San Diego Zoo Safari Park San Diego Zoo Safari Park News 2019

A little late to the discussion but when I visited the park in January 2018 I saw the following antelope species:

1) Springbok
2) Blackbuck
3) Nilgai
4) Black Duiker
5) Yellow-Backed Duiker
6) White-Bearded Wildebeest
7) Bontebok
8) Nubian Red-Fronted Gazelle
9) Thomson's Gazelle
10) Slender-Horned Gazelle
11) Roan Antelope
12) Sable Antelope
13) Ellipsen Waterbuck
14) Lake Victoria Waterbuck
15) Ugandan Kob
16) Red Lechwe
17) Nile Lechwe
18) Southern Gerenuk
19) Cavendish's Dik-Dik
20) Addra Gazelle
21) Grant's Gazelle
22) Fringe-Eared Oryx
23) Scimitar-Horned Oryx
24) Gemsbok
25) Arabian Oryx
26) Cape Steenbok
27) Lowland Nyala
28) Giant Eland
29) Eastern Bongo
30) Common Eland
31) Eastern Sitatunga
32) Southern Greater Kudu

~Thylo
 
SDZSP keeps a hybrid population of ReticulatedXRothschild's Giraffes so the birth is of no conservation value.

~Thylo

They also keep Masai giraffes and according to my information the park still has some purebred Rothschild giraffes. But couldn’t the hybrid giraffes still participate in the SSP? Also what enclosure did u see the Nubian Red Fronted Gazelles in?
 
They also keep Masai giraffes and according to my information the park still has some purebred Rothschild giraffes. But couldn’t the hybrid giraffes still participate in the SSP? Also what enclosure did u see the Nubian Red Fronted Gazelles in?

Oh yes I forgot about the Masai. If they have any purebred there's only a couple max, and they will be pretty old at this point. There is an SSP for the hybrid population but they still have no conservation value as they're a hybrid population between two different species.

The gazelles were mixed with the Giant Elands and there was a calf in that nursery pen.

~Thylo
 
Red-Fronted Gazelle calf actually, but there was a Giant Eland as well. They seem to just mix newborns together in that pen

~Thylo

The way they mix young hoofstock in those pens is interesting considering the variety they have in my opinion. Though from what I have seen/heard, they are careful about what species they mix.
 
The way they mix young hoofstock in those pens is interesting considering the variety they have in my opinion. Though from what I have seen/heard, they are careful about what species they mix.

I agree and they are. I saw them swapping the calves exhibited during my visit. They don't mix very small animals with larger ones.

~Thylo
 
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