Primates park

And is the tamarin population better today?

Personally , I believe it would have benefited enormously from an assurance population kept ex-situ for captive breeding in zoos. This was done successfully with all of the other lion tamarins and managed to achieve some brilliant results. Sadly historically this never happened with the Superagui lion tamarin which was discovered much later than the others (1990) and whose in-situ conservation was much more complicated.

Regarding the tamarin population in the wild , there is a new drive to research metapopulations, their ecology, and to conserve the wider Atlantic rainforest ecosystem which they inhabit in Parana and Sao Paulo States.I guess we will have to see in time how well it is faring, but ultimately it does remain the most threatened of the Leontopithecus species , the least known, and the most in need of a long term conservation intervention.
 
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In case it hasn't brought up yet, this is what JMC has according to JAZA's own website.

brown lemur (probably hybrids), common black lemur, ring-tailed lemur, black and white ruffed lemur, Lesser slow loris, Potto, Common marmoset, black tufted marmoset, pygmy marmoset, white-lip tamarin, red-hand tamarin, cotton-top tamarin, white-fronted capuchin, tufted capuchin, White-headed Capuchin, Black-capped Squirrel Monkey, Three-striped Night Monkey, Black Bearded Saki, White-faced Saki, White-fronted Spider Monkey, Geoffroy's Spider Monkey, Red-faced Spider Monkey, Brown Woolly Monkey, Golden-bellied Mangabey, Sykes' monkey, Cercopithecus ascanius schmidti, Cercopithecus cephus cephus, De Brazza's Monkey, Cercopithecus petaurista buettikoferi, Grivet, Patas Monkey, Formosan Rock Macaque, Crab-eating Macaque, Rhesus Monkey, two suspecies of snow monkey, Southern Pig-tailed Macaque, Bonnet Macaque, Lion-tailed Macaque, Toque Macaque, Barbary Macaque, Tibetan Macaque, Mandrill, Angolan Talapoin, Olive Baboon, Hamadryas Baboon, Angola Colobus, Guereza, Silvery Lutung, Francois's Langur, Lar Gibbon, Muller's Bornean Gibbon, Pileated Gibbon, Siamang, Common Chimpanzee, and a very lonely gorilla.

I personally would expect most of these species to be phased out since importing new animals could be difficult due to cites and the local customs.

Entry Monkeys:動物検疫所

There is also another primate park (not counting parks with wild macaques) in Japan called the nasu world monkey park. It also has species that are rare within Japan such as white-throated capuchins and wooly monkeys, but have lost their accreditation since they refused to stop making their monkeys do circus tricks.
 
Anyone have a list of Twycross and Chester species?

Both seem to be big names in the field of primates. What monkeys could we see in these two zoos in the future, I know that Chester plans to welcome gorillas ...
 
Anyone have a list of Twycross and Chester species?

Both seem to be big names in the field of primates. What monkeys could we see in these two zoos in the future, I know that Chester plans to welcome gorillas ...

Chester keep:

Aye-aye
Alaotran gentle lemur
Ring-tailed lemur
Black lemur
Crowned lemur
Red-bellied lemur
Belted black-and-white ruffed lemur
Red ruffed lemur
Eastern pygmy marmoset
Bearded emperor tamarin
Pied tamarin
Golden-headed lion tamarin
Yellow-breasted capuchin
Black howler monkey
Colombian spider monkey
Sulawesi crested macaque
Lion-tailed macaque
Mandrill
Lar gibbon
Silvery gibbon
Bornean orangutan
Sumatran orangutan
Chimpanzee

Twycross keep:

Ring-tailed lemur
Crowned lemur
Red ruffed lemur
Pygmy marmoset
Common marmoset
Silvery marmoset
Bearded emperor tamarin
Black howler monkey
Brown spider monkey
Colombian spider monkey
Red titi monkey
De Brazza’s monkey
Diana monkey
L’Hoest’s monkey
Black-and-white colobus
Dusky langur
François’s langur
Siamang
Northern white-cheeked gibbon
Agile gibbon
Pileated gibbon
Bornean orangutan
Western lowland gorilla
Chimpanzee
Bonobo


For future reference however, I do recommend to use Zootierliste for these kinds of questions....
 
