Wellington Zoo Meet the Locals redevelopment at Wellington Zoo

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Proposed redevelopment at Wellington Zoo - Meet the Locals.

Kiwi creatures for zoo's new themed project | Stuff.co.nz

Wellington Zoo is building a $4.3 million New Zealand-themed precinct as part of a major 10-year redevelopment.

The project, Meet the Locals, will occupy about a third of the zoo area by the time it is completed.

The first phase is scheduled to be finished by the end of this year, with a $900,000 aviary now being built.

The project will be on hold in the next financial year while the sun bear enclosure is upgraded. Most of the work will be done in 2012-13.

Zoo chief executive Karen Fifield said Meet the Locals would trace the Kiwi landscape from the coast to the mountains, beginning with little blue penguins and finishing with a highlands area populated by kea and kaka.

Meet the Locals is the second biggest project in the zoo's 10-year capital development plan, after the $6.5m Nest animal hospital, which was completed last year.

The zoo would not lose any of its present animals in making way for the new displays, Ms Fifield said. Some would be rehoused in other areas and the project would occupy some parts of the zoo that are unused at present, such as the zebra paddock.

It is being funded through the zoo's $20.8m 10-year capital development plan, which is now in its fifth year.

Wellington City Council has contributed $15.6m, leaving the zoo trust to raise the remaining $5.2m.

The trust had so far raised about $3m, Ms Fifield said.

Meet the Locals will also include a farmyard petting zoo and a barn inhabited by invertebrates, including weta.

Ms Fifield said the farmyard elements were a nod to the strong role of agriculture in New Zealand.

From the barn, visitors will move into a walk-through forest aviary with kaka, kereru and kakariki, and on to a highlands area occupied by deer and Himalayan tahr, and up into The Roost, an aviary for kea and other native birds.

Ms Fifield said it was not possible to include every native species because of Conservation Department rules and regulations.

"For example, we wouldn't hold takahe because of the requirements – you'd need a huge area and we'd end up having the whole zoo taken up by about two creatures."

Kakapo will not be coming to the zoo because they are isolated to a population on Codfish Island, near Stewart Island.

But there will be rare creatures, including the Otago skink, which is critically endangered. The zoo will be involved in a "breed for release" programme to help replenish the skink's population.

The zoo will not take animals from the wild except under DOC programmes, and does not plan to breed animals for sending overseas.

Ad Feedback Ms Fifield said she hoped people would see the new area as a way to get to know their own country. "We'll never have elephants at Wellington Zoo [again], but it's really important that people love their own country, and what's happening in their own backyard."
 
The project, Meet the Locals, will occupy about a third of the zoo area by the time it is completed.
...
Meet the Locals will also include a farmyard petting zoo and a barn inhabited by invertebrates, including weta.

Ms Fifield said the farmyard elements were a nod to the strong role of agriculture in New Zealand.

From the barn, visitors will move into a walk-through forest aviary with kaka, kereru and kakariki, and on to a highlands area occupied by deer and Himalayan tahr, and up into The Roost, an aviary for kea and other native birds.
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The third of the zoo might be a slight exageration, probably closer to one quarter. Still it is a lot of the zoo to dedicate to farmyard animals of little conservation value. Most species of Deer and the Hymilayan Thar are feral in NZ - so I can't see any conservation value in displaying them at Wellngton Zoo.
With only 4 largish Zoos in NZ, (Auckland, Hamilton, Orana Park and Wellington) and all with limited space for new exhibits, I would have hoped that Wellington Zoo would use this space for species that require additional space in order to keep successful breeding programmes going in the Australaisian region. (Binturong, Snow Leopard, Fishing cat, Maned Wolf, Silvery Gibbon, Mandrill... just a few mammalia listed at random!)
With the success of Zelandia (Karori Wildlife Sanctuary) and a number of Petting Farms in the region, Wellington Zoo should stick with its core business where it has no direct competition - maintaining endangered wildlife.
 
