Native Mammals in Australian Zoos

The only zoo I have visited so far that I can't do a species list for is the Australian Venom Zoo as signage there was largely non-existent.

It was non-existent when I was there more than 10 years ago.

:p

Hix
 
I visited David Fleay Wildlife Park today and I was able to talk to a keeper about some of their unusual mammals.
The Julia Creek Dunnart is now dead and there are none in captivity so they won't be getting any more. Apparently they were being bred for release and one was kept for display which has now died.
The Mahogany Gliders and Yellow-bellied Gliders are still at the collection, however they are now held off show.
Their last Tree Kangaroo was put down a few months ago, she was very old, but they plan to get more later this year.

They now have Fat-tailed Dunnarts.

And they do still have both Proserpine Rock-wallaby and Bridled Nailtail Wallaby, and I was very pleased to see my first Platypus.

They also have 2 bilbies, a sugar glider (held of display), Long nosed potoroos, 2 dingos, prospine Rock wallabies and koalas. One of the keepers told me last time I was there that they about to renavate the yellow bellied gliders and mahogany gliders enclosure, is this why they are off display?
 
What is the population number of captive Lumholtz's tree kangaroos in Australia (3 or 4 holding institutions); whether there have been successfull captive breeding of this species in Australia? If yes, how many individuals of the captive population were captive bred?

What is the future of this species in collections? Is the population managed, is there a plan for adding new wild-caugh animals in captive population?
Several questions, but I must ask.
Thanks,
 
They also have 2 bilbies, a sugar glider (held of display), Long nosed potoroos, 2 dingos, prospine Rock wallabies and koalas. One of the keepers told me last time I was there that they about to renavate the yellow bellied gliders and mahogany gliders enclosure, is this why they are off display?

In my above post I was only mentioning things that have changed that affect the listings in the original post of the thread. (is it still being updated?). I posted a full species list here: http://www.zoochat.com/24/david-fleay-wildlife-park-show-species-452143/

I don't think they were off display for renovations because there were no enclosures in the nocturnal house that were empty or in the process of being renovated, they all had something in them. Though the potoroo enclosure could easily hold one species of glider in addition to the potoroos.

I was however told by the keeper that I spoke to that they do occasionally swap the glider species around so I had a chance of seeing one of the other species if I revisited.
 
The Julia Creek Dunnart at David Fleay Wildlife Park have been replaced by fat-tailed dunnarts. As all the Julia Creek Dunnarts were eithier released or died, so now there are none in captivity. Also David Fleay Wildlife Park's Lumholtz's Tree Kangaroo died several years ago as I have mentioned previously so please remove it from the list. They also now have Black-Footed Tree Rat.
 
The Julia Creek Dunnart at David Fleay Wildlife Park have been replaced by fat-tailed dunnarts. As all the Julia Creek Dunnarts were eithier released or died, so now there are none in captivity. Also David Fleay Wildlife Park's Lumholtz's Tree Kangaroo died several years ago as I have mentioned previously so please remove it from the list. They also now have Black-Footed Tree Rat.

I posted about both the dunnart and tree kangaroo from my visit in June; see my own post which I quoted below. I spoke to the keeper who looked after and bred the Julia Creek Dunnarts and she said they were just being bred for release but they kept a single one for display which died so they won't be getting anymore.

A few other updates to the list have been posted by myself and other members, but it seems this thread isn't being updated anymore, which would be a shame.

I may as well add that Peel Zoo also holds Black-footed Tree Rat and is not listed as such in this thread.

I visited David Fleay Wildlife Park today and I was able to talk to a keeper about some of their unusual mammals.
The Julia Creek Dunnart is now dead and there are none in captivity so they won't be getting any more. Apparently they were being bred for release and one was kept for display which has now died.
The Mahogany Gliders and Yellow-bellied Gliders are still at the collection, however they are now held off show.
Their last Tree Kangaroo was put down a few months ago, she was very old, but they plan to get more later this year.

They now have Fat-tailed Dunnarts.

And they do still have both Proserpine Rock-wallaby and Bridled Nailtail Wallaby, and I was very pleased to see my first Platypus.
 
I posted about both the dunnart and tree kangaroo from my visit in June; see my own post which I quoted below. I spoke to the keeper who looked after and bred the Julia Creek Dunnarts and she said they were just being bred for release but they kept a single one for display which died so they won't be getting anymore.

A few other updates to the list have been posted by myself and other members, but it seems this thread isn't being updated anymore, which would be a shame.

I may as well add that Peel Zoo also holds Black-footed Tree Rat and is not listed as such in this thread.
Sorry, I did not see your posts.
 
There's only one Long-haired Rat left at Walkabout and in good old east-coast tradition (the interesting stuff ) is off-display...
 
Hi, what kangaroos and wallabies are relatively resistant to cold weather, besides red-necked wallaby and grey kangaroos?

I am asking, because zoos abroad are rather uniform and keep generally red-necked wallabies, grey or red kangaroos. It would be interesting that other kangaroo species would be kept more widely.

I though that wallaroo is relatively cold hardy. It is unfortunately kept just in 2 or so collections in Europe.
 
I though that wallaroo is relatively cold hardy. It is unfortunately kept just in 2 or so collections in Europe.

Something of an exaggeration - it is kept in a total of 5 European collections; Tierpark Berlin, Duisburg Zoo, Prague Zoo, Linton Zoo and BestZoo.
 
Yes, but most of these obtained animals only recently.

Anyway, I googled myself what big marsupials live in alpine areas of Kosciuszko national park in Australia with constant winter snow. Red-necked wallaby, eastern grey kangaroo, swamp wallaby and common wombat. Wombat is considered best adapted to snow of them all. Swamp wallaby can browse branches sticking out of snow, so deals with winter better than grazing red-necked wallaby.
 
On my visit at Alice Springs Desert Park on July 25th there was no sign of Numbat. Its former enclosure in the daylight section of Nocturnal House was under the construction
 
Eastern Pygmy-possum in Trowunna Wildlife Park, one animal in a small enclosure in the entrance area, hibernating so saw a bit of its back in the log's hole.
 
Eastern Barred Bandicoots are off-display at Melbourne Zoo.

Southern Brown Bandicoots while strictly speaking on-display at Halls Gap Zoo are basically impossible to see because of how they are kept.

Eastern Pygmy-possum is off-display at Australia Walkabout Wildlife Park during normal visiting hours.
 
I visited Wings Wildlife Park in Tasmania two weeks ago, and they have Eastern Barred Bandicoots there. This was of the Tasmanian subspecies, which is in contrast to the Mainland subspecies held at the Zoos Victoria parks. I am, however, unsure if this species is held elsewhere in Tasmania.

I also saw Eastern bettongs and Australian water-rats there.

I am pretty sure Yellow-Bellied Gliders are no longer at Healesville Sanctuary, unless they are present off-display?
 
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I was told by a keeper today that there's no more Tasmanian Pademelon at Werribee Open Range Zoo
 
Mitchell's Hopping Mice (two old individuals) at Melbourne Museum are off-show
 
Based on calls I made today:

Monarto's Black-footed Rock-wallabies are only viewable during the 'A Devilish Native Experience'-bts tour.

Cleland doesn't have Western Pygmy-possum on-show and the person didn't know if there were even any left at the park at all. I'm hoping to be able to follow up on that tomorrow.
 
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