Nocturnal Exhibits in the United Kingdom

Only has an Armadillo in it now, 6 banded I think.

Are you sure? I am aware that they do indeed have a six-banded armadillo, he's called Ross I believe who I last saw in his outdoor enclosure.

On the door to the nocturnal room it has/had photos of naked mole rats, woodland dormice etc so I presumed they must have held these in the room. I also queried back in September 2022 if the white-tailed antsangy that they obtained in 2021 were held in here but the staff didn't seem to recognize both the common and scientific name of the species whatsoever. :confused:
 
Are you sure? I am aware that they do indeed have a six-banded armadillo, he's called Ross I believe who I last saw in his outdoor enclosure.

On the door to the nocturnal room it has/had photos of naked mole rats, woodland dormice etc so I presumed they must have held these in the room. I also queried back in September 2022 if the white-tailed antsangy that they obtained in 2021 were held in here but the staff didn't seem to recognize both the common and scientific name of the species whatsoever. :confused:

To my knowledge, the Dormice are in the small mammals room with the rats and mice etc, but again this is off limits to the public.
 
Plus a Southern Three-Banded Armadillo :)

Is this in the main house? Must have missed it!

There was a sign for Brazilian Cavies in with the Goeldi's, but don't think I've ever seen them
 
Nocturnal exhibits are among my favourite styles of exhibit in a zoological garden, encouraging elusive animals that look nothing like the diurnal species we are familiar with to be active in their usual, dark setting.

The purpose of this thread is to create as comprehensive as possible of a list of every nocturnal exhibit in the United Kingdom (apologies if such a thread already exists, although I could not find any). What follows is a list of every such exhibit that I have personally seen and a species list, as well as others which I am yet to see, but am aware of. This will, of course, be nowhere near every such exhibit in the country, so I would be very curious and grateful if other members who are better-informed than myself could add any nocturnal exhibits that I have not listed. :)

On that note, here is the list:

Cannon Hall Farm - Small Mammal House (24 species):
European Harvest Mouse
Sugar Glider
Large Hairy Armadillo
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Long-eared hedgehog
Persian Jird
Brandt’s Vole
Acacia Rat
Black Rat
Northern Luzon Giant Cloud Rat
Northern Treeshrew
Common Yellow-toothed Cavy
Brazilian Cavy
African Woodland Dormouse
African Pygmy Mouse
Cactus Mouse
House Mouse
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Guinea Pig
Hermanns Tortoise
Cichlid sp
Barbary Striped Grass Mouse
Long-nosed Potoroo

(Species list credit to @pangolin12 and @Alwaysevergreen )

Wingham Wildlife Park - Nocturnal House (16 species):
Asian Palm Civet
Senegal Galago
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Indochinese Clouded Leopard
Northern Luzon giant cloud rat
Gila Monster
Beaded Lizard
New Caledonia Giant Gecko
African Fat-tailed Gecko
Savu Island Python
Three-banded Armadillo
Racoon Dog
Tawny Frogmouth
Spix's Night Monkey
Sugar Glider
Naked Mole Rat

(Species list credit to @DesertRhino150 and @pipaluk )

ZSL London Zoo - Night Life (7 species):
Grey Slender Loris
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Senegal Galago
Naked Mole Rat
Pygmy Slow Loris
Potto

Aye-Aye are located within the same building, and also within a nocturnal exhibit, but it is part of In With The Lemurs.

Tropiquaria Zoo - Nocturnal House (6 species):
African Dormouse
Common Genet
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Long-nosed Potoroo
Kinkajou
Northern Flying Squirrel

Shaldon Zoo - Nocturnal House (6 species):
Bengal Slow Loris
Pygmy Slow Loris
Grey Slender Loris
Three-banded Armadillo
Stick Insect sp
Scorpion sp

The zoo also has a nocturnal exhibit for Grey Mouse Lemur and Brush-tailed Bettong elsewhere in the zoo, but the focus of the building is not fully nocturnal, with the indoors for the zoo's squirrel monkey also present.

