFS area? Is it of dual-citizenship? Though seeing Read's intent to move the red pandas over... the answer may be one to unfold rather than figure out right this minute.

But overall, I think for her first major development [very funnily, this area was also the site of Cretney's major development!] it is one that is very well done, and leaves me excited for what she will bring to Marwell in future!
 
Other 2024 News Not Mentioned:
On September 26th, the zoo announced they bred and released 1,640 land snails (of 2 species and 1 subspecies) in the Partula genus into the wild.

Marwell Wildlife
We snailed it! - Marwell Zoo
Marwell have announced on social media the birth of a male cotton topped tamarin.

On May 26th, the zoo announced they named the tamarin Fester.

Marwell Wildlife

On October 22nd, the zoo announced they transferred (2.0) Prezwalski's wild horses named Basil and Takhi to their Eelmoor Marsh Site of Special Scientific Interest in Hampshire in late August.

Marwell Wildlife
Endangered horses with a very important job - Marwell Zoo

On December 18th, it was announced that the zoo transferred a (1.0) white-faced saki to Drusillas Park in East Sussex.

Drusillas Park

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Looks like their has been another banteng calf. I did see one that doesn't look very old.
A Coppery Titi Monkey has been born first one at Marwell.

On March 29th, the zoo announced that a (0.1) banteng was born on March 3rd. The zoo also announced that a sitatunga was born on March 1st which is now on exhibit, as well as 2 silver-eared mesias hatched and fledged which are now on display in the tropical house.

Also on March 29th, the zoo announced that the coppery titi was named Nacho.

Marwell Wildlife
Meet our adorable new arrivals - Marwell Zoo
 
Other 2024 News Not Mentioned:
On September 26th, the zoo announced they bred and released 1,640 land snails (of 2 species and 1 subspecies) in the Partula genus into the wild.

Marwell Wildlife
We snailed it! - Marwell Zoo


On May 26th, the zoo announced they named the tamarin Fester.

Marwell Wildlife

On October 22nd, the zoo announced they transferred (2.0) Prezwalski's wild horses named Basil and Takhi to their Eelmoor Marsh Site of Special Scientific Interest in Hampshire in late August.

Marwell Wildlife
Endangered horses with a very important job - Marwell Zoo

On December 18th, it was announced that the zoo transferred a (1.0) white-faced saki to Drusillas Park in East Sussex.

Drusillas Park

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On March 29th, the zoo announced that a (0.1) banteng was born on March 3rd. The zoo also announced that a sitatunga was born on March 1st which is now on exhibit, as well as 2 silver-eared mesias hatched and fledged which are now on display in the tropical house.

Also on March 29th, the zoo announced that the coppery titi was named Nacho.

Marwell Wildlife
Meet our adorable new arrivals - Marwell Zoo
Przewalsk’is Horses being used as grazing animals for nature reserves? Is that not a bit risky?
 
On October 22nd, the zoo announced they transferred (2.0) Prezwalski's wild horses named Basil and Takhi to their Eelmoor Marsh Site of Special Scientific Interest in Hampshire in late August.
Still weird to read about somewhere I grew up next to on here!
Przewalsk’is Horses being used as grazing animals for nature reserves? Is that not a bit risky?
It's been going on for a long time on the site managed by Marwell on behalf of Qinetiq (the Defence industry contractors) and there's no public access. There's a PDF at this link which summarises what goes on on site
Just to add to this, the site itself borders Farnborough Airport and though obviously the site is full of defence contractors you can actually view the horses occasionally from the surrounding hills. I did my quintessential Year 10 work experience at Airbus at the tech park it's connected to a good few years ago and met part of the herd, they're naturally very acclimated to being around people and aren't bothered at all by human presence
 
Another thing I noticed from the inventory. They acquired a male crocodile monitor Hopefully there are plans to breed as Marwell are currently the only UK holder according to zootierliste.

Unless that is wrong it must therefore be an import. They have had quite a few recently, which I consider to be a good sign.

Prague zoo published news about their newly arrived pair of crocodile monitors it received this year and it mentions Marwell as well (I post here only relevant excerpt):

"The one-year-old monitors ... arrived from Fuengirola, Spain, but their total journey was much longer. The resumption of breeding at Prague Zoo is part of the plan of the Reptile Advisory Group of the European Association of Zoos and Aquariums (RTAG EAZA) to build a viable European population of this species.

