Haliaeetus
Well-Known Member
Hello,
welcome to the South Asian Zone of my absolute Zoo, that completes the Asian part of the Zoo with many impressive species from the Indian subcontinent, Indochina and the Indonesian archipelago (plus a few species from Papua, Melanesia and even Polynesia, even if they aren't properly "Asian") in its 9,3 ha.
The map of this zone is released here :
I begin the description with the Indian Plain (1), a large flat enclosure of 1,2 ha.
It is sandy and grassy, and divided in 2 parts by a path, a tunnel allowing the moves of the various animals of the exhibit. All of them can be seen in the plains of Northern India.
Their night quarters are stables carved in the Himalayan Rock. All the species can be seen outside year-round.
Like in the Eurasian Plain, there are safe fenced quarters for the birds in order to avoid them to be scratched by the hoofstock.
In early 2023 we can see the following species :
Otherwise the 3 Gaur bulls and a cow have left the Zoo, as well as the Indian Swamp Deer, 0.2 Common Hog Deer (including the two females born in 2020) and 1.1 Bar-headed Geese.
1.0 Common Hog Deer arrived in the exhibit.
The Indian Plain :
(Credits : @Gil )
Sambar :
(Credits : @Dianamonkey )
Indian Hog Deer :
(Credits : @Haliaeetus )
Indian Gaur :
(Credits : @Baringogiraffe12 )
Bar-headed Goose :
(Credits : @Haliaeetus )
The next enclosures (2-3-4-5) are a complex dedicated to the most popular species of the zone : the Asian Elephants.
More information about the Elephant quarters :
Name : Hathi's domain.
Year of building : 2009.
Inspiration : Elephant enclosures and house in Planckendael Zoo [Belgium] and Chester Zoo [England] (cf. Zoolex).
Capacity : 3.6 + offspring
Surface : three plains have respectively surfaces of 7.895 m² (2), 17.740 m² (3) and 13.960 m² (4). The night quarters are inside a building of 950 m² (5), functional but not especially aesthetical for the visitors.
Fencing : the plains are separated from the visiting paths by dry moats and an electric fence, there are bamboo plantations and elephant grass along too. Inside the Elephant house, there's a single corridor for the visitors, placed 3 m above the floor of the paddocks and separated from them by a double row of large steel fences and a security corridor.
Internal layout : the plains are sandy with large pools where the elephants can refresh themselves during the hottest days. Some trees and thickets are maintained inside the enclosures, with fences around to avoid the damage caused by the animals.
Enrichments are disposed in the outside enclosures : food and even water in tubes placed inside rock blocks, bales of hay placed on cranes...
Inside the night building there are individual boxes and a comunitarian enclosure (with a pool) for the main herd, in order to allow "fusion-fission" moves inside it. Every adult male has his own box, but all the boxes can be connected. All the boxes are sandy except 2 boxes with a rubber soil. Additionnally there are 2 "medical boxes" of 4x3 m each, used for medical care.
Webcams are disposed inside the Elephant house, filming the boxes 24/24.
Every pool has a maximal depth of 4 meters (allowing a complete immersion of the elephants) and gentle slopes on every side (except along the visiting path or corridor) to prevent the drowning of the youngest animals. The outside waterbeds can be used by the elephants during all the day, the inside waterbed can be used 24/24. The inside pool is frequently used by the "continental" herd, but sometimes it is open to the "Sri Lankan" one ; in this case there are thick wire cables to separate the two herds. Some zones of wet clay are maintained near each outside pool.
The Elephants can be seen outside year-round, but they aren't less prone to go outside during the winter months, preferring the heated night quarters.
Management : all the elephants can be seen together except during the musth period, in this case the males are separated from the remainder of the herds.
There's a stocking area for the food in a shed hidden from the visitors' sight.
The gardians (totalizing 6 people) can enter the elephant house by doors placed in behind the boxes, a corridor allow them the access to every box and enclosure.
