Prigen Conservation Breeding Ark

4 months ago a orphan Javan warty pig ( Sus verrucosus ) was brought in. This female was about three months old at the time of arrival and placed with a young Pot-bellied pig as company and they are both doing fine :).
 
PCBA has planned for a breeding projects of the Sulawesi forest turtle, as well as species of rainbow fish and gobies.

This a great news especially since the forest turtle is available for people to buy and keep here in Indonesia due to them being unprotected by the Indonesian government. There are private breeders for this rare species but they're obviously headed for the pet trade.
 
Surely the only one in captivity?
This species has often caught and kept as pet in Indonesia, labelled as a mink by the seller and keeper. With the current trend of keeping wildlife in Indonesia, the number of this species being keep as a house pet would definitely risen.
 
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The linked news update mentions the construction of a breeding facility for Bawean warty pigs (Sus blouchi). I was unaware this taxon had been split from the Javan species.
The split was suggested in Groves' Ungulate Taxonomy (from 2011). They are smaller and there are some other morphological differences, and of course the island is home to other endemic species such as the Bawean Hog Deer.

The suggested split seems to have only erratically been followed. I don't think it is a majority view yet, and whether the differences between them and Javan animals are robust enough for a splitting or whether they are just because it is a population separated on a small island (for geologically a relatively short time) is probably a good question. I doubt there has been any genetic work done on them.
 
PCBA has released 40 Javan pied mynas on Taman Safari Prigen's safari area. The event was attended by representative of the local government of East Java, IPB university's academics, local communities, and other guests. Monitoring and evaluation will regularly take place to ensure the wellbeing of the mynas.

Photos from PCBA Instagram page.

The mynas in their habituation aviary:
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Release of the mynas:
Screenshot_2022-11-06-15-49-08-64.png
 

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PCBA seems to had began their other mamalian projects, apart from the Javan warty pigs and Javan small-toothed palm civets.

Apart from Indonesian mountain weasel, Sunda pangolin, and red giant flying squirrel, they also have a spotted giant flying squirrel and interestingly a spiny bandicoot or long-nosed echymipera. They also had previously planned to breed several species of cuscus and also the Sumatran striped rabbit.

Let's see how this ambitious plans worked out in the future.

Image - Echymipera rufescens (Rufous Spiny Bandicoot) | BioLib.cz
Image - Echymipera rufescens (Rufous Spiny Bandicoot) | BioLib.cz
 
PCBA seems to had began their other mamalian projects, apart from the Javan warty pigs and Javan small-toothed palm civets.

Apart from Indonesian mountain weasel, Sunda pangolin, and red giant flying squirrel, they also have a spotted giant flying squirrel and interestingly a spiny bandicoot or long-nosed echymipera. They also had previously planned to breed several species of cuscus and also the Sumatran striped rabbit.

Let's see how this ambitious plans worked out in the future.

Image - Echymipera rufescens (Rufous Spiny Bandicoot) | BioLib.cz
Image - Echymipera rufescens (Rufous Spiny Bandicoot) | BioLib.cz

I thought bandicoots are gone from Indonesia!!
 
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