sooty mangabey
Well-Known Member
This is a fairly obscure question; however, I think I might have more joy from the Zoochat community than from a direct address to London Zoo itself!
In the ZSL Annual Report for 1995, an unknown species of galago is listed as both arriving and departing; no more information than this is given.
On Zootierliste, this animal is listed as a Rondo bushbaby / galago (Galagoides rondoensis) from southern Tanzania. if it was such an animal, it would almost certainly be the only Rondo galago to knowingly be held in a zoo. ZTL mentions that it escaped (!) - and quotes Richard Weigl's Longevity of Mammals book as a source.
Does anybody know any more about this animal? How and why did it arrive at London? Was it a deliberate acquisition, or a customs seizure of suchlike? And did it indeed escape, never to be seen again? And have Rondo galagos been kept elsewhere?
In the ZSL Annual Report for 1995, an unknown species of galago is listed as both arriving and departing; no more information than this is given.
On Zootierliste, this animal is listed as a Rondo bushbaby / galago (Galagoides rondoensis) from southern Tanzania. if it was such an animal, it would almost certainly be the only Rondo galago to knowingly be held in a zoo. ZTL mentions that it escaped (!) - and quotes Richard Weigl's Longevity of Mammals book as a source.
Does anybody know any more about this animal? How and why did it arrive at London? Was it a deliberate acquisition, or a customs seizure of suchlike? And did it indeed escape, never to be seen again? And have Rondo galagos been kept elsewhere?