Cotswold Wildlife Park - Bat House (5 species):
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Seba's Short-tailed Bat
Mongolian Jird
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Spinifex Hopping Mouse

Cotswold has other buildings with multiple nocturnal exhibits, such as Little Africa (Naked Mole Rat and Senegal Galago) and the Siamang House (Grey Mouse Lemur and Straw-coloured Fruit Bat), but as they both have other species in daylight exhibits, it felt somewhat unfair to include them.

Chester Zoo - Fruit Bat Forest (4 species):
Seba's Short-tailed Bat
Rodrigues' Flying Fox
Omani Blind Cave Fish
Turkish Spiny Mouse

This exhibit was closed during my visit, so I could be very much mistaken. I also believe that the Boky-Boky and Grandidier's Vontsira are held in this building, in nocturnal setups, but are behind the scenes.

Hemsley Conservation Centre - Nocturnal House (2 species):
Pygmy Slow Loris
New Guinea Ground Cuscus

Paignton Zoo - Nocturnal House (2 species):
Short-beaked Echidna
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec

I believe the House is temporarily closed for renovations, and the species selection may have changed quite a bit since my visit. I remember seeing a sloth in there once, but they now seem to be held elsewhere in the zoo. Perhaps a member more familiar with Paignton can inform me here?
Paignton have closed this house. It exists but has been removed from the ‘map’. The Echidna still has access. It is an off-show area now. Sad.
 
Is this in the main house? Must have missed it!

There was a sign for Brazilian Cavies in with the Goeldi's, but don't think I've ever seen them

Yeah, he lives in the Sloth enclosure, but can be quite elusive!

There aren't any Cavies in with the Goeldi's so you haven't missed them!
 
Someone probably has a species list of Bristol's famous nocturnal house, which should probably be included, despite the closure of the zoo.
This was the species list of the building during my visit in October 2021:

Bristol Zoo Gardens - Twilight World (14 species)
Aruba Island Rattlesnake
Yellow Mongoose
New Guinea Ground Cuscus
Kowari
Gila Monster
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Henkel's Leaf-tailed Gecko
Pygmy Slow Loris
Aye-Aye
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat
Giant Banded Tailless Whip Scorpion
Omani Blind Cave Fish
Naked Mole Rat
European House Mouse

Perhaps with the zoo already preparing for closure, this was way past its prime. The likes of Eastern Quoll and Merriam's Kangaroo-rat had all been held there across the past decade, but were nowhere to be seen on my final visit, sadly.

On an unrelated note, one mistake that I noticed in my initial post is that London's galagos are Moholi, not Senegal.
 
Was there not Mouse Deer in the nocturnal house as well at Bristol? Did the Kowari die off, or move to another collection.
I don't ever remember seeing mouse deer in Twilight World itself (certainly not in 2021), although there were a some (three, I believe) Javan Chevrotain in the adjacent walkthrough aviary (the one with the Livingstone's Flying Fox).

The last Kowari died in November 2021, sadly.
 
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So, with all the information generously provided upthread, and with some further research, I thought I would post an updated list, so as to have all the information in one place. Still with some uncertainties and questions, and a lack of a species list for certain exhibits, but its certainly progress. I have also added an additional species list under zoos that have additional reverse lighting setups, but that are part of other, diurnal buildings, as opposed to devoted nocturnal houses. There are far more nocturnal exhibits in the country than I had anticipated, it would seem:

Cannon Hall Farm - Small Mammal House (24 species):
European Harvest Mouse
Sugar Glider
Large Hairy Armadillo
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Long-eared hedgehog
Persian Jird
Brandt’s Vole
Acacia Rat
Black Rat
Northern Luzon Giant Cloud Rat
Northern Treeshrew
Common Yellow-toothed Cavy
Brazilian Cavy
African Woodland Dormouse
African Pygmy Mouse
Cactus Mouse
House Mouse
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Guinea Pig
Hermanns Tortoise
Cichlid sp
Barbary Striped Grass Mouse
Long-nosed Potoroo

Wingham Wildlife Park - Nocturnal House (16 species):
Asian Palm Civet
Senegal Galago
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Indochinese Clouded Leopard
Northern Luzon giant cloud rat
Gila Monster
Beaded Lizard
New Caledonian Giant Gecko
African Fat-tailed Gecko
Savu Island Python
Three-banded Armadillo
Racoon Dog
Tawny Frogmouth
Spix's Night Monkey
Sugar Glider
Naked Mole Rat

Isle of Wight Reptilarium - Nocturnal Room (12 species):
Gargoyle Gecko
Crested Gecko
Cave Cricket sp
Whip Scorpion sp
Cuban Tree Frog
Chilean Rose Tarantula
African Giant Land Snail
African Common Toad
Bumblebee Toad
Land Hermit Crab
Death's Head Cockroaches
Tokay Gecko

According to the zoo’s website.

