San Diego Zoo San Diego Zoo news 2022

The kiwis are also all geriatric so probably no plans to exhibit them at all in the near future

Does anyone have an idea where they came from?

San Diego received a kiwi via a join import from New Zealand in 2010: New Zealand Embassy Ceremoniously Hands Over Kiwi Pair for New National Zoo Breeding Science Center

Going back further, the zoo has exchanged kiwi with Memphis Zoo (which has also loaned kiwi from Frankfurt Zoo):

Memphis Zoo has housed kiwis off and on since 1991, when a female Brown Kiwi was received on loan from the San Diego Zoo to celebrate the annual Memphis in May festival (when New Zealand was the featured country). The Memphis Zoo imported four kiwis in the fall of 1991 from zoos in New Zealand. A male from the Auckland Zoo was kept at the Memphis Zoo, and the other three were sent to other zoos across the U.S. Memphis’ original kiwis were housed in the Kenyan building. This is now the Dragon’s Lair exhibit, which houses Komodo dragons. In 1995, our remaining male kiwi was sent to the San Diego Zoo on a breeding loan.

Memphis Zoo Hatches First Ever Kiwi
 
So I just found out SD has Bobobos, not Chimpanzees as I had thought. All this time I thought I have never seen Bonobos, yet there they are running around on a video recording on my smartphone in all their glory. That was a fun little surprise.
 
So I just found out SD has Bobobos, not Chimpanzees as I had thought. All this time I thought I have never seen Bonobos, yet there they are running around on a video recording on my smartphone in all their glory. That was a fun little surprise.
There are only 8 institutions that house bonobos in the United States. San Diego Zoo, Fort Worth Zoo, Memphis Zoo, Jacksonville Zoo, Columbus Zoo, Cincinnati Zoo, Milwaukee Zoo, and the Ape Cognition and Conservation Initiative.
 
I braved the crazy crowds and a slew of strollers to be at the Grand Opening of Wildlife Explorers Basecamp. I have attempted to make a list of the animals on exhibit by taking cell phone photos of the exhibit signs. I will start with the Spineless Marvels Building. It is a 2 story building on the right just past the entrance. You enter on the upper level, exit, and then take the stairs down to the lower level.
Spineless Marvels Building-2 stories

Upstairs

Malaysian Bus-cricket

Peruvian Jumping Stick

Dragon-headed Katydid

Lubber Grasshopper

Rhinoceros Katydid

Black Beauty Stick Insect

Domino Roach

Madagascar Hissing Cockroach

Taxicab Beetle

Leaf Insect

African Whip Spider

White-eyed Assassin Bug

Vampire Crab

Ghost Mantis

Dead Leaf Mantis

Giant Asian Mantis

Goliath Beetle

Jade-headed Buffalo Beetle

Downstairs

Giant African Millipede

Leafcutter Ants- (amazing exhibit)

Puerto Rican Arboreal Millipede

Rhinoceros Beetle

Honeypot Ant

Naked Mole-rat

Brazilian Black Tarantula

Desert Hairy Scorpion

Brazilian White-knee Tarantula

Mexican Fireleg Tarantula

Cave Clawed Scorpion

Antilles Pinktoe Tarantula

Curlyhair Tarantula

Children’s Stick Insect

Giant Leaf Insect

Peruvian Fire Stick

Jungle Nymph

New Guinea Stick Insect

Metallic Pinktoe Tarantula

Giant Cave Cockroach

African Whip Spider

Goliath Stick Insect

Golden Orb Weaver

Curlyhair Tarantula
 
Cool Critters-2 Story Building

First Floor

Chinese Giant Salamander

West African Lungfish

Caiman Lizard

Ferocious Water Bug

Pascagoula Map Turtle

Emperor Spotted Newt

Amazon Milky Tree Frog

Axolotl- (off exhibit at this time)

