biggest_dreamer
Well-Known Member
Oh, Hollywild also has emus.
You can remove Special Memories from the listings as it is closed.
Emu too.Dang it, missed it on rhea I see. I've been pulling them off as I spot them.
Last I checked (which was some months ago), LA only had 1.1 ostrich left. The male is the North African "red-necked" subspecies, S. c. camelus, while the female should be a Somali Ostrich, S. molybdophanes. Their other Somali I think was sent to Dallas? Why the zoo is mixing the two species is beyond me, especially when the North African Ostrich is highly endangered and should have female available from Bush Gardens.
The only zoo I knew of which had Masai Ostrich was Riverbanks but I believe these birds have died. Quite a few of our birds are likely the South African subspecies, however there will undoubtedly be a lot of animals with unknown or mixed lineages as well.
~Thylo
Why the zoo is mixing the two species is beyond me, especially when the North African Ostrich is highly endangered and should have female available from Bush Gardens.
I share your frustration on zoos being rather indiscriminate on mixing what has been deemed separate species. The North African is "Critically Endangered" (according to signage I've seen at San Francisco Zoo talking about their commitment in helping the species) and the Somali is "Vulnerable"
I have been told by a gentleman that raises ostriches and emus that the reason he keeps female ostriches is because they are easier to work with and that males would be very aggressive and out to kill me (I visited his property).
It really is unfortunate how in both the private sector and in zoos how there is indiscriminate cross-breeding between subspecies and hybridization between species. We need to do better in keeping species and subspecies pure
I will confirm that San Diego Safari Park does still have elegant-crested tinamous.
I thought I read somewhere that the AZA is trying to create a studbook for the Andean tinamou.
This is almost as bad a problem as with tigers (but according to phylogenetic studies on tigers, the once many "subspecies" (Bengal, Siberian, South China, Indochinese, and Malayan) are just populations, and there are really two subspecies of tigers - the mainland tigers (Panthera tigris tigris) and the Sunda Island tigers (P. t. sondaica)). But I digress.
I don't think any zoo organizations hybridize tigers.
~Thylo
Hi all, not sure if Frank Buck Zoo was still considered a holder of Lesser Rhea, they still claim to have them, both their website and the exhibit are labelled as such, but these do appear to be Greaters. Asked a few other people and they agreed.
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