Mixed species exhibit ideas

What about these animals;
Black and Rufous Sengi

Birds as Paul mentioned, as well as reptiles such as chameleons, tortoises and Keel-bellied lizards (although you can't mix chameleons and small birds)

Chimpanzee

Nothing that you don't want killed

Jackson's Chameleon

Tortoises, Plated or Girdled lizards, Agamas, Sengis, etc

Mantled Guereza + Mountain Bongo

Red duikers or Kirk's dikdik, maybe a second primate species like DeBrazza's monkey


I wouldn't really mix serval with anything but I feel like you could mix them with Spurred tortoises

Williams' Dwarf Gecko

Small frogs, tortoises or small lizards
 
Could crowned eagles and white-necked ravens live together? Similar to the stellars and ravens in Blijdorp? And could an aviary of Ross’ turaco, helmeted guineafowl, laughing dove, common hoopoe and European bee-eater work?
 
Not sure if this has been asked before, but assuming there's enough retreat areas separated by bollards, would black rhinoceros play nicely with red river hogs? I know there's a similar mix with southern white rhinos and warthogs at Pairi Daiza, however I know that southern white rhinos are much more docile relative.
 
Not sure if this has been asked before, but assuming there's enough retreat areas separated by bollards, would black rhinoceros play nicely with red river hogs? I know there's a similar mix with southern white rhinos and warthogs at Pairi Daiza, however I know that southern white rhinos are much more docile relative.

I believe that this mix has been done before actually (at SDZSP, if I'm not mistaken). Given the opportunity of retreat and separated areas for both species, it should work.
 
Not sure if this has been asked before, but assuming there's enough retreat areas separated by bollards, would black rhinoceros play nicely with red river hogs? I know there's a similar mix with southern white rhinos and warthogs at Pairi Daiza, however I know that southern white rhinos are much more docile relative.
I can guarantee you that this would not work. Red river hogs tend to be pesky to other animals. They’re too curious for their own good and like to rub on and nip at other animals and don’t back down. Black rhinos would not be tolerant of this behavior whatsoever. I’ve known of red river hogs getting seriously injured by lowland nyala, red lechwe, steenbok, okapi, and giraffe in other failed mixes so I don’t think it’s worth trying them with a species known to be so aggressive and un-mixable. Black rhino mixes pretty much never work. I don’t even know that I’d say “successful” mixes like The Living Desert’s exhibit are really “successful”, when most of the other animals live their lives almost entirely in the exclusion areas… What kind of life is it for those animals, truly, if they don’t feel safe enough to use the whole space?
 
I can guarantee you that this would not work. Red river hogs tend to be pesky to other animals. They’re too curious for their own good and like to rub on and nip at other animals and don’t back down. Black rhinos would not be tolerant of this behavior whatsoever. I’ve known of red river hogs getting seriously injured by lowland nyala, red lechwe, steenbok, okapi, and giraffe in other failed mixes so I don’t think it’s worth trying them with a species known to be so aggressive and un-mixable. Black rhino mixes pretty much never work. I don’t even know that I’d say “successful” mixes like The Living Desert’s exhibit are really “successful”, when most of the other animals live their lives almost entirely in the exclusion areas… What kind of life is it for those animals, truly, if they don’t feel safe enough to use the whole space?
Good to know, thanks! In that case, I'll just highlight black rhinos by themselves in my current project.
 
Within the confines of an-all indoor exhibit, would it be feasible enough to mix Drills (M. leucophaeus) with Collared Mangabeys within a more limited space?

If Drills aren’t an option, what are some other animals that could work better alongside mangabeys?
 
Additionally, is it also feasible to mix Congo Dwarf Clawed Frogs with Banded Bushfish (M. fasciolatum) and Leopard Bushfish (C. acutirostre) in a paludarium-type setting?
 
Within the confines of an-all indoor exhibit, would it be feasible enough to mix Drills (M. leucophaeus) with Collared Mangabeys within a more limited space?

If Drills aren’t an option, what are some other animals that could work better alongside mangabeys?
Drills are too aggresive and could stress out the mangabeys. Diana monkeys, smaller guenons, and colobus would work
Additionally, is it also feasible to mix Congo Dwarf Clawed Frogs with Banded Bushfish (M. fasciolatum) and Leopard Bushfish (C. acutirostre) in a paludarium-type setting?
Not leopard bushfish. If it's densely planted, the banded would work but the frogs could be seen as prey and are easily stressed. A more herbivorous, smaller, and peaceful fish would work better
 
Drills are too aggresive and could stress out the mangabeys. Diana monkeys, smaller guenons, and colobus would work
Drills are being mixed with De Brazza's monkey tho in Europe, so i'm not sure they are that agressive. Just not sure if an all-indoor exhibit is possible. Pairi Daiza might have this exact situation in the sanctuary as they recently acquired both Drill and De Brazza's in the backstage.
 
What about a massive paludarium setup with Fijian crested iguanas and juvenile green and/or hawksbill sea turtles as well as some small native reef fish species? Ideally, this would look similar to Shedd's former(?) Cyclura lewisi setup and/or some of the Reptilandia Reptile Lagoon setups.
 
Could these exhibits work for a hypothetical bird house?

Cypress Swamp:
Medium-sized indoor diorama with a greenhouse-style roof, plenty of native vegetation (cattails, buttonbush, etc.) simulated cypress trees, and a large pool. Simulation of the Florida Everglades.
1.3 Roseate spoonbills
0.2 Snowy egrets
1.1 Wood ducks

Acacia Bushland:
Reminiscent of a scene in the drier regions of northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia, this medium-sized room with a greenhouse-roof consists of plantings of dry-adapted native vegetation (Senegalia, Euphorbia, etc.), a small stream running through the exhibit, and high walls of mock-rock framing a mural of a savanna scene.
1.0 Buff-crested bustard
1.0 Common bulbul
1.5 Northern carmine bee-eaters
2.0 Superb starlings
0.2 Speckled pigeons
1.3 White-crested buffalo weaver
 
Could these exhibits work for a hypothetical bird house?

Cypress Swamp:
Medium-sized indoor diorama with a greenhouse-style roof, plenty of native vegetation (cattails, buttonbush, etc.) simulated cypress trees, and a large pool. Simulation of the Florida Everglades.
1.3 Roseate spoonbills
0.2 Snowy egrets
1.1 Wood ducks

Acacia Bushland:
Reminiscent of a scene in the drier regions of northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia, this medium-sized room with a greenhouse-roof consists of plantings of dry-adapted native vegetation (Senegalia, Euphorbia, etc.), a small stream running through the exhibit, and high walls of mock-rock framing a mural of a savanna scene.
1.0 Buff-crested bustard
1.0 Common bulbul
1.5 Northern carmine bee-eaters
2.0 Superb starlings
0.2 Speckled pigeons
1.3 White-crested buffalo weaver
I see no issues with the first one, however I am not of the knowledge to provide insight on the second one.
 
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