Seals are expensive. I was told that the food bill for seals at one major zoo in Australia was equal to the food bill of the entire bird department.
I'm surprised big cats haven't been mentioned. As a general rule of thumb, carnivores will cost more than herbivores- and as the largest carnivores big cats (especially tigers and lions) are most certainly fairly high on the list of expensive to feed species.
IIRC, the SDZ Safari Park has a colony of crayfish BTS that they rear and care for which are meant to feed the platypus. From my talks about their diet when it Platypus Habitat opened, the docents mentioned that the platypuses were relatively expensive to feed and they’re not exclusively on crayfish aka yabbies, being feed an assortment of worms and other invertebratesCherax destructor is illegal in the US as of 2016, but they're still around. They average 10-26 USD apiece depending on size so not cheap necessarily.
I believe they are indeed using yabbies, though I'm not sure how they're acquiring them.
I'm pretty sure King Cobras are just fed rats in captivity. Someone with more knowledge - say @Batto - would be able to answer that.I'm surprised to know that King Cobras are common in captivity, given the fact that they only can feed on other alive snakes. I was told that main food used for them are young boa constrictor. I suppose corn snakes will be used too. For sure not a cheap meal.
Dugongs are fed lettuce and other such things - they don't get fed on harvested sea grasses (or, at least, if they are it is not as a primary diet). And almost nowhere keeps Dugongs anyway.Dugongs must be a nightmare too, since seagrasses are not cultivated and must be harvested to the wild. Since seagrasses are not harvested for different purposes than feeding dugongs, there is no market for this.
The only place outside their native range which keeps Three-toed Sloths would likely be the Dallas World Aquarium, so this isn't exactly a widespread issue in zoos. Presumably the owner of DWA can afford it even if it is expensive. In any case, I believe that the story of Three-toed Sloths feeding exclusively on Cecropia isn't even true.Three-toed sloths also must be very difficult. Every country grows bamboo and eucalyptus with varied species and is easy to get for pandas and koalas, but despite being an easy to care plant with very rapid growth, which non-tropical country grows Cecropia??? They need to be imported... so shipping costs for daily fresh Cecropia must be really expensive!
And I suppose that no place tries to hold leatherback turtles... both importing and breeding jellyfishes in enough quantity must be a big bucket. In fact, a very expensive feeding is many times what marks the limit in what is a commonly kept animal in zoos and what is entirely absent from worlds zoos. Leatherback turtles could be as common as green or loggerhead turtles in aquariums if they feed in other than jellies.
I'm pretty sure King Cobras are just fed rats in captivity. Someone with more knowledge - say @Batto - would be answer that
Most carnivores (cats, bears, canids...) aren't very expensive to feed, because reject pieces of meat (carcasses...), not appreciated for human consumption, are easily available in the slaughterhouses and wholesale markets.True, ursids and canids too.
Most carnivores (cats, bears, canids...) aren't very expensive to feed, because reject pieces of meat (carcasses...), not appreciated for human consumption, are easily available in the slaughterhouses and wholesale markets.
I'm pretty sure King Cobras are just fed rats in captivity. Someone with more knowledge - say @Batto - would be able to answer that.
As far as I know, no aquarium feeds Whale Sharks solely on krill, and it doesn't need to be live. They are usually fed a mix of chopped fish, squid, and dead krill, and are trained to accept it from a scoop, where the Whale Shark swims across the surface and the mixture is poured in front of it.Whale sharks (and of course baleen whales) must be a nightmare to keep too. Tons of fresh, and better alive, krill everyday. Not cheap!
I'm pretty sure King Cobras are just fed rats in captivity. Someone with more knowledge - say @Batto - would be able to answer that.
The king cobra keeper community is separated into two fractions: The "Natural dieters" vs. "The "Replacers". The first argue that king cobras only eat snakes and the occasional monitor lizard in the wild and should thus only be fed reptiles. Thanks to the ongoing commercial breeding of ball python and cornsnake morphs, getting prey snakes (both alive and frozen) is a bit easier than it used to be, but still more pricey than a rodent - based diet. The "Replacers" argue that they have been keeping and breeding King cobras on alternative diets (rodents, eels, chicken legs) for years without any issues. Furthermore, they use as an argument that the spread of snake diseases such as Cryptosporidium serpentis (which is pretty common in some cornsnake breeding lines) to king cobras is less likely if you don't use prey snakes. Both fractions often clash with one another online.I've heard this as well, usually it's youngsters or the occasional fickle specimen that needs live snakes if I'm recalling what I've read correctly
As @Andrew Swales correctly pointed out in an older thread, depending on the local legislation, a zoo might be required not to use rejected meat for its carnivores, among others due to the prevention of the spread of infectious diseases such as TBC.Most carnivores (cats, bears, canids...) aren't very expensive to feed, because reject pieces of meat (carcasses...), not appreciated for human consumption, are easily available in the slaughterhouses and wholesale markets.
It may depend of the definition given to "rejected meat", if it's the meat of healthy animals (thus, pieces without value for human consumption ; I think it wouldn't be a problem to give it to animals) or not (that must be really unable to animal consumption, at least in some circumstances).As @Andrew Swales correctly pointed out in an older thread, depending on the local legislation, a zoo might be required not to use rejected meat for its carnivores, among others due to the prevention of the spread of infectious diseases such as TBC.
Let's just say that my insight into this matter might be of a professional nature...It may depend of the definition given to "rejected meat", if it's the meat of healthy animals (thus, pieces without value for human consumption ; I think it wouldn't be a problem to give it to animals) or not (that must be really unable to animal consumption, at least in some circumstances).restrictions.
You're just repeating what I wrote...And it may vary according to national legislations, and to zoonotic events that could lead to temporary or permanent restrictions.
May I ask what your opinion is?The king cobra keeper community is separated into two fractions: The "Natural dieters" vs. "The "Replacers". The first argue that king cobras only eat snakes and the occasional monitor lizard in the wild and should thus only be fed reptiles. Thanks to the ongoing commercial breeding of ball python and cornsnake morphs, getting prey snakes (both alive and frozen) is a bit easier than it used to be, but still more pricey than a rodent - based diet. The "Replacers" argue that they have been keeping and breeding King cobras on alternative diets (rodents, eels, chicken legs) for years without any issues. Furthermore, they use as an argument that the spread of snake diseases such as Cryptosporidium serpentis (which is pretty common in some cornsnake breeding lines) to king cobras is less likely if you don't use prey snakes. Both fractions often clash with one another online.
So far, no one has done a comparative dietary study to evaluate any long-term effects of replacement diets on king cobras.