The third of the zoo might be a slight exageration, probably closer to one quarter. Still it is a lot of the zoo to dedicate to farmyard animals of little conservation value. Most species of Deer and the Hymilayan Thar are feral in NZ - so I can't see any conservation value in displaying them at Wellngton Zoo.
With only 4 largish Zoos in NZ, (Auckland, Hamilton, Orana Park and Wellington) and all with limited space for new exhibits, I would have hoped that Wellington Zoo would use this space for species that require additional space in order to keep successful breeding programmes going in the Australaisian region. (Binturong, Snow Leopard, Fishing cat, Maned Wolf, Silvery Gibbon, Mandrill... just a few mammalia listed at random!)
With the success of Zelandia (Karori Wildlife Sanctuary) and a number of Petting Farms in the region, Wellington Zoo should stick with its core business where it has no direct competition - maintaining endangered wildlife.

a big emphasis on native fauna seems to be the trend in many zoos now.
 
a big emphasis on native fauna seems to be the trend in many zoos now.

Looking at tourism in the region, it is what most visitors also would like to experience. No small matter ... attendance and Joe Public through the gates.

Another is local awareness building. The number of exotics - the deer and Himalayan thar - ... perhaps can be construed as examples how exotics have endangered native animals ... so def a conservation ethic brief there!

Thirdly, with Biosecurity issues the management and import/export of exotic species in the Australasian region is somewhat difficult.

I would therefore term this a realistic development and also one that comes into the remit of conservation education. :cool:
 
a big emphasis on native fauna seems to be the trend in many zoos now.
I do not have a problem with the redevelopments for the native fauna. :)
The more native birds and reptiles on display the better!

Another is local awareness building. The number of exotics - the deer and Himalayan thar - ... perhaps can be construed as examples how exotics have endangered native animals ... so def a conservation ethic brief there!

The Meet the Locals development, if it is to proceed with the display of domesicated and feral wildlife, will mean less space for exotic wildlife, which in the end will mean less exotic wildlife on dispaly in the Australasian region. Most species currently on display in the region desperately need additional spaces and or new bloodlines, if they are to survive into the forseeable future. If Zoos in the region can't keep species alive, then there is no hope.

New Zealand has only 2 native land based mammals - both bats. All other mammals have been introduced, (Humans included!) many with disasterous results. Every New Zealander is already all too well aware of the folly of introduced species and how these introductions have lead to the extinction of numorous native species. "Since mid-1800 European arrival there have been another 19 losses caused by logging, forest clearing for pasture, and introduction of a hoard of predatory animals including bird enemies numbers one and two, stoats and rats." TerraNature | New Zealand Ecology - Extinct birds
You only have to drive a short distance to see possums dead on the side of the road. (Todays roadside count 2). A sad indicator of the state of the average patch of bush.
The news media is constantly telling us of stoats killing endangred birds in mainland sanctuary's....
DOC dog teams hunt for kiwi killer: Media release 12 August 2010
So New Zealanders probably know better than most nationalities the folly of feral wildlife and the negatve impact it has on natve flora and fauna.

with Biosecurity issues the management and import/export of exotic species in the Australasian region is somewhat difficult.
Just because importation of some zoo animals is currently difficult in NZ, it is not impssible. Wellington Zoo applied for and was granted approval to import numerous species... including "All animals of the genus Canis (excluding Canis familiaris); All species of Bovidae, excluding the subfamily Caprinae (chamois, goats, sheep, serows and relatives) and genera Bos (oxen and true cattle), Bubalus (water buffalo), and Syncerus (African buffalo); Maned Wolf; Sand Cat;
The approval process can't have been to difficult as it was submtted 16Jan2009 and was approved on 13March2009. http://www.ermanz.govt.nz/BertDocs/NOC08010.doc

Wellington Zoo is currently visited by aproximately 180,000 visitors per annum. 90% would be locals(personal estimate). In order to encourage repeat visitation on a reguar basis, the zoo needs to sell the conservation message "We are doing our bit for endangered wildlife". Keeping
Deer and Sheep and Thar does not reinforce that message, especialy when a privately run orginisation already displays most of these domesticated animals. Staglands coincidentily helped save the Kune Kune pig from extinction in the 1970's, the Auckland Island pig in 1999 and works with a number of rare domestic breeds. http://www.staglands.co.nz/Staglands-Wildlife-Reserve-and-Cafe/Rare-Breeds_IDL=7_IDT=1084_ID=5543_.html
 
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