None of the guidebooks published by Walsrode (41 editions plus a few variants) have been in English.
Can any German Zoo nerd confirm this? I seem to remember a guide in a different language? Perhaps that one was in Dutch?
None of the guidebooks published by Walsrode (41 editions plus a few variants) have been in English.
BoPs were in the BoP aviaries and Hypocolius (single bird) in the East Africa aviary in the Paradies Halle.Dark Chanting Goshawk
Grey Hypocolius
King Bird of Paradise
Raggiana Bird of Paradise
Damn it..........I must have walked past the King and Raggiana BoP, I only saw Red and Twelve-Wired.BoPs were in the BoP aviaries and Hypocolius (single bird) in the East Africa aviary in the Paradies Halle.
Two new species have been added to Zootierliste, and they are not kept in any other European zoo:
-Bronze-tailed peacock-pheasant (Polyplectron chalcurum)
-Chestnut-bellied Partridge (Arborophila javanica)
With this addition, WVP Walsrode now has a total of five species of Arborophila, with one being the newly added Chestnut-bellied Partridge.
Edit: and I heard that black-faced ibis (Theristicus melanopis) can now be seen in the wellenanlage.
I am visiting tomorrow again so possibly another update tomorrow.
You are correct - Chester does keep this species, as does Prague. However, on ZTL, both these holders are listed at subspecific status (P. c. chalcurum) as opposed to the Walsrode individuals which are only listed at species level, hence the error.Bronze Tailed Peacock Pheasant is kept at Chester Zoo also, in their Sumatra walkthrough aviary. I don't know if ZTL mentions it but it is definitely there.
I collect Walsrode guidebooks, and even though I'm missing a few, I've never heard of any guidebook being in Dutch or any other language, but I do have a flyer in my collection that's in Dutch.Can any German Zoo nerd confirm this? I seem to remember a guide in a different language? Perhaps that one was in Dutch?
Two new species have been added to Zootierliste, and one of them is not kept in any other European zoo:
-Bronze-tailed peacock-pheasant (Polyplectron chalcurum)
-Chestnut-bellied Partridge (Arborophila javanica)
With this addition, WVP Walsrode now has a total of five species of Arborophila, with one being the newly added Chestnut-bellied Partridge.
Edit: and I heard that black-faced ibis (Theristicus melanopis) can now be seen in the wellenanlage.
I am visiting tomorrow again so possibly another update tomorrow.
Some news from todays visit.
New species on show:
- Bronze-tailed peacock-pheasant (Polyplectron chalcurum)
- Boreal owl (Aegolius funereus)
- European starling (Sturnus vulgaris)
Not new for the park, but got put on show again (some already reported here the other day):
- King vulture (Sarcoramphus papa)
- Philippine Scops-owl (Otus megalotis)
- Speckled mousebird (Colius striatus)
- South African black duck (Anas sparsa sparsa)
- Ashy-faced owl (Tyto glaucops)
Other changes:
- The eclectus parrots are now free-flying in the Jungle Trail.
- The Austral parakeets are now housed in one aviary by the penguins, together with chilean tinamou.
- The umbrellabird is no longer on show, for the first time since they received him in 2013.
- Reich der Mitte is now full with birds, I saw all species listed except the black-breasted thrush
- One aviary in Pukara is completely empty - so maybe some new species will go there eventually.
oh dear....I've had more information about the umbrellabird for a few days, but I couldn't share it earlier because it wasn't public. Now that the info is also on Zootierliste, which is public, I can finally talk about it.
I'm really sad to say that Walsrode's long-wattled umbrellabird actually has passed away. This happened recently. But we can be thankful for the time we had with him at Walsrode, from 2013 until just about a week ago. Now that he's gone, there aren't any long-wattled umbrellabirds left in European zoos, a great loss!
I've had more information about the umbrellabird for a few days, but I couldn't share it earlier because it wasn't public. Now that the info is also on Zootierliste, which is public, I can finally talk about it.
I'm really sad to say that Walsrode's long-wattled umbrellabird actually has passed away. This happened recently. But we can be thankful for the time we had with him at Walsrode, from 2013 until just about a week ago. Now that he's gone, there aren't any long-wattled umbrellabirds left in European zoos, a great loss!
oh dear....
He was part of the reason I was frequenting this thread... in a similar thread to 'Baby' the dolphin of years gone by !!
Part of me hopes there may still be some hanging on in private holdings.
But from what I recall in the wild they are easy enough to find as they don't fly around much as they are larger birds.
Then there's the question of organising an outing to Ecuador!!
[As likely as planning one to Dallas in my situation anyhow]
Sad - my first experience with the species was actually years before Walsrode acquired one, in Veldhoven Zoo (called ''Nederlandse Opvang Papegaaien'' back then). That park had such an exquisite collection of birds back then. So many rare toucans, hornbills and cotinga's...
The umbrellabird will be missed.