The Javan Gibbon infant has been confirmed as female and been named Telo: Log into Facebook | FacebookExcellent news! A Javan Gibbon was born today at Mogo. This is their fifth successful birth at the zoo from their resident pair: Mogo Wildlife Park
Births at Mogo:
0.1 Cinta (Arjuna x Layar) 06-09-2009 at Mogo Wildlife Park (now at Tasmania Zoo)
1.0 Patoot (Arjuna x Layar) 07-05-2012 at Mogo Wildlife Park
1.0 Jawa (Arjuna x Layar) 02-05-2015 at Mogo Wildlife Park
0.0.1 Unk (Arjuna x Layar) 19-05-2018 at Mogo Wildlife Park
0.0.1 Unk (Arjuna x Layar) 28-05-2021 at Mogo Wildlife Park
I believe the raceway idea is an excellent idea for some animal enclosures, It would give animals a opportunity to travel to another locations other than what they are use to and more room to explore providing more stimulus for them.@WhistlingKite24 That would be great if they did have breeding success. The Binturong I saw there in Jan '17, Nov '15 and April '14 seemed pretty happy and well looked after. I can only recall seeing one Binturong on those visits and its great to hear they have a pair at the moment. Whoever the individual was I saw the few years back moved exhibits a few times, From memory it was always an upsize in spatial area which was obviously really good to see. Good idea about the raceway between the two exhibits. I thought they might keep a pair together like Taronga does/did and other Zoos I imagine.
I believe that Wildlife HQ north of Brisbane has quite a few now some of them are nice and long between enclosures!@Zorro o Yeah thats a really good point, it would be good for exploration space and stimulus not having to be in the same space all the time. It be good if most exhibits built in the future gave all the animals a change for interchange to a different space at times.
Yes Steve thats correct they are located right next to the big pineapple. I dare say the trend will continue with the overhead tunnels where its needed.@Zorro Oh that's great they've got multiple ones, hope they keep it up with constructing their new exhibits that way seeing as its optimal across multiple species for enrichment stimulus. Am I right in thinking Wildlife HQ is the one near the big Pineapple the successor to the Alma Park Zoo?
Mogo Wildlife Park have experienced very heavy rainfall that has lead to flash flooding in some parts of the zoo including their campsite and several of their hoofstock enclosures. One of the images also reveals that they now have Dromedary with their group of Plains Zebra: 200mms of rainfall inundates the South Coast as Mogo Zoo floods
They look like dark Fallow Deer (they come in several colours).The second photo in the article also seems to show a second species of deer in with the European Fallow Deer herd too. Anyone know what type of deer the darker ones are? It's not easy to tell from the photo.
Black fallow. There are four main colour varieties- from the photo, two are present in this herd.The second photo in the article also seems to show a second species of deer in with the European Fallow Deer herd too. Anyone know what type of deer the darker ones are? It's not easy to tell from the photo.
The second photo in the article also seems to show a second species of deer in with the European Fallow Deer herd too. Anyone know what type of deer the darker ones are? It's not easy to tell from the photo.
Black fallow. There are four main colour varieties- from the photo, two are present in this herd.
At Woburn Park in UK they produced a couple of other rarer colours too- a bluish/creamy colour and even some piebald ones, but I think they may have died out now and don't appear to be anywhere else.The colours are Common, Menil, Melanistic and Leucistic.
Colour descriptions and photos are here: European fallow deer - Wikipedia