Get to Know Animals - Nocturnal Room (9+ species):
Striped Skunk
Lesser Egyptian Jerboa
Fat-tailed Jird
Gambian Pouched Rat
Nine-banded Armadillo
Sugar Glider
Short-tailed Opossum
Cane Toad
African Bullfrog

ZSL London Zoo - Night Life (7 species):
Grey Slender Loris
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Moholi Galago
Naked Mole Rat
Pygmy Slow Loris
Potto

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Aye-Aye

Shaldon Zoo - Nocturnal House (6 species):
Bengal Slow Loris
Pygmy Slow Loris
Grey Slender Loris
Three-banded Armadillo
Stick Insect sp
Scorpion sp

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Grey Mouse Lemur
Brush-tailed Bettong

Tropiquaria Zoo - Nocturnal House (6 species):
African Dormouse
Common Genet
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Long-nosed Potoroo
Kinkajou
Northern Flying Squirrel

Birmingham Wildlife Conservation Park - Nocturnal House (6 species):
Goeldi’s Monkey
Grey-handed Douroucouli
Linneaus’ Two-toed Sloth
Potto
Northern Luzon Giant Cloud Rat
Three-banded Armadillo

Also held in nocturnal displays:

Pygmy Slow Loris
Grey Slender Loris
Brush-tailed Bettong

Beale Wildlife Park - Nocturnal House (6 species):
New Guinea Ground Cuscus
Grey Mouse Lemur
Grey Slender Loris
Naked Mole Rat
Rio Fuerte Beaded Lizard
(Unknown sixth species)

Cotswold Wildlife Park - Bat House (5 species):
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Seba's Short-tailed Bat
Mongolian Jird
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Spinifex Hopping Mouse

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Naked Mole Rat
Senegal Galago
Grey Mouse Lemur
Straw-coloured Fruit Bat

Chester Zoo - Fruit Bat Forest (5 species):
Seba's Short-tailed Bat
Rodrigues' Flying Fox
Omani Blind Cave Fish
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Barbary Striped Grass Mouse

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Aye-Aye
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat

Lotherton Wildlife World - Nocturnal House (5 species):
Northern Luzon Giant Cloud Rat
Kinkajou
Three-banded Armadillo
Seba’s Short-tailed Bat
Egyptian Fruit Bat

According to an article about the exhibit’s opening.

British Wildlife Centre - Nocturnal House (4 species):
Hazel Dormouse
Edible Dormouse
Serotine Bat (?)
Western European Hedgehog

Rodbaston Animal Zone - Nocturnal House (4 species):
Asian Palm Civet
Kinkajou
Grey Mouse Lemur
Pygmy Slow Loris

According to the zoo's website

Newquay Zoo - Nocturnal House (3 species):
Owston’s Civet
Grey Slender Loris
Javan Chevrotain

Shepreth Wildlife Park - Nocturnal House (3 species):
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Pygmy Slow Loris
Arabian Spiny Mouse (?)