Not only Prague Zoo and Bioparc Fuengirola, but also zoos in Marwell, England and Düsseldorf, Germany, joined forces with this goal and organized the transport of nine young monitors from the USA, from the Henry Doorly Zoo in Omaha. A European quarantine was carried out in Spain and the lizards traveled to their final destinations during March."

Source
 
Prague zoo published news about their newly arrived pair of crocodile monitors it received this year and it mentions Marwell as well (I post here only relevant excerpt):

"The one-year-old monitors ... arrived from Fuengirola, Spain, but their total journey was much longer. The resumption of breeding at Prague Zoo is part of the plan of the Reptile Advisory Group of the European Association of Zoos and Aquariums (RTAG EAZA) to build a viable European population of this species.

Not only Prague Zoo and Bioparc Fuengirola, but also zoos in Marwell, England and Düsseldorf, Germany, joined forces with this goal and organized the transport of nine young monitors from the USA, from the Henry Doorly Zoo in Omaha. A European quarantine was carried out in Spain and the lizards traveled to their final destinations during March."

Source
A nice endeavour ... it really is down to the relations developed over several years with joint EAZA / AZA meetings for Taxon Advisory Groups. It softens up, massages ties and gets results with interest in species management on both sides of the Atlantic Pond.
 
Does anyone know when the penguins will return to their exhibit? Planning on making a trip this Easter.
If you look on the Marwell website it says the work will take approximately 6 weeks. I would expect there would then be some time allowed for the water treatment system to re-balance before the birds are returned.
 
I am going to reserve judgement on saying it won't be a good enclosure for red pandas (from a viewing points of you).

When the clouded leopards were announced there were a number of us on here, me included, who questioned if they would ever be seen. It ended up being pretty good and I saw them on most visits.

The enclosure is obviously going to need to be adapted. How successful it is is going to be dependent on what changes they make.
The clouded leopard/leopard enclosure, along with the remains of the previous raised walkway, have been completely removed, so any enclosure for red pandas will need to be a new build on the site. Leopards had been kept on that site since 1972 when Marwell opened and when the provision of mature living trees within the enclosures for the leopards to climb was a UK innovation. There must be good reasons to removal the enclosures, but it marks the end of an era that had seen Indian, African and melanistic leopards in the original enclosure, and Persian and Amur leopards, as well as the recent clouded leopards in the replacement enclosures that had been re-built on the same spot.
 
The clouded leopard/leopard enclosure, along with the remains of the previous raised walkway, have been completely removed, so any enclosure for red pandas will need to be a new build on the site. Leopards had been kept on that site since 1972 when Marwell opened and when the provision of mature living trees within the enclosures for the leopards to climb was a UK innovation. There must be good reasons to removal the enclosures, but it marks the end of an era that had seen Indian, African and melanistic leopards in the original enclosure, and Persian and Amur leopards, as well as the recent clouded leopards in the replacement enclosures that had been re-built on the same spot.

It’s incredibly sad. Marwell was always known for its hoofstock but just behind that it was known for its wide variety of cats. These have dwindled a lot in recent years.
 
Whilst this is a surprising and unexpected decision, I have faith that there is logical reasoning, e.g. suitability of the enclosure or some extended plans for the area. Its unfortunate to lose the clouded leopards though.
 
I do feel quite sad if it is a rebuild and not a conversion. There is plenty of unused space where a new red panda exhibit could have been built elsewhere, for example just across the road where the marabou stork aviary used to be.

As CatMan says, cats were the secondary speciality after ungulates. Disappointing that they are now down to just 3 cat species. I would have preferred them to have acquired some replacement cats, whether that be more clouded leopards or another species and built the red panda enclosure elsewhere.
 
I do feel quite sad if it is a rebuild and not a conversion. There is plenty of unused space where a new red panda exhibit could have been built elsewhere, for example just across the road where the marabou stork aviary used to be.

As CatMan says, cats were the secondary speciality after ungulates. Disappointing that they are now down to just 3 cat species. I would have preferred them to have acquired some replacement cats, whether that be more clouded leopards or another species and built the red panda enclosure elsewhere.

I'm not even convinced it's a good spot for the red pandas given the high footfall through the area.

And agreed on the cat front, it's incredibly sad that they've seemed to almost collapse in recent years with no plans for replacement. The Cheetah enclosure is now sitting there empty, with no plans on sourcing replacements or opening a new habitat. It's so sad.

I expect that if they do indeed demolish and rebuild that it might be due to structural issues. If the leopard lookout was unable to be opened it does ponder the question whether the same wear and tear occurred at in the actual enclosure. It's been there for almost 30 years, after all.
 
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