USZOOfan42
Well-Known Member
Not really, but there are at least 23 holdings in the US, mostly in the Midwest and the south.Are waterbuk rare in collections? Haven’d seen them much
Not really, but there are at least 23 holdings in the US, mostly in the Midwest and the south.Are waterbuk rare in collections? Haven’d seen them much
What is the current Somali wild ass group look like (any info on individual animals like ...?)?A couple updates from the park:
- The current Elephant viewing area will be closing on November 11th to make way for construction on the eastern yard. The service road viewing deck will be utilized as the new temporary viewing for the duration of the project and this will be a timed viewing as an employee will escort guests down at different times.
- I can confirm that two other Somali Wild Ass are indeed expecting making the total of offspring at three.
- Wild Holidays decorations are starting to be put up in the wake of the Autumn Festival.
- Two large climbing structures have been added to the Gorilla “bachelor pad” and Frank and Monroe are back in the space. There is speculation that there might a future experience that brings guests back to that space, however any other details are unknown.
- The debut of Jillian’s cub is expected to be late November, along the same timeline as Diana’s cubs.
- The goal for the opening date of the new Safari Experience Hub is the end of November.
The Park has 2.7 adults and the 1.0 foal so far from this year. There are 0.5 + the foal on exhibit (with two of these mares due to foal before the end of the year), with the two stallions managed separately behind-the-scenes and the two additional mares being held temporarily behind-the-scenes while the foals are young.What is the current Somali wild ass group look like (any info on individual animals like ...?)?
Unfortunately, the second greater kudu calf did not survive.The baby boom continues at the Park, with the birth of a second greater kudu calf and the first gerenuk calf of the season in African Woods, as well as an ellipsen waterbuck in the South Africa field exhibit!
Any idea what the plan is here with the urial at San Diego?Most of the Transcaspian urial herd has been removed from the Central Asia field exhibit and the male has been removed from the Mountain exhibit for breeding behind-the-scenes.
They’re moving them behind-the-scenes to breed them. They’ve struggled in the past with parasites and high infant mortality from contraspecific aggression in the urial in the past, and the Park’s herd is one of the last purebred herds in the country, so they’re trying something different to get more successful lambs on the ground.Any idea what the plan is here with the urial at San Diego?
OK, thanks ... I really hope they can make a turn around!They’re moving them behind-the-scenes to breed them. They’ve struggled in the past with parasites and high infant mortality from contraspecific aggression in the urial in the past, and the Park’s herd is one of the last purebred herds in the country, so they’re trying something different to get more successful lambs on the ground.
Fingers crossed!OK, thanks ... I really hope they can make a turn around!
Perhaps the Zoo might be a more conducive environment for breeding the urial under more controlled conditions?
A very sad epitaph and state of affairs for Barbary deer ex situ. Unsurprising with just one individual and thus functionally extinct within the North American continent.The park's last female Barbary Deer passed away today. She was the last of her kind in the Western Hemisphere leaving behind a legacy for this species.
The ship, unfortunately, sailed a long time ago for the Barbary deer in North America. The last births (including those of the last individuals at San Diego and two of the three remaining animals in Berlin) were in 2005, so this was just a slow march to the inevitable. Prior to COVID, there were plans to establish an import station in Tunisia to boost the populations and genetic diversity of assorted North African ungulates in North American zoos (as well as serve as a waypoint for future reintroduction efforts for addax and scimitar-horned oryx), including not only addra and slender-horned gazelles, but also Barbary deer and Cuvier's gazelles, both of which are now entirely gone from collections in North America (although there might still be some Cuvier's gazelles in the private sector). Unfortunately, COVID tanked these plans, and they will very likely never be picked back up, unfortunately.A very sad epitaph and state of affairs for Barbary deer ex situ. Unsurprising with just one individual and thus functionally extinct within the North American continent.
It is not like the situation in situ is getting any better with climate change and the continued encroachment upon Juniper, ook or pine forests in the Magrhib (as well as the numerous forest fires ... like in major forest types now globally).
I really cannot phantom why a species of red deer that is threatened and endangered cannot find a safe haven in a few US zoos, let alone the San Diego Safari Zoo alone!
There is something truly not sound and unsettling about the current species management trends within the circle of AZA policy makers and the accredited zoos within the organisation to not achieve the objectives and mission for which they had set out to create conservation breeding ex situ projects (let alone aside from the mainstream SSP or Signature CB) in the first place.
Some news not mentioned yet regarding this is that 2 of the park's young male desert bighorn sheep moved to the Lee Richardson Zoo in Kansas last month.A male desert bighorn sheep has been introduced to the exhibit in Condor Ridge for breeding.
We will be very lucky to see any large exotic deer species remain in public collections in North America in the coming decades. As Chronic Wasting Disease spreads, more and more regulations on moving deer are coming into place, and it is becoming increasingly difficult, year on year, to move deer around the country.
There would be a potentially increased risk to zoo herds if CWD spreads into the local deer population, yes. While, in theory, the zoo herds should be having minimal to no direct contact with wild deer or wild deer excrement, that is not always the case, and the prions that cause CWD have been proven to survive passage through the digestive systems of carrion-eating birds. As such, there is a chance for transmission via bird excrement, which is much more difficult to control. The actual likelihood of that happening is probably quite low, but it is possible. If a captive herd was to present with CWD, the whole herd would absolutely have to be culled, and I imagine quite extensive pasture mitigation would have to take place, as well.Would there also be increasing risk of a zoo herd contracting CWD and presumably that might necessitate quite an extensive cull? Or would it be unlikely to ever spread in a properly managed captive deer herd?