Berkshire Animal Management Centre - Nocturnal Room (2+ species):
Three-banded Armadillo
Brush-tailed Possum

The zoo’s website only mentions those two species, although I strongly suspect that the likes of Pygmy Slow Loris, Small-spotted Genet and Brush-tailed Bettong, all of which the zoo houses, are held within the Nocturnal Room

Hemsley Conservation Centre - Nocturnal House (2 species):
Pygmy Slow Loris
New Guinea Ground Cuscus

Africa Alive - Aardvark House (2 species):
Aardvark
Bat-eared Fox

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Aye-Aye
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat

Hamerton Zoo - Sloth House (2 species):
Linnaeus’ Two-toed Sloth
Three-banded Armadillo

Ark Wildlife Park - Kinkajou Cavern (1 species):
Kinkajou

The following also have nocturnal houses, but sadly I don’t have a species list:

Amazon World Zoo Park - Nocturnal House
Barleylands Farm - Nocturnal and Exotic House
Dudley Zoo - Castle Creatures
Exotic Zoo - Nocturnal Zone
Hoo Zoo - Nocturnal House
Ponderosa Zoo - Nocturnal House
Tropical Butterfly House - Nocturnal House
West Midlands Safari Park - Twilight Cave
Wild Discovery - Nocturnal House
 
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Northumberland Zoo has a nocturnal house with Grey Mouse Lemur, Sugar Glider and a Potoroo which isn't signed. The house has had a recent refurbishment and also previously included Axolotl, Jerboa and an Armadillo species which are no longer on show. Livingstone's Fruit Bat is kept in a separate diurnal exhibit.
 
ZSL London Zoo - Night Life (7 species):
Grey Slender Loris
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Senegal Galago
Naked Mole Rat
Pygmy Slow Loris
Potto

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Aye-Aye

London's Galago are Moholi, not Senegal :)
 
Two come to mind from the zoo's I've visited:

- Lakeland Wildlife Oasis has a very small nocturnal area in their tropical house, which consists of only three enclosures:
- Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
- Egyptian Spiny Mouse
- Sun Beetle

The sun beetle enclosure used to house a Gambian Giant Pouched Rat, which has now been moved to a different part of the zoo.

Telford's Exotic Zoo has a whole area of their site dedicated to nocturnal animals, the ones I remember from my last visit in 2021 are:
- Common Genet
- Barn Owl
- Striped Skunk
- Red Fox
- Axolotl
- Egyptian Spiny Mouse
- Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec

There could be more species I'm forgetting. I'm planning another visit this November so I'll comment again with an update.
 
Two come to mind from the zoo's I've visited:

- Lakeland Wildlife Oasis has a very small nocturnal area in their tropical house, which consists of only three enclosures:
- Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
- Egyptian Spiny Mouse
- Sun Beetle

The sun beetle enclosure used to house a Gambian Giant Pouched Rat, which has now been moved to a different part of the zoo.

Telford's Exotic Zoo has a whole area of their site dedicated to nocturnal animals, the ones I remember from my last visit in 2021 are:
- Common Genet
- Barn Owl
- Striped Skunk
- Red Fox
- Axolotl
- Egyptian Spiny Mouse
- Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec

There could be more species I'm forgetting. I'm planning another visit this November so I'll comment again with an update.

I don't think Exotic keep their Genet in Nocturnal settings do they? They never used to, they had two outside exhibits and an inside house.

They do have an area in the tropical / reptile house, which has a dark section, which is where their Tailless Tenrec is.
 
I don't think Exotic keep their Genet in Nocturnal settings do they? They never used to, they had two outside exhibits and an inside house.

They do have an area in the tropical / reptile house, which has a dark section, which is where their Tailless Tenrec is.
From what I remember, the Genet enclosure is part of the main nocturnal building, and their indoor viewing is in the same part of the building as the axolotl tank and Spiny Mouse enclosure. This was a while ago so I could be wrong, but that's how I remember the layout.
 
So, with all the information generously provided upthread, and with some further research, I thought I would post an updated list, so as to have all the information in one place. Still with some uncertainties and questions, and a lack of a species list for certain exhibits, but its certainly progress. I have also added an additional species list under zoos that have additional reverse lighting setups, but that are part of other, diurnal buildings, as opposed to devoted nocturnal houses. There are far more nocturnal exhibits in the country than I had anticipated, it would seem:

Cannon Hall Farm - Small Mammal House (24 species):
European Harvest Mouse
Sugar Glider
Large Hairy Armadillo
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Long-eared hedgehog
Persian Jird
Brandt’s Vole
Acacia Rat
Black Rat
Northern Luzon Giant Cloud Rat
Northern Treeshrew
Common Yellow-toothed Cavy
Brazilian Cavy
African Woodland Dormouse
African Pygmy Mouse
Cactus Mouse
House Mouse
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Guinea Pig
Hermanns Tortoise
Cichlid sp
Barbary Striped Grass Mouse
Long-nosed Potoroo