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Both seem to be big names in the field of primates. What monkeys could we see in these two zoos in the future, I know that Chester plans to welcome gorillas ...

Twycross have in fact reduced the number of species they keep in recent years, mostly by natural attrition. I would not expect them to increase again. Similar with Chester- gorillas maybe yes at some stage though they have talked about having them again for many years without result, while changes/cancellations in planning new exhibits like Heart Of Africa etc seem to delay that still further.
 
Thanks for the lists.

If I ask is that there is a reason ZTL is inaccessible to me, I do not know why but impossible to open the site.
 
I'm doing research on Nasu World Monkey Park, and I can't find a full species list. From what I've seen the exhibits are terrible and also bad for photography, but I'd still like to know what they have there.

In case it hasn't brought up yet, this is what JMC has according to JAZA's own website.

brown lemur (probably hybrids), common black lemur, ring-tailed lemur, black and white ruffed lemur, Lesser slow loris, Potto, Common marmoset, black tufted marmoset, pygmy marmoset, white-lip tamarin, red-hand tamarin, cotton-top tamarin, white-fronted capuchin, tufted capuchin, White-headed Capuchin, Black-capped Squirrel Monkey, Three-striped Night Monkey, Black Bearded Saki, White-faced Saki, White-fronted Spider Monkey, Geoffroy's Spider Monkey, Red-faced Spider Monkey, Brown Woolly Monkey, Golden-bellied Mangabey, Sykes' monkey, Cercopithecus ascanius schmidti, Cercopithecus cephus cephus, De Brazza's Monkey, Cercopithecus petaurista buettikoferi, Grivet, Patas Monkey, Formosan Rock Macaque, Crab-eating Macaque, Rhesus Monkey, two suspecies of snow monkey, Southern Pig-tailed Macaque, Bonnet Macaque, Lion-tailed Macaque, Toque Macaque, Barbary Macaque, Tibetan Macaque, Mandrill, Angolan Talapoin, Olive Baboon, Hamadryas Baboon, Angola Colobus, Guereza, Silvery Lutung, Francois's Langur, Lar Gibbon, Muller's Bornean Gibbon, Pileated Gibbon, Siamang, Common Chimpanzee, and a very lonely gorilla.

I personally would expect most of these species to be phased out since importing new animals could be difficult due to cites and the local customs.

Entry Monkeys:動物検疫所

There is also another primate park (not counting parks with wild macaques) in Japan called the nasu world monkey park. It also has species that are rare within Japan such as white-throated capuchins and wooly monkeys, but have lost their accreditation since they refused to stop making their monkeys do circus tricks.
 
I'm doing research on Nasu World Monkey Park, and I can't find a full species list. From what I've seen the exhibits are terrible and also bad for photography, but I'd still like to know what they have there.
There isn't much that could be done but to tally the species by using social media which could be outdated. There's this playlist I found on youtube which could give one an idea on what the park has.

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmzGxCmreDOGlyzlolI1S0d87j4WqI0NI

I do remember this zoo having a grey tailed titi which are rare or even gone from Japan
 
I think a lot is due to the education and marketing departments of zoos. Many exhibits have little notices listing the common name, Latin name and perhaps a little map. These are unlikely to attract a visitor who goes part an exhibit after seeing an animal there. I remember a zoo exhibiting a paradise tree snake. If the notice had said that the 'flying' snake glides between trees and perhaps shown a video, more visitors may have been interested. Several exhibitions in museums show a range of audio-visual display material to interest visitors. Many zoos should use similar techniques.

Good point @Dassie rat and I totally agree.
 
I found this database consisting of the animals JMC once kept or samples received from other collections. There are animals such as bald uakari, agile mangabey, and tree shrews. However there seem to be species lieted without samples and most splits probably aren't recognized.
 
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