Reimagining Australian Exhibits in U.S. Zoos

Salties seem to be very rare in the US. The only place I've ever seen them is Reptile Gardens in South Dakota. Are freshwater crocodiles kept anywhere outside of Australia?

I also think an Australasian section of a zoo would be neat. Does that include Indonesia or just Papua New Guinea.
I’ve seen saltwater crocs at several US zoos. Freshwater I’ve seen at fewer, but still a handful (I used to work with one)
 
I think the reason why a lot of zoos don't keep Saltwater Crocodiles is because of what Saltwater Crocodiles are: the largest living reptile. I believe Baru was the last saltie imported to the US, and his entire selling point is that he's BIG. Yes, he was brought in for Wild Walkabout, but now he's the crown jewel of the Toledo Zoo's reptile house.
The same goes for Jaws at Wildlife World or Salty (real original) at Fort Worth. They're both the headliners of Dragon World & the MOLA, respectively. And both zoos have dedicated Australian areas, too. I would love to see more zoos put salties in their Australian exhibits, but I guess zoos would rather emphasize the "reptile" over the "Australian" in "Australian reptile."
 
Im not experienced with American zoos (or zoos in general) but the one zoo I have visited seems to have the same problem with its Australian section: being boring and repetitive. Wondering what kind of improvements could be made in Canada as well.

Which zoo was this?
 
I think it's worth mentioning that many facilities keep Australian reptiles or birds in their dedicated reptile or bird exhibits, as opposed to including them in a dedicated Australia area. There are frilled lizard, kookaburra, little penguins, frogmouth, and even cassowary that have been held at zoos in areas without any biogeographic link to these species. Marsupials are usually not entitled to this kind of benefit besides isolated walkabouts, large macropods in hoofstock yards, and in the past some small mammal houses, although that entire breed of building seems on the way out.
 
I think it's worth mentioning that many facilities keep Australian reptiles or birds in their dedicated reptile or bird exhibits, as opposed to including them in a dedicated Australia area. There are frilled lizard, kookaburra, little penguins, frogmouth, and even cassowary that have been held at zoos in areas without any biogeographic link to these species. Marsupials are usually not entitled to this kind of benefit besides isolated walkabouts, large macropods in hoofstock yards, and in the past some small mammal houses, although that entire breed of building seems on the way out.

Yep!!! I can think of quite a few zoos that do this with reptiles and birds.
 
I know that the Great Plains Zoo in South Dakota also had camels in their Australia exhibit (they were bactrian, but in reference to the feral camel population) as well as a "sheep station" themed exhibit to talk about the Australian wool industry. Have komodo dragons ever been included in Australian-type exhibits?
 
I know that the Great Plains Zoo in South Dakota also had camels in their Australia exhibit (they were bactrian, but in reference to the feral camel population) as well as a "sheep station" themed exhibit to talk about the Australian wool industry. Have komodo dragons ever been included in Australian-type exhibits?
LA, kind of sort of? Their Komodo is kept near their Australian nocturnal house, but I’m not sure if it’s actually part of the Australian area.
 
I know that the Great Plains Zoo in South Dakota also had camels in their Australia exhibit (they were bactrian, but in reference to the feral camel population) as well as a "sheep station" themed exhibit to talk about the Australian wool industry. Have komodo dragons ever been included in Australian-type exhibits?
Not American, but the Toronto Zoo has the Komodo featured in the Australian section.
 
I think houstons zoo worst move was getting rid of their wombat lily cause she was wild born and lived at Healesville sanctuary until she moved to Houston then to Toledo where she died i had a plushie from the houston zoo but that was like 8 years ago so it's long gone:(
 
Something I’ve noticed with Australian exhibits is that the majority always focus on the desert/arid environments of Australia. I don’t think I’ve seen an Australia exhibit focus on the tropical environments of the continent. Would be a nice change of pace to create a tropical Australia section in Australia areas. Can include cassowaries, crocodiles, lorikeets, flying foxes, and other birds and reptiles from that area.
 
If AZA zoos were more interested in representing ecoregions than in displaying charismatic animals then you would see a greater diversity of Australian species. The Living Desert Zoo's Australian Adventures exhibit feels different and has a more interesting and unique animal collection because they were interested in showcasing the biodiversity and beauty of the Australian desert. Zoos that just want to engage their guests aren't usually going to do more than create a Walkaroo Kangabout (to borrow that catchy phrase) and/or an interactive budgie/rainbow lorikeet aviary.

Personally, I actually like Walkaroo Kangabouts and interactive budgie/rainbow lorikeet aviaries. I should duck for cover after saying that here! It is just a shame that they are not used more often to support other Australian/Australasian exhibits with species of greater conservation significance and to convey compelling educational themes. I think it is a huge missed opportunity.
 
"Australia" as a continent is much more than just the country of Australia. I'd love to see some exhibits focussed on Papua, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands. Philadelphia's bird house has a few exhibits dedicated to Guam and Hawaii

McNeil Avian Center - Built In 1916 - ZooChat
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(Credit: @snowleopard )

I believe it has since been renovated, but Point Defiance had an aquarium that revolved around the wildlife of the South Pacific, what made it unique was the fact it was a walkthrough beach. I'm unsure if birds were ever displayed here, but it would be a unique idea that differs from the usual walkthrough tropical rainforest!

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south-pacific-aquarium.85337

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South Pacific Aquarium - ZooChat
south-pacific-aquarium.85340

(Credit @snowleopard)

I think the problem with representing Oceania as a whole is the lack of animal species other than fish that are native to the islands. Papua would be pretty easy for a major zoo to do (tree kangaroos, cassowaries, and a bunch of reptiles. Maybe even birds of paradise depending on the zoo), but the rest of the islands don't have much room for a full fledged exhibit. There are some creatures here and there which can be find in non-Australia Oceania that are held in quite a few places (Solomon Island tree skink, Fiji banded iguana, Guam kingfisher, Guam rail, Marianas fruit dove, kiwi, kea). I think a "South Pacific" house would be a cool idea for a zoo to explore. It could check off the box for an aquarium and a walkthrough jungle if the facility were to get their hands on enough animals (Some like kiwis, birds of paradise, tuataras, and keas would be difficult to get, but they exist in the US).
 
No, Australia as a continent is only the country of Australia. Oceania as a region is wider than Australia.
Australia is both depending on who you ask. Australia is typically interchangeable with Oceania continent-wise but it’s also used for the island and country. If Australia only applied to Australia, then there wouldn’t be any continent for most of the pacific islands (except Zealandia I guess)
 
If Australia only applied to Australia, then there wouldn’t be any continent for most of the pacific islands (except Zealandia I guess)
Islands aren't really a part of a continent. Oceania isn't a continent either, it's just a region we kind of pretend is a continent in order to make sorting countries into geographic groups easier.
 
Islands aren't really a part of a continent. Oceania isn't a continent either, it's just a region we kind of pretend is a continent in order to make sorting countries into geographic groups easier.
Would that mean the Caribbean, the uk, Cyprus, Madagascar, Sri Lanka, Japan, etc. wouldn’t count as being part of a continent? Though I feel at least the uk would be as they used to be connected to Europe
 
No, Australia as a continent is only the country of Australia. Oceania as a region is wider than Australia.
Like @MOG2012 said, what do those count as? If Japan and the Philippines are part of Asia, wouldn’t New Zealand belong to the “continent” of Australia? I mean most websites, including ZooChat, clump the Pacific Islands under the region of Oceania
 
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