Wingham Wildlife Park - Nocturnal House (16 species):
Asian Palm Civet
Senegal Galago
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Indochinese Clouded Leopard
Northern Luzon giant cloud rat
Gila Monster
Beaded Lizard
New Caledonian Giant Gecko
African Fat-tailed Gecko
Savu Island Python
Three-banded Armadillo
Racoon Dog
Tawny Frogmouth
Spix's Night Monkey
Sugar Glider
Naked Mole Rat

Isle of Wight Reptilarium - Nocturnal Room (12 species):
Gargoyle Gecko
Crested Gecko
Cave Cricket sp
Whip Scorpion sp
Cuban Tree Frog
Chilean Rose Tarantula
African Giant Land Snail
African Common Toad
Bumblebee Toad
Land Hermit Crab
Death's Head Cockroaches
Tokay Gecko

According to the zoo’s website.

Get to Know Animals - Nocturnal Room (9+ species):
Striped Skunk
Lesser Egyptian Jerboa
Fat-tailed Jird
Gambian Pouched Rat
Nine-banded Armadillo
Sugar Glider
Short-tailed Opossum
Cane Toad
African Bullfrog

ZSL London Zoo - Night Life (7 species):
Grey Slender Loris
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Senegal Galago
Naked Mole Rat
Pygmy Slow Loris
Potto

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Aye-Aye

Shaldon Zoo - Nocturnal House (6 species):
Bengal Slow Loris
Pygmy Slow Loris
Grey Slender Loris
Three-banded Armadillo
Stick Insect sp
Scorpion sp

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Grey Mouse Lemur
Brush-tailed Bettong

Tropiquaria Zoo - Nocturnal House (6 species):
African Dormouse
Common Genet
Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec
Long-nosed Potoroo
Kinkajou
Northern Flying Squirrel

Birmingham Wildlife Conservation Park - Nocturnal House (6 species):
Goeldi’s Monkey
Grey-handed Douroucouli
Linneaus’ Two-toed Sloth
Potto
Northern Luzon Giant Cloud Rat
Three-banded Armadillo

Also held in nocturnal displays:

Pygmy Slow Loris
Grey Slender Loris
Brush-tailed Bettong

Beale Wildlife Park - Nocturnal House (6 species):
New Guinea Ground Cuscus
Grey Mouse Lemur
Grey Slender Loris
Naked Mole Rat
Rio Fuerte Beaded Lizard
(Unknown sixth species)

Cotswold Wildlife Park - Bat House (5 species):
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Seba's Short-tailed Bat
Mongolian Jird
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Spinifex Hopping Mouse

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Naked Mole Rat
Senegal Galago
Grey Mouse Lemur
Straw-coloured Fruit Bat

Chester Zoo - Fruit Bat Forest (5 species):
Seba's Short-tailed Bat
Rodrigues' Flying Fox
Omani Blind Cave Fish
Turkish Spiny Mouse
Barbary Striped Grass Mouse

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Aye-Aye
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat

Lotherton Wildlife World - Nocturnal House (5 species):
Northern Luzon Giant Cloud Rat
Kinkajou
Three-banded Armadillo
Seba’s Short-tailed Bat
Egyptian Fruit Bat

According to an article about the exhibit’s opening.

British Wildlife Centre - Nocturnal House (4 species):
Hazel Dormouse
Edible Dormouse
Serotine Bat (?)
Western European Hedgehog

Rodbaston Animal Zone - Nocturnal House (4 species):
Asian Palm Civet
Kinkajou
Grey Mouse Lemur
Pygmy Slow Loris

According to the zoo's website

Newquay Zoo - Nocturnal House (3 species):
Owston’s Civet
Grey Slender Loris
Javan Chevrotain

Shepreth Wildlife Park - Nocturnal House (3 species):
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Pygmy Slow Loris
Arabian Spiny Mouse (?)