Dwarf Caiman

Sunburst Diving Beetle

Second Floor

Green tree Monitor

Rosy Boa

Pygmy Spiny-tailed Skink

Madagascar Tree Boa

Fijian Banded Iguana

Prehensile-tailed Skink

Annulated Boa

Ball Python

Woma

Angolan Python
 
The 3 animal ambassador exhibits are between the top and bottom floors of the Spineless Marvels Building. When I visited today they were an ocelot, sloth, and a porcupine. There are no signs as they will also rotate a binturong and a tamandua I believe.They will be having a show every day at 1:00 on the Animal Ambassador Stage. The stage is located across the bridge on your right side in front of Rady Ambassadors Building. On the left side of the stage is a plaque of donors with my name on it!IMG_1818.jpeg
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1818.jpeg
    IMG_1818.jpeg
    213 KB · Views: 62
Last edited:
On the left side of the bridge on the lower level is Wild Woods. This is really the kid's play area with rope bridges, climbing structures, a stream, and water jets. The 2 animal exhibits located there are South American Coati and Guianan Squirrel Monkey. It was just crazy there today. The Rainforest area houses the animal ambassador exhibits, tortoises, and caiman._1BE2988.jpg _1BE3015.jpg
 

Attachments

  • _1BE2988.jpg
    _1BE2988.jpg
    203.3 KB · Views: 57
  • _1BE3015.jpg
    _1BE3015.jpg
    281.4 KB · Views: 57
Thanks for your great species list @betsy! The new invertebrate house looks fantastic with over 40 species on display, and I'm also glad to see there are some dedicated exhibits for the ambassadors, meaning species like the ocelot and tamandua will be viewable beyond the presentations. Do you have any photos of those exhibits you could upload?
 
Thanks for your great species list @betsy! The new invertebrate house looks fantastic with over 40 species on display, and I'm also glad to see there are some dedicated exhibits for the ambassadors, meaning species like the ocelot and tamandua will be viewable beyond the presentations. Do you have any photos of those exhibits you could upload?
This is what I have now, not the best. _1BE3011.jpg _1BE3012.jpg
 

Attachments

  • _1BE3011.jpg
    _1BE3011.jpg
    122.1 KB · Views: 56
  • _1BE3012.jpg
    _1BE3012.jpg
    309 KB · Views: 58
This all looks great, don't get me wrong, but just to contextualise, I missed the part where this is worth $88 million plus? At least through my European lens, the reptile and invert houses are nothing special (at least in terms of species) and the rest consists of fairly mediocre (in the case of the tamandua (or ocelot, not sure which) exhibit shown above, pretty poor, honestly) exhibits for common species? The hummingbirds and tanagers looked great but ever since it's just been a bit underwhelming from my perspective - not even pangolins could make up for the massive chasm between price tag and results.

Just to be clear I know all about overblown construction costs, I live in London - but honestly this makes Land of the Lions seem like the bargain of the century. Obviously that is just from my point of view, having never visited SDZ, let alone the new Basecamp but I'd be interested to see what other who have think.
 
Last edited:
This all looks great, don't get me wrong, but just to contextualise, I missed the part where this is worth $88 million plus? At least through my European lens, the reptile and invert houses are nothing special (at least in terms of species) and the rest consists of fairly mediocre (in the case of the tamandua (or ocelot, not sure which) exhibit shown above, pretty poor, honestly) exhibits for common species? The hummingbirds and tanagers looked great but ever since it's just been a bit underwhelming from my perspective - not even pangolins could make up for the massive chasm between price tag and results.

Just to be clear I know all about overblown construction costs, I live in London - but honestly this makes Land of the Lions seem like the bargain of the century. Obviously that is just from my point of view, having never visited SDZ, let alone the new Basecamp but I'd be interested to see what other who have think.

I understand where you’re coming from and I believe the cost of the exhibit is most likely due to a few factors: life support systems, location/reputation of the zoo, infrastructure overhaul. Seeing that they have water features for guests and animals alike, especially the indoor exhibits that require filtration systems for some of their residents. As for the location and reputation of the zoo, San Diego is a very popular city, the county alone is within the top 10 most populated in the country. Construction projects within the city would be costly, very much reflected by the living situations of the residents of San Diego. Lastly, the Children’s zoo area was in dire need of an overhaul. It was decades old, which really showed off its age as the decades went by. And whenever infrastructure has to be done from the ground up, it will be an added cost aside from doing some revamping of pre-existing exhibits that may need a touch up. I will still try to make a trip happen this week if I can switch at work, I want to give it a proper assessment while also photographing it too :)
 
