Cody Raney
Well-Known Member
Can Cape Buffalo and Ankole-Watusi be kept in the same exhibit?
I don't think that would work.outdoor Tanzania area walk through avairy with
1.Bat-eared fox
2.southern carmine bee-eater
3.Von der Decken's hornbill
4.helmeted guinea fowl
5.common duiker
6.rufous sengi (low chance)
i think this is do able ,maybe not the sengi, but this as a walk-through would be amazing
I remember hearing a story about bat-eared foxes almost catching red or yellow billed hornbills despite their age. Definitely not a good idea unless you somehow have a very large aviary.I don't think that would work.
Although Bat-eared Foxes usually eat insects, they would stress the birds.
Would a large air-conditioned hall with an outdoor aviary for the Atlantic puffin, the common eider, the common scoter, the king eider, the black-legged kittiwake, the common murre, and the razorbill be feasible? Could there be any animosity, or even a risk of hybridization?
Also, would an aviary for the Cabot's tragopan and Père David's rock squirrel be feasible?
Possibly, if you take into account that most zebras will actively hunt and kill antelope neonatesCould a combination of Hartmann's mountain zebra, Springbok and Gemsbok work?
And for Teratornis & Direwolf?For a representation of Ice Age La Brea Tar Pits:
Plains Bison for the Ancient Bison (Bison Antiquus)
Przewalski's Horse for the Western Horse (Equus Occidentalis)
Dromedary Camel for the Western Camel ( Camelops Hesternus)
Mule Deer
Rocky Mountain Elk
Pronghorn
Sichuan Takin for the Shrub-Ox (Euceratherium Collinum)
Baird's tapir for the California Tapir(Tapirus Californicus)
Collared Peccary for the Flat-Headed Peccary (Platygonus Compressus)
For the Teratornis I would say an Andean Condor for the Dire Wolf, Grey Wolf though despite the physical similarities the two are not closely related. The closest relatives to the Dire Wolf (as far as I know) are the African Jackals and the African Wild Dogs. Evidence suggests that Grey Wolves and Dire Wolves were actually too far apart genetically to interbreed.And for Teratornis & Direwolf?
9 males, 11 females and 5 unidentified animals.American Bison (Bison bison) (9.11.5)
Thank you.The first number counts males, the second females and the third unidentified
For example:
9 males, 11 females and 5 unidentified animals.
This would have to be one well-stocked space, given that some entire zoos cover the land area you are using for a single exhibit (the space you've proposed is roughly 7x the area of the entire Rosamond Gifford Zoo, and slightly under half of the entire Toronto Zoo's area). The one note I do have is that, likely, the potential for inter-species aggression initiated by the zebras would decrease significantly.300-acre safari park exhibit featuring:
Cape Buffalo
Southern White Rhino
Masai Giraffe
Masai ostrich
Blue Wildebeest
Grant's Zebra
Impala
Greater kudu
Sable Antelope
Bontebok
Ankole-Watusi
Gemsbok
That was the main idea. Inspiration came from Northwest Trek Wildlife Park, they have a 435-acre habitat that has exhibited with Bison, Elk, Bighorn, Mountain Goat, Moose, Caribou, and Black-tailed deer since 1975 and as far as I know they haven't had an incident of interspecies aggression. The only change they've made was Pronghorn were phased out for health issues due to the weather of the Pacific Northwest.The potential for inter-species aggression initiated by the zebras would decrease significantly.
That was the main idea. Inspiration came from Northwest Trek Wildlife Park, they have a 435-acre habitat that has exhibited with Bison, Elk, Bighorn, Mountain Goat, Moose, Caribou, and Black-tailed deer since 1975 and as far as I know they haven't had an incident of interspecies aggression. The only change they've made was Pronghorn were phased out for health issues due to the weather of the Pacific Northwest.