No, but it could likely come from the other three zoos in Europe that hold the species.
Or a private holder in France
No, but it could likely come from the other three zoos in Europe that hold the species.
No, but it could likely come from the other three zoos in Europe that hold the species.

The park has already a nothern brown kiwi received from Berlin Zoo in 2016. I don't know if he is on show.What about the big projects that the park had presented a few years ago: kiwis, bats ...
Birth of two tawny frogmouths at the end of august and birth of two open-billed storks a week ago (first time for the park).
Wooh ! I suppose this is the first step to a breeding program in Europe but I don't know where they will be on display in the park.The Parc des Oiseaux will soon receive four Black-faced spoonbills (Platalea minor) from Tama Zoo (Tokyo, Japan). They will on display from the 2021 season.
Parc des Oiseaux
The real new thing for this year is the refurbishment of the old birds house at the entrance of the park. The house will be called "Missions 2070" focus on children learning about birds and conservation. We do not know if it will still house birds.
The park has already a nothern brown kiwi received from Berlin Zoo in 2016. I don't know if he is on show.
The next new exhibit will be a new conference center with two indoors enclosures on desert (american desert if I remember well) and antartic birds and a nocturnal area for small indigenous animals (not birds).
Sounds great!3 European black vultures arrived from Ouwehands - the Netherlands. Here the 3 birds which had hatched at Riga, Munster and Ostrava, had been socialized in a large aviary and now they have been send to Parc des Oiseaux to be paired with birds already at the birdpark in a special breeding-center ( "Programma Barnabé" ) were the species will be bred for re-introduction-programms.