I understand where you’re coming from and I believe the cost of the exhibit is most likely due to a few factors: life support systems, location/reputation of the zoo, infrastructure overhaul. Seeing that they have water features for guests and animals alike, especially the indoor exhibits that require filtration systems for some of their residents. As for the location and reputation of the zoo, San Diego is a very popular city, the county alone is within the top 10 most populated in the country. Construction projects within the city would be costly, very much reflected by the living situations of the residents of San Diego. Lastly, the Children’s zoo area was in dire need of an overhaul. It was decades old, which really showed off its age as the decades went by. And whenever infrastructure has to be done from the ground up, it will be an added cost aside from doing some revamping of pre-existing exhibits that may need a touch up. I will still try to make a trip happen this week if I can switch at work, I want to give it a proper assessment while also photographing it too :)

(Just to be clear, the post below is not directed at you whatsoever, moreso at the zoo and its management.)

Just as a comparison, London built Land of the Lions, a complex comprising a 3-part lion habitat (2100 sqm), a Hanuman langur exhibit (400 sqm), an aviary for Green peafowl, Griffon vultures and Black kites (350 sqm), a Dwarf mongoose exhibit and a whole load of temple and village and train station theming, all for 5.2 million GBP (6.8 million USD). And that was on top of a whole load of old infrastructure, not a new site. I wouldn't say the scale is necessarily comparable (although the site sizes are, at around 7500 sqm and 8000 sqm) but it still begs the question - exactly where is all that money going? Surely not construction costs, as I've just shown that London Zoo (not exactly the most financially astute zoo in the world) can do it for a tiny fraction of the price despite construction costs being higher on average. The population argument is void - London's population is almost triple that of SD's entire county, and filtration systems don't exactly cost tens of millions.

So what exactly is costing the 80 or so unaccounted-for millions? San Diego's reputation? I should think that if that is the case, the zoo has some serious introspective thinking to do; if their name alone is causing them to spend almost a tenth of a billion dollars on an exhibit that could be built for a tenth of the cost almost anywhere else. Just to put $80 million in perspective, that is twice the cost of Masoala. Is that not faintly ridiculous, that SDZ is spending double the amount of money spent on one of the greatest zoo exhibits ever to build what is, at its core a pretty average Children's Zoo? It strikes me as wrong, and that together with the massive million dollar lion statue at the entrance makes me seriously worry that the place is moving further and further away from the actual mission of zoos. I'd have to wait until studies are done within the Basecamp but I'd be immensely surprised if it had any effect on the educative aspect of the zoo (and it certainly doesn't do much for research or conservation).

My skeptical self immediately saw the hefty price tag as a way of bringing in visitors, and while obviously quite an ironic point of view, I'm inclined to believe that the main reason the project cost so much was in order to flaunt the price tag across the news rather than because it actually warranted such a fee. And that in turn makes me wonder how that superfluous money injected into the project could be otherwise spent on other areas of the zoo (Urban Jungle, the Bear Grottos etc.) or beyond the confines of the zoo for conservation. Having visited predominantly European zoos, it is now painfully obvious to me how far removed American zoos are (with SDZ as an extreme example) from the purpose of zoos over here (which have generally stuck to the underlying ethos of a modern zoo with a few exceptions). And if that is the direction in which zoos are headed, I'm not optimistic.
 
Last edited:
You raise all good questions and critiques, something many have raised their collective eyebrows at some of the price tags rightly so. I remember initially the cost for the revamp of area was 69 million, rivaling their previous major project which was Africa Rocks :eek: None of us will ever truly know where all that budget went into even though it’s not something anyone can squanders.

I am sure San Diego’s reputation plays a part in this so perhaps there may be a need to have such budgets for their capital campaigns. Also the whole organization just underwent major restructuring too, there have been many changes between the zoo and Safari Park just in the past few years. Whether or not that may have also played a part in this project to a significant degree, I don’t know :/

From what I’ve seen based on news and photos of the complex, it’s certainly is an improvement to the previous area which appears to have more interactivity for guests of all ages compared to its previous iteration. I wish I knew more and I apologize for not being able to reply in a better way, currently at my job right now :oops: haha Luckily Zoochat has those with who can run laps around me with their extensive zoo knowledge so hopefully they can provide a more concise answer!
 
Back
Top