Whilst perusing some Census and Plan pages (because naturally that's what you do at 2.15am on a public holiday), I stumbled upon a rather startling discovery: the tiny municipal zoo in Rockhampton's Botanics Gardens, best known for its two middle-aged bachelor chimps, is planning a rather significant expansion.
Not only have they stated a desire to expand their chimp group from two to twelve, but there are now apparently intentions to acquire lion-tailed macaques (despite this not being a program species), common marmosets, black-capped capuchins, small-clawed otters, Brazilian agoutis and perhaps most remarkably, Sumatran tigers and pygmy hippos!
That's just the exotic headline grabbers. Native mammal species listed for acquisition are squirrel gliders, red kangaroos, northern bettongs, northern quolls, short-beaked echidnas and platypus.
They have listings for 15 new bird species, 20 new reptile species and 11 new amphibian species. Oh, and the timetable for all this to happen is by 2014. They intend to get the tigers in 2012.
So did someone hack Rockhampton's ZAA database account, or is something big on the cards in central Queensland?
Not only have they stated a desire to expand their chimp group from two to twelve, but there are now apparently intentions to acquire lion-tailed macaques (despite this not being a program species), common marmosets, black-capped capuchins, small-clawed otters, Brazilian agoutis and perhaps most remarkably, Sumatran tigers and pygmy hippos!
That's just the exotic headline grabbers. Native mammal species listed for acquisition are squirrel gliders, red kangaroos, northern bettongs, northern quolls, short-beaked echidnas and platypus.
They have listings for 15 new bird species, 20 new reptile species and 11 new amphibian species. Oh, and the timetable for all this to happen is by 2014. They intend to get the tigers in 2012.
So did someone hack Rockhampton's ZAA database account, or is something big on the cards in central Queensland?