Yes, the one "in person"Cacareco was the rhino that became a political figure in São Paulo during the protest vote wasn't she ?
Understandable. During the 1950's the zoo had a large group of baboons, as you can see in this video:
The narrator says the monkeys kept there are from the Papio papio species, but you can clearly notice their similarities with the ones from the Papio hamadaryas species.
Also, I'd like to share a file from Unirio which explains us a little bit more about the history of the zoos in the world and in Brazil, but the main focus were the ones in the city of Rio de Janeiro:
http://www.unirio.br/ppg-pmus/jose_alberto_pais.pdf
The document shows us a list which contains most of the animal species and specimens obtained by the institution, from 1951 to 1990. You can notice that sacred baboons have been brought to the zoo since the 1950's.
Wow, I didn't know that! Then was Cacareco the second registred captive born rhino in the world? That's pretty interesting.Fun fact: Rio Zoo was the second zoo in the world to breed rhinos. The first one was the Brookfield Zoo, in Chicago.
Hmmm didn't know there were rhinos born there before her. Once she is probably the most highlighted rhino from those times in Brasil, I thought she was also the first to be born.No, two births occurred before hers.
About the enclosures, I'll have to agree with you. However, the zoo's collection was much larger than it is now.
Ah, yes, I was confused if there were other rhinos born in Rio before her or if you meant in other places of the world. Now I get it.Cacareco was the first Brazilian-born rhinoceros and I can cite two examples of captive-born calf births happening before the ones in Chicago: one in 1826, in Kathmandu (Nepal) and other happening in 1925, in Kolkata (India). Both of the calves were of the greater one-horned species.
Yeah, the zoos of São Paulo, BH, Brasília and Porto Alegre (Sapucaia) were "born" more or less in the same period (end of the 50's), and I agree with you about when their collection's highest point was.I think both zoos had equally high numbers of species kept. But Rio had its golden age in the 1950's. São Paulo and many other zoos in Brazil had their golden ages in the late 1980's and 1990's.
Didn't know there were vervet monkeys in any zoos in Brazil. Interesting to know about it. Do you have pictures of the exhibits where these and the other cercopithecidaes are kept?I went to the Volta Redonda Zoo today. Turns out the place keeps four Old World monkeys of three different species: a Japanese macaque, an olive baboon and two vervet monkeys. The baboon is definitely a male. I don't know about the others though, but I presume the macaque is a male and the two others are male and female, as they are from the same species. Therefore, they might be a couple.
There were vervet monkeys at Rio Zoo as well, I don't know if they're still there though. Look at this video from the AFP News Agency:
About the monkeys in Volta Redonda, I do have pictures of them, and I'll probably post those pictures here (on Zoochat, not on this thread, obviously).