San Diego Zoo Safari Park San Diego Zoo Safari Park News 2024

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Kudu21

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15+ year member
I made my first 2024 visit to the Safari Park yesterday, and there were a couple of things I noticed:

-Access to the babirusa exhibit in Mombasa Lagoon is currently cut off.

-A black tree monitor is now on display in wall of herp exhibits in Nairobi Village. Two of the terrariums are still empty.

-They appear to be beginning the process of potentially netting over some of the open-air bird exhibits around the park, with what appears to be new metal support poles going up around the secretarybird/white stork yard as well as the yellow-billed stork/duiker/dik-dik yard.

-Greater one-horned rhinoceroses "Rupert" and "Joona" are now both out of quarantine and living next to each other in the Asian Plains boma in preparation for their release into the field exhibit.
 
-They appear to be beginning the process of potentially netting over some of the open-air bird exhibits around the park, with what appears to be new metal support poles going up around the secretarybird/white stork yard as well as the yellow-billed stork/duiker/dik-dik yard.
I didn’t notice this the other day, but that is genuinely great news. The amount of flight-restricted birds at the park is really quite shocking. While on the topic, is there a reason only certain birds are off-exhibit due to bird flu? The flamingos, marabou storks and ground hornbills by the large pond are still off-show, but the flamingos by the entrance and the other ground hornbills in the Africa Loop are still out despite also being in open-topped enclosures.
 
I didn’t notice this the other day, but that is genuinely great news. The amount of flight-restricted birds at the park is really quite shocking. While on the topic, is there a reason only certain birds are off-exhibit due to bird flu? The flamingos, marabou storks and ground hornbills by the large pond are still off-show, but the flamingos by the entrance and the other ground hornbills in the Africa Loop are still out despite also being in open-topped enclosures.
The flamingos at the entrance are the lesser flamingos (with some odd Americans mixed in), and they proved too sensitive to move, so the park made the decision to keep them in place. The only reason the hornbills on the islands were moved is because their proximity to a big body of water.
 
The Park is now caring for 1.2 infant Geoffroy’s spider monkeys that were confiscated at the US-Mexico border. It is stated in the press release that a new exhibit is being developed for them and that they will be on exhibit in the coming weeks:
Illegally Trafficked Spider Monkeys Receive Expert Care by San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance

Three Baby Monkeys Confiscated at the US-Mexico Border Receiving Specialized Treatment for Malnourishment, Lethargy


SAN DIEGO (Jan. 19, 2024) – Three baby spider monkeys confiscated at the United States-Mexico border are now safely with the wildlife care specialists at San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance.


U.S. Customs and Border Protection authorities at the Calexico West Port of Entry thwarted the illicit smuggling of the monkeys—two females and one male—in August. A subspecies of Geoffroy’s spider monkey (designated Endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species), the trio was estimated to be approximately two months old at the time of their rescue. They were found malnourished and in poor condition.



The monkeys were seized and placed in quarantine by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Veterinary Services. San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance wildlife care specialists answered the emergency call in the middle of the night and immediately responded, taking the monkeys to the Paul Harter Veterinary Medical Center at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park for full examinations and critical care, and they have remained there under close observation the past several months. Despite facing initial challenges, including lethargy and mobility issues, all three monkeys are now flourishing under San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance’s expert care. They have been consistently eating well, gaining weight and exhibiting normal behavior and movement. While being treated, the monkeys have had access to the outdoors and opportunities for socialization.


The trio has now been moved from the Veterinary Medical Center to the Animal Care Center at the Safari Park. To increase public awareness and advocacy about the harmful, illegal wildlife trade, a new habitat has been developed where the public will have an opportunity to see these monkeys in the coming weeks. Periodically, other wildlife that has been confiscated as part of the illicit wildlife trade may also be temporarily cared for here while awaiting permanent rehoming. The habitat features educational information about the Southern California Wildlife Confiscation Network (SCWCN).


