130 different monkey-species ???? :
Lima-based zoo features 130 monkey species from different countries
Lima-based zoo features 130 monkey species from different countries
Most of these were still there, yeah, except for the sea elephant (a shame!).Checked a few recent videos of this little known zoo and some real rareties could be seen among them :
- White-winged trumpeter
- Southern sea-elephant
- Pampas cat
- Culpeo ( aka Andean fox )
- Sechuran fox ( aka Peruvian desert fox )
- Giant otter
- Red uakari
- Red-crowned titi
There is currently no elephant in the zoo.Does the zoo still have the female Asian elephant Cobus?
Most of these were still there, yeah, except for the sea elephant (a shame!).
Help with the Viscacha and Red howler identification is welcome, not sure if there are already pictures online but I can upload some later if necessary. Don't have any good pictures of the Saddleback tamarin unfortunately.
Red howlers are probably Alouatta seniculus, but the identification on phenotype is difficult (or impossible). They usually have several types of saddleback tamarins, mostly Leontocebus leucogenys (with the black arms), depends on confiscations.
I added a picture of the viscachas, southern???
The sakis are not monk, but Pithecia inusta. They often have several subspecies of woolly monkeys, poeppigii and tschudii were visible the past few years. They had this year a yellow-tailed, but I think that it died.
Well, that depends, as there are often changes in the collection. At one time they had inusta (from Leyendas), but I have also seen animals that could have been hybrids. And to be honest, their taxonomy is complicated and disputed. I was a few months ago in Huachipa, will check the pictures of the only saki monkey they had and try to identify it (and post it on the gallery).The sakis of Parque de las Leyendas are Pithecia inusta and the sakis of Huachipa are monk? Are they two different species?
If it helps, my visit was in June 2024.Well, that depends, as there are often changes in the collection. At one time they had inusta (from Leyendas), but I have also seen animals that could have been hybrids. And to be honest, their taxonomy is complicated and disputed. I was a few months ago in Huachipa, will check the pictures of the only saki monkey they had and try to identify it (and post it on the gallery).