I have a lot of mixed species ideas that I’m wondering about.
- Greater Flamingos, African Grey Parrots, various African Turacos, and other small African birds in a large netted aviary
- Saddle Billed Storks, African Grey Parrots, various Turacos, and other small African birds in a large netted aviary
- Shoebill Storks, African Grey Parrots, various Turaco species, and other small African birds in a large netted aviary
This depends mostly on what you consider "other small African birds".
It should probably work, you can even have the Flamingos and Saddle-billed storks together in the same aviary. Same goes for Shoebills if the aviary is big enough (see Singapore's Bird Paradise)
Can African Grey parrots be in mixed aviaries with other birds in general, or are they too dangerous, since I never see them in mixed exhibits
In Parc des Oiseaux's "Africa in mosaics" aviary:
- African grey parrot
- Greater vasa parrot
- Speckled pigeon
- Egyptian vulture
- Silvery-cheeked hornbill
- Little egret
- Squacco heron
- Goliath heron
- African spoonbill
- Glossy ibis
- Hamerkop
- Black stork
- Abdim’s stork
- Yellow-billed stork
- African openbill
- Marabou stork
- Blacksmith lapwing
- Spur-winged lapwing
- Spotted thick-knee
- Yellow-necked francolin
- Vulturine guineafowl
- African comb duck
- White-faced whistling duck
In Blijdorp's "Africa's forest edge" aviary:
- African grey parrot
- Black-cheeked lovebird
- Green turaco
- Purple glossy starling
- White-faced whistling duck
- Blacksmith lapwing.
Lappet Faced Vultures, African Grey Parrots, various Turaco species, and other small African birds in a large netted aviary
Lappet-faced vultures are aggressive for a vulture species, the mix would be safer with Hooded vultures, Egyptian vultures or any type of Griffon vulture
Lowland Anoa and Asian Small Clawes Otter
Lowland Anoa and pinioned cranes or storks
Both of these should be fine, although the otters could harass the Anoas, and there would be a trampling risk with Anoas and cranes or Storks if they're pinioned. The latter mix would do much better in an aviary setting, where the bird can fly to safety more easily.
Also: pinioning in general is on it's way out as it's bad husbandry, some cranes (like Blue or Demoiselle cranes) do fine since they're mostly ground-dwelling, but storks fly around a lot in aviaries. If you still want them pinioned I would suggest doing it only with the cranes