Sorry I meant their Rhinoceros hornbill
Great news! Hopefully more zoos can acquire this species. One of the comments praised the zoo for crossbreeding wolves and aardvarks, saying hooray for science…The zoo received 2, 14 week old, Aardwolves from the Safari Wild Animal Preserve in Mississippi
The post also mentions a Spotted Fanaloka was born August 24th
Nashville Zoo
Feels like one of the most insane zoo Facebook posts ever, both insanely rare species I'd say (correct me if I'm wrong though)! They are now up to four fanaloka pups in the past 18 months alone!The zoo received 2, 14 week old, Aardwolves from the Safari Wild Animal Preserve in Mississippi
The post also mentions a Spotted Fanaloka was born August 24th
Nashville Zoo
the real question is how Safari Wild even gained Aardwolves in the first place!
From pictures, the new leopard forest looks like the perfect set up for them. One can dream...Wonder if there are any plans to have them on exhibit
That’s good. When I first heard of the news I rolled my eyes since this looked like just another vanity acquisition that won’t lead to anything sustainable in the long term. But then I realized, unlike fanalokas and ferret-badgers, there are more (known) holders of aardwolves and that there’s at least an attempt at creating a sustainable population, albeit managed by the ZAA. I hope this will result in more interest for the species in the AZA, assuming other AZA members are willing to work with non-AZA zoos to secure the future of this species within the US. The aardwolves being displayed in an enclosure instead of vet check-ups, social media posts, and animal ambassador displays looks like a greater effort to actually show people the species as well.Per the zoo's LinkedIn page, they are seeking sponsors to build a new exhibit for the aardwolves.
#nashvillezoo #corporatepartnerships #conservation #zoobabies | Nashville Zoo
Thank goodness they’re planned to not be a bts-exclusive!Per the zoo's LinkedIn page, they are seeking sponsors to build a new exhibit for the aardwolves.
#nashvillezoo #corporatepartnerships #conservation #zoobabies | Nashville Zoo
A new post, revealed that the new baby Fanaloka is a female.The zoo received 2, 14 week old, Aardwolves from the Safari Wild Animal Preserve in Mississippi
The post also mentions a Spotted Fanaloka was born August 24th
Nashville Zoo
How many AZA Zoos have them, and what are they doing to breed Aardwolves?That’s good. When I first heard of the news I rolled my eyes since this looked like just another vanity acquisition that won’t lead to anything sustainable in the long term. But then I realized, unlike fanalokas and ferret-badgers, there are more (known) holders of aardwolves and that there’s at least an attempt at creating a sustainable population, albeit managed by the ZAA. I hope this will result in more interest for the species in the AZA, assuming other AZA members are willing to work with non-AZA zoos to secure the future of this species within the US. The aardwolves being displayed in an enclosure instead of vet check-ups, social media posts, and animal ambassador displays looks like a greater effort to actually show people the species as well.
I hope this will result in more interest for the species in the AZA, assuming other AZA members are willing to work with non-AZA zoos to secure the future of this species within the US.
It depends on your definition of "compelling" a lot, of course.At the risk of provoking the ire of aardwolf fans... is there a compelling reason for other zoos to have this species in their collection? Are they not primarily nocturnal and also too large for most nocturnal exhibits? (IIRC the same problem zoos have with the similarly named aardvark...)
That said, I had once heard a contributing issue was that Aardwolf needed a specialized diet that was expensive and I could see that eating up interest in them even more so than space/habitat issues.