Should work as this birds don't catch flying insects.Could I mix Cairn's and Golden Birdwing Butterflies with Victoria Crowned Pigeon, Red and/or Raggiana Bird-of-Paradise, Spotted Whistling-duck, and Black-capped Lory?
Oh wow! Didn't know about this institution, thank you for showing me this!de Orchideeënhoeve does this, actually
White stork and Ring-tailed lemurs in Lemur kingdom - ZooChat
American flamingos in Lemur kingdom - ZooChat
I was gonna do something I saw recently at Syracuse, where they keep a species less suitable for a mix in the same atrium, but in an aviary which is separated. Would that still work? And would the mix I asked about work in a walkthrough?Should work as this birds don't catch flying insects.
But you have to choose one bird-of-paradise
Could I possibly include Pesquet's Parrot in this mix as well, or would there be issues with aggression between any species?Could I mix Cairn's and Golden Birdwing Butterflies with Victoria Crowned Pigeon, Red and/or Raggiana Bird-of-Paradise, Spotted Whistling-duck, and Black-capped Lory?
A: Markhor with Wild Yak
B: Black Lemur with Aldabra Giant Tortoise
C: Wild Boar with Capercaillie
Would workCould I possibly include Pesquet's Parrot in this mix as well, or would there be issues with aggression between any species?
I've seen lemurs mixed with giant tortoises before. The mix also contained Grey-crowned Crane if there was anything else you wanted to include.B: Black Lemur with Aldabra Giant Tortoise
Yes they are mixed in Hannover for exampleHave emu and wallabies (swamp, parma, rock-wallabies, etc.) been mixed before?
Yes. The most common mix is with the overly common Red-necked Wallabies but I guess it would work with any medium to large species of kangaroo/wallaby.Have emu and wallabies (swamp, parma, rock-wallabies, etc.) been mixed before?
I think you can mix all these species in an aviary if it's large enough, but the Bettong may be a no-show.Another mix (again, from here on out I will try to keep them all in one post, I just think sporadically sometimes). Could I combine the following avian species assuming enough?
Ideally the space would be an outdoor replication of Toronto's Australasian aviary, very well planted, couple water features, etc.
- Australian Brush-turkey
- Galah
- Eastern Rosella
- Moluccan Radjah Shelduck
- Northern Masked Lapwing
- Australian Wood Duck
- Little Pied Cormorant
- Brush-tailed Bettong
- Tawny Frogmouth
- Australian Little Buttonquail
Australian Brush-turkey
Galah
Eastern Rosella
Moluccan Radjah Shelduck
Northern Masked Lapwing
Australian Wood Duck
Little Pied Cormorant
Brush-tailed Bettong
Tawny Frogmouth
Australian Little Buttonquail
Without Buttonquail and Frogmouth it should workAnother mix (again, from here on out I will try to keep them all in one post, I just think sporadically sometimes). Could I combine the following avian species assuming enough?
Ideally the space would be an outdoor replication of Toronto's Australasian aviary, very well planted, couple water features, etc.
- Australian Brush-turkey
- Galah
- Eastern Rosella
- Moluccan Radjah Shelduck
- Northern Masked Lapwing
- Australian Wood Duck
- Little Pied Cormorant
- Brush-tailed Bettong
- Tawny Frogmouth
- Australian Little Buttonquail
Impala, Springbok, Nyala, Thomson’s Gazelle, etc. If there were is a theme, it would be easierWhen it comes to an outdoor, 0.5 acre / 0.202 hectare-sized savanna; what some of the most ideal medium-large ungulates that peacefully mix with Klipspringers?
Preferably, I am thinking towards nyala/gazelle-sized antelope that are larger than a Klipspringer, but are smaller than say, a Gemsbok.
Ideally, these candidates should also have a known presence in North American facilities (AZA, ZAA, doesn’t matter).