SCWCN is a coalition of area zoos, aquariums and other animal-care facilities that jump in to provide immediate medical care and housing for wildlife trafficked through U.S. ports of entry. “This story illuminates the critically important role of accredited zoos and aquariums in providing world class care for wildlife and responding in a moment’s notice,” said Lisa Peterson, executive director, San Diego Zoo Safari Park. “In these difficult moments, we see it as our responsibility to be ready and provide the best care possible, assess their individual needs, give them opportunities to experience environments that reflect their native habitats, and when appropriate, the complex social dynamics critical to their well-being.”


“We wish these monkeys were not trafficked in the first place, but to have been found where they were and to have received the care they did is the best possible outcome,” said Hendrik Nollens, vice president of wildlife health, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. “Too often the outcome for smuggled wildlife is poor.”



Criminal wildlife trafficking is on the rise, and Southern California is considered an epicenter for the illicit trade, which is tied to international crime and drug networks. According to the Wildlife Trafficking Alliance, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service seized nearly 50,000 illegally smuggled wildlife between 2015 and 2019. Accredited zoos and aquariums are frequently called to provide critical care assistance for the seized wildlife.



As a founding member SCWCN, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance plays a pivotal role on the front lines of emergency response to wildlife smuggling. Incidents like this one demonstrate San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance’s ongoing commitment to addressing the critical issues of wildlife trafficking, exploitation and mistreatment
 
The Park is now caring for 1.2 infant Geoffroy’s spider monkeys that were confiscated at the US-Mexico border. It is stated in the press release that a new exhibit is being developed for them and that they will be on exhibit in the coming weeks:
There's been a shocking number of Geoffroy's spider monkeys confiscated at the border and brought into zoos in recent years- I know Brevard in Florida took in some as well last year. Leads me to wonder how many cross undetected and don't get confiscated, especially as this is a species that every subspecies is endangered or critically endangered. Furthermore, oftentimes when infants are captured for the (illegal) pet trade, it comes at the expense of them killing at least the mother, sometimes more individuals, making this one of, if not the biggest, conservation threat to many New World primate species.
 
The sika and Eld's deer herds are both in Central Asia, and they are both very small -- 0.4 and 2.2 + the 0.1 sika x barasingha hybrid, respectively, so they can be a little difficult to spot.
Aren't there 2.2 sika and 0.4 Eld's deer in that one?

The Malayan sambar herd in Asian Plains is a little bit bigger at 0.6 and are usually much easier to spot.
the intact male Malayan sambar
Are the Malayan sambar a phase-out species, as well?
 
Aren't there 2.2 sika and 0.4 Eld's deer in that one?
Yes, that’s my bad. Thanks for catching that! I accidentally reversed the species when I listed the numbers for some reason. It is 2.2 Indochinese sika (both males being castrated) and 0.4 Eld’s deer.

Are the Malayan sambar a phase-out species, as well?
Yes, they are. They’re a manage to extinction taxon.
 
Yes, that’s my bad. Thanks for catching that! I accidentally reversed the species when I listed the numbers for some reason. It is 2.2 Indochinese sika (both males being castrated) and 0.4 Eld’s deer.


Yes, they are. They’re a manage to extinction taxon.
This rationalisation exercise is just killing.
 
I've seen this term before applied to Central Chinese gorals. "Manage to extinction" basically means that the population will continue breeding until there are no more left, right?
Usually “manage to extinction” means that breeding will cease, but the animals will not be deacquisitioned, so in the case of the Malayan sambar, the males have been removed so no further animals will be bred, but the Park will continue to hold all of the animals they currently have until they have all passed away.
 
The Dalmatian and great white pelicans are back on exhibit in the Bird Marsh along the Africa Tram, and most of the other waterfowl, shore, and wading birds are back on exhibit across the walking portion of the Park as well. I think it is just the Chilean and greater flamingos and saddle-billed storks that have not returned to exhibit yet.
 
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