JabbaFlabba
Active Member
Rare Animals in Zoos in UK
*exmoorTo start with I would like to mention the exmoor beast a black leopard that is the main attraction at senior zoo
There are a few missing from this list too. Greater Grison, Brush Turkey, Barking Owl, Black Backed Jackal(don't think anywhere else in the UK has them now) ?Southern aardwolf, tiger quoll, golden brush tail possum, rufous bettong, spinifex hopping mouse, dingo, Javan binturong, oncilla, Malayan tiger, johnstone’s Cassowary, white masked bearded palm civit, ringtail possum, yellow spotted bush hyrax and wombats at hamerton
The latterDo you mean the animals with the smallest numbers in UK zoos or the animals with the smallest global populations that are held in UK zoos?
If we think about the latter, I would suggest the Round Island boas at Jersey, the spoon-billed sandpipers at Slimbridge (neither of which are on-show) and Javan green magpies on-show at Chester and Newquay (not sure about the other holders).
But your own example given is a black Leopard...The latter
To start with I would like to mention the exmoor beast a black leopard that is the main attraction at senior zoo
It was supposed to say "Exmoor Zoo" (see his following post).Could you explain what a 'senior zoo' is?
It was supposed to say "Exmoor Zoo" (see his following post).
Other examples include flat-tailed tortoise and Anguillan racer at Jersey, ploughshare tortoise at Chester and Jersey, fanaloka and ringtail at Exmoor, Grandidier’s vontsira and white-tailed antsangy at Chester, Titicaca water frog at Slimbridge, Chester, BCA and Whipsnade, Lord Howe Island stick insect at Bristol, Bermuda killifish and Omani blind cave fish at Chester (and I believe the latter is also at Blue Planet Aquarium).....and so on
...but are these, and all the others listed, 'latter' or 'former'..?
As far as I'm concerned, global means everywhere on planet Earth.I'm just confused now! By global population, do we mean wild population or global zoo population or a mixture of both?
I would say both for most of them.....
I would say both for most of them.....
Correct, but some species were originally listed before clarification was given. The first few replies thought the question was about animals rarely seen in UK zoos, I think the black leopard example fuelled the misunderstanding!Not sure that wombats, or ringtails or leopards have small global populations...?