FunkyGibbon
Well-Known Member
Two male Wreathed Hornbills fledged in August.
Which leopard subspecies?News based on photos from Chinese forums and my visit last month:
-Other notable recent births include mona monkey, lion-tailed macaque, Francois' langur, yellow-cheeked gibbon, pileated gibbon, orangutan, chimpanzees, black-backed jackal and hog deers.
-A sarus crane was newly added to the crane exhibit.
-The announced East China exhibit plan includes an entrance plaza, an otter exhibit, wetland bird exhibits (with common crane, hooded crane, white-naped crane, oriental white stork, black stork and possibly Siberian crane) and seven mammal habitats (Malayan porcupine, raccoon dog, Asian badger, hog badger, masked palm civet, Reeves' s muntjac and Chinese water deer). The new cat complex will feature South China tiger, leopard and clouded leopard (not sure how they're gonna source the last one as the whole captive population in PRC is down to two females in Chongqing).
what about the monkey cages? Have they been replaced, or did you forget them?Shanghai Zoo is two developments away from being very good indeed: the old Children's Zoo/Small Mammal Area, and the Bear Pits. After the completion of the China Wetlands Area it will will be one development away.
what about the monkey cages? Have they been replaced, or did you forget them?
When I was there (2013, so a while ago) the Small Mammal area was largely empty already and the impression I had from the state of the cages was that the empty ones were "abandoned" as opposed to "not yet refilled".
ah, I seem to have missed all the recent 2017 photos by yourself and baboon. But I had seen the April 2016 ones, so in fact I did know the primate area had been improved but had completely forgotten about it.The primate area is largely renovated and basically quite good. The mandrill and macaque rows of cages are the only remains of the hellhole you described. To the others height has been added, adjacent cages have been merged, they are handsomely planted and basically rather good. The Chimp and Orang indoors could do with some work though. There are issues to do with public feeding and also open-topped enclosures that seem curiously unused. Basically though, you would be delighted with the improvement (photos are in the gallery from my two visits).
And in fact I did a review of my 2016 visit that you commented onah, I seem to have missed all the recent 2017 photos by yourself and baboon. But I had seen the April 2016 ones, so in fact I did know the primate area had been improved but had completely forgotten about it.
I can't be expected to remember that! I looked in the Shanghai Zoo forum and there wasn't anything, so I guess it is in your Chinese Takeaway thread? That's the problem with having a single thread of multiple diverse reviews.And in fact I did a review of my 2016 visit that you commented on![]()
I can't be expected to remember that! I looked in the Shanghai Zoo forum and there