Berkshire Animal Management Centre - Nocturnal Room (2+ species):
Three-banded Armadillo
Brush-tailed Possum

The zoo’s website only mentions those two species, although I strongly suspect that the likes of Pygmy Slow Loris, Small-spotted Genet and Brush-tailed Bettong, all of which the zoo houses, are held within the Nocturnal Room

Hemsley Conservation Centre - Nocturnal House (2 species):
Pygmy Slow Loris
New Guinea Ground Cuscus

Africa Alive - Aardvark House (2 species):
Aardvark
Bat-eared Fox

Also held in nocturnal displays:
Aye-Aye
Malagasy Giant Jumping Rat

Hamerton Zoo - Sloth House (2 species):
Linnaeus’ Two-toed Sloth
Three-banded Armadillo

Ark Wildlife Park - Kinkajou Cavern (1 species):
Kinkajou

The following also have nocturnal houses, but sadly I don’t have a species list:

Amazon World Zoo Park - Nocturnal House
Barleylands Farm - Nocturnal and Exotic House
Dudley Zoo - Castle Creatures
Exotic Zoo - Nocturnal Zone
Hoo Zoo - Nocturnal House
Ponderosa Zoo - Nocturnal House
Tropical Butterfly House - Nocturnal House
West Midlands Safari Park - Twilight Cave
Wild Discovery - Nocturnal House
An impressive list of more nocturnal exhibits than I thought existed in the UK. Unfortunately I have a visual impairment that means that it is not possible to adjust to very low light levels so there are many times when I have had to find my way back through the entrance rather than walk into walls and other visitors, so I miss out on seeing some interesting species. Some nocturnal houses have brighter lighting at the start or end of the day which means I can at least look around and read the labels, even if the animals are not active - though they often are. Why more places do not have low-level floor lights along the wall line of the enclosures I do not know as that makes navigation so much easier. Which houses do you consider are the easiest for visitors to navigate through? I appreciate that nocturnal exhibits have a useful role, not least to make people aware that many species normally are most active at night, but do have reservations about species that do as well, or better, in diurnal exhibits where they have access to external enclosures and are not kept only indoors with artificial lighting. Are the Hermann's tortoises at Cannon Hall Farm in a nocturnal section?
 
London's Galago are Moholi, not Senegal :)
I noted this in one of my posts upthread, but foolishly forgot to change it when I reposted the list. :( I'll blame my recent visit to Cotswold for throwing me off so that I don't know what my own local zoo displays! :p
Tropiquaria have Cape genet (Genetta tigrina) not Common genet :)
Interesting. Their website lists Common, but I will ensure to adjust this if I ever update the list again. Sadly, I think I left it too late to edit my post
An impressive list of more nocturnal exhibits than I thought existed in the UK. Unfortunately I have a visual impairment that means that it is not possible to adjust to very low light levels so there are many times when I have had to find my way back through the entrance rather than walk into walls and other visitors, so I miss out on seeing some interesting species. Some nocturnal houses have brighter lighting at the start or end of the day which means I can at least look around and read the labels, even if the animals are not active - though they often are. Why more places do not have low-level floor lights along the wall line of the enclosures I do not know as that makes navigation so much easier. Which houses do you consider are the easiest for visitors to navigate through? I appreciate that nocturnal exhibits have a useful role, not least to make people aware that many species normally are most active at night, but do have reservations about species that do as well, or better, in diurnal exhibits where they have access to external enclosures and are not kept only indoors with artificial lighting. Are the Hermann's tortoises at Cannon Hall Farm in a nocturnal section?
I am aware of some zoos offering outdoor access by virtue of cage-like setups that are covered in black sheets to keep the animal in a nocturnal setup (London's Aye-Aye enclosure and Wingham's Clouded Leopard enclosure being examples). In terms of diurnal additional enclosures, I can think of very few. Paignton's echidna have a sizable outdoor area, although I was informed upthread that the nocturnal portion is now off-display...
 
I noted this in one of my posts upthread, but foolishly forgot to change it when I reposted the list. :( I'll blame my recent visit to Cotswold for throwing me off so that I don't know what my own local zoo displays! :p

Thought I'd seen it noted somewhere! Happy to edit it for you if you'd like :)
 
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