Rare Species Conservation Centre RSCC animal transfers and general news

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I came across this while I was looking around on the internet. It seems the place has been continuing to run as a private centre, and has been working on importing some species.

Zoo Jobs: CARNIVORE & PROSIMIAN KEEPER VACANCY

I'm particularly interested in the following sentence:
"We are home to a diverse collection ranging from Aardwolf to Rusty Spotted Cat and Banded Civet to Tarsier."
it always sounds terrible when an organisation, which one would presume wants to be considered seriously, describes themselves as "maverick" (from the job advert).
 
Just wanted to ask on this forum if anyone knows anything about tarsiers at RSCC, but apparantly the rumour has spread to here as well. Does anyone know anything more about them, I never knew there where any in Europe...
 
When they say banded civet, could they mean Owston's palm civet?

That is the most likely option, but then they could always mean the banded palm civet - Hemigalus derbyanus. Of course, if they were to help bring back any banded species, my preference would be banded linsang ;)
 
jwer said:
Just wanted to ask on this forum if anyone knows anything about tarsiers at RSCC, but apparantly the rumour has spread to here as well. Does anyone know anything more about them, I never knew there where any in Europe...
wasn't Leipzig after tarsiers for Gondwana? Maybe that's why RSCC (may) have them, as they seem to act pretty much as a middle-man trader.
 
Yes they are banded palm civets not owstons! The tarsiers are not for leipzig and should remain at the centre!
 
if they are Philippine tarsiers I'd say they came from the same supplier who sent the Palawan binturongs?

They might do all right with the tarsiers, seeing as they will presumably be kept in a standard enclosure (i.e. not reversed night-day) and the animals won't have to deal with the stress of all the visitors and their noise and flash-bulbs that they'd have to endure if on display at a regular zoo.
 
I rather suspect the tarsiers *will* remain right where they are. Sods law, y'see :p
 
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Al already said that they'd likely remain where they are: "The tarsiers are not for leipzig and should remain at the centre!"
 
Indeed - I meant to embolden the word "will" as emphasis, as even without Al's statement they should be remaining where they are, I'd never expect something as unusual as tarsiers getting into circulation!

I've edited my post to reflect this.
 
your edited post is clearer to me now (the eternal problem of the written word: interpretation issues :D).
 
Why does the job applicant need exceptional communication skills and spotless hygiene to work at a facility that is closed to the public? The description says we are not currently open to the public. Could the word "currently" be interpreted to mean we will be open to the public in the future?
 
Why does the job applicant need exceptional communication skills and spotless hygiene to work at a facility that is closed to the public? The description says we are not currently open to the public. Could the word "currently" be interpreted to mean we will be open to the public in the future?
you still need communication skills to work in a non-public organisation. And the hygiene bit says "Exceptional standards or [sic, should read "of"] hygiene and cleanliness are essential" which isn't to do with keeping things tidy for the visitors or for the staff being visually presentable for visitors, it's to do with keeping things hygenic for the animals (food prep etc)
 
interesting comment in this BBC article from January this year: BBC Nature - Strange endangered primates you may have never heard of
Trade of tarsiers is permitted by CITES - but what for? The animal trade organisation Traffic says significantly, figures show 520 tarsiers were imported into Germany from Indonesia for scientific purposes in 2010
I can't find the report from Traffic, so I can't say how many of the tarsiers were live and how many were preserved specimens.
 
According to their Facebook page they will be having some Open Days in October , dates to be announced .
 
According to their Facebook page they will be having some Open Days in October , dates to be announced .

Very interesting. Of course, how useful this information actually is to me depends very much on

a) when in October it is
b) how soon details are confirmed
c) if I can manage to get there at however short-notice it might end up being!
 
hi all i am new to this forum but have been nosing around for a while
i live very close to the rscc and visited it on its first year of opening and also went quite a few times to its predecessor the monkey rainforest. only recently i have realized what a nice little collection it turned out to be. anyway there website which has been offline for a while has come back http://www.rarespeciesconservationcentre.org/
also on zootierliste it mentions that the banded palm civets have left the collection and that there is no tarsier although this is probably not accurate.
 
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