Visitor facilities : several platforms are installed along the visiting path.
The night quarters can be visited.
There are daily feeding sessions with talks about the life of the Elephants ; they are very popular among the visitors.
Sustainable development : the water of the pools is locally filtrated by a phytoepuration station.
The sand and the rocks have a local origin.
Photovoltaic panels are installed on the Elephant house.
The complex is home of two subspecies of Asian Elephants :
Along the Central and Southern plains the visitor path is dedicated to the discovery of the ecology of these animals in the South Asian ecosystems.
Real-size Elephant footprints cover the path, while statues of Ganesha and other zoomorphic Hindu divinities are placed along it. Many panels describe the evolution of Elephants, their biology, their range, the interest to keep and breed them in zoos, the conflicts with the humans and the solutions to preserve an harmonious coexistence (including a project led in Sri Lanka and supported by the Zoo itself). There's also information about other projects like the research against the herpesvirus, a deadly disease for these animals.
Near the picnic area (A) the Hathi Cafe (B) is additionnally decorated with many Indian items (road panels, rickshaw...)
Map of the Elephant pavilion (same as the 2022 version) :
A) Sri Lankan Elephant paddocks
B) Continental (Indian) Elephant paddocks
C) Comunitarian enclosure
Sri Lankan Elephant :
(Credits : @Zoofan15 )
Indian Elephant :
(Credits : @RatioTile )
Asian Elephants' enclosure :
(Credits : @felis silvestris )
Comunitarian enclosure of the Elephant house :
(Credits : @twilighter )
In the next days I'll describe other exhibits, this time dedicated to smaller species of mammals, that nonetheless remain very interesting.
Stay tuned !
welcome to the South Asian Zone of my absolute Zoo, that completes the Asian part of the Zoo with many impressive species from the Indian subcontinent, Indochina and the Indonesian archipelago (plus a few species from Papua, Melanesia and even Polynesia, even if they aren't properly "Asian") in its 9,3 ha.
The map of this zone is released here :
I begin the description with the Indian Plain (1), a large flat enclosure of 1,2 ha.
It is sandy and grassy, and divided in 2 parts by a path, a tunnel allowing the moves of the various animals of the exhibit. All of them can be seen in the plains of Northern India.
Their night quarters are stables carved in the Himalayan Rock. All the species can be seen outside year-round.
Like in the Eurasian Plain, there are safe fenced quarters for the birds in order to avoid them to be scratched by the hoofstock.
In early 2023 we can see the following species :
- Sambar Rusa unicolor (2.0), back after one year of absence
- Common Hog Deer Axis porcinus porcinus (3.3)
- Indian Gaur Bos gaurus gaurus (0.3)
- Bar-headed Goose Anser indicus (4.6)
- Ruddy Shelduck Tadorna ferruginea (5.5)
Otherwise the 3 Gaur bulls and a cow have left the Zoo, as well as the Indian Swamp Deer, 0.2 Common Hog Deer (including the two females born in 2020) and 1.1 Bar-headed Geese.
1.0 Common Hog Deer arrived in the exhibit.
The Indian Plain :
(Credits : @Gil )
Sambar :
(Credits : @Dianamonkey )
Indian Hog Deer :
(Credits : @Haliaeetus )
Indian Gaur :
(Credits : @Baringogiraffe12 )
Bar-headed Goose :
(Credits : @Haliaeetus )
The next enclosures (2-3-4-5) are a complex dedicated to the most popular species of the zone : the Asian Elephants.
More information about the Elephant quarters :
Name : Hathi's domain.
Year of building : 2009.
Inspiration : Elephant enclosures and house in Planckendael Zoo [Belgium] and Chester Zoo [England] (cf. Zoolex).
Capacity : 3.6 + offspring
Surface : three plains have respectively surfaces of 7.895 m² (2), 17.740 m² (3) and 13.960 m² (4). The night quarters are inside a building of 950 m² (5), functional but not especially aesthetical for the visitors.
Fencing : the plains are separated from the visiting paths by dry moats and an electric fence, there are bamboo plantations and elephant grass along too. Inside the Elephant house, there's a single corridor for the visitors, placed 3 m above the floor of the paddocks and separated from them by a double row of large steel fences and a security corridor.
Internal layout : the plains are sandy with large pools where the elephants can refresh themselves during the hottest days. Some trees and thickets are maintained inside the enclosures, with fences around to avoid the damage caused by the animals.
Enrichments are disposed in the outside enclosures : food and even water in tubes placed inside rock blocks, bales of hay placed on cranes...
Inside the night building there are individual boxes and a comunitarian enclosure (with a pool) for the main herd, in order to allow "fusion-fission" moves inside it. Every adult male has his own box, but all the boxes can be connected. All the boxes are sandy except 2 boxes with a rubber soil. Additionnally there are 2 "medical boxes" of 4x3 m each, used for medical care.
Webcams are disposed inside the Elephant house, filming the boxes 24/24.
Every pool has a maximal depth of 4 meters (allowing a complete immersion of the elephants) and gentle slopes on every side (except along the visiting path or corridor) to prevent the drowning of the youngest animals. The outside waterbeds can be used by the elephants during all the day, the inside waterbed can be used 24/24. The inside pool is frequently used by the "continental" herd, but sometimes it is open to the "Sri Lankan" one ; in this case there are thick wire cables to separate the two herds. Some zones of wet clay are maintained near each outside pool.
The Elephants can be seen outside year-round, but they aren't less prone to go outside during the winter months, preferring the heated night quarters.
Management : all the elephants can be seen together except during the musth period, in this case the males are separated from the remainder of the herds.
There's a stocking area for the food in a shed hidden from the visitors' sight.
The gardians (totalizing 6 people) can enter the elephant house by doors placed in behind the boxes, a corridor allow them the access to every box and enclosure.
Visitor facilities : several platforms are installed along the visiting path.
The night quarters can be visited.
There are daily feeding sessions with talks about the life of the Elephants ; they are very popular among the visitors.
Sustainable development : the water of the pools is locally filtrated by a phytoepuration station.
The sand and the rocks have a local origin.
Photovoltaic panels are installed on the Elephant house.
The complex is home of two subspecies of Asian Elephants :
- the Sri Lankan Elephants Elephas maximus maximus (2.3) : the three cows JAFFNA, KANDY and LANKA have been joined by two young bulls : TALI and TANGO
- the South-East Asian (Indian) Elephants Elephas maximus maximus (2.4) : the adult bull GANESHA, the adult cows HAMPI, INDILA and JAWA and the calves born in 2020 (the male KAILASH and the female LUDHIANA).
Along the Central and Southern plains the visitor path is dedicated to the discovery of the ecology of these animals in the South Asian ecosystems.
Real-size Elephant footprints cover the path, while statues of Ganesha and other zoomorphic Hindu divinities are placed along it. Many panels describe the evolution of Elephants, their biology, their range, the interest to keep and breed them in zoos, the conflicts with the humans and the solutions to preserve an harmonious coexistence (including a project led in Sri Lanka and supported by the Zoo itself). There's also information about other projects like the research against the herpesvirus, a deadly disease for these animals.
Near the picnic area (A) the Hathi Cafe (B) is additionnally decorated with many Indian items (road panels, rickshaw...)
Map of the Elephant pavilion (same as the 2022 version) :
A) Sri Lankan Elephant paddocks
B) Continental (Indian) Elephant paddocks
C) Comunitarian enclosure
Sri Lankan Elephant :
(Credits : @Zoofan15 )
Indian Elephant :
(Credits : @RatioTile )
Asian Elephants' enclosure :
(Credits : @felis silvestris )
Comunitarian enclosure of the Elephant house :
(Credits : @twilighter )
In the next days I'll describe other exhibits, this time dedicated to smaller species of mammals, that nonetheless remain very interesting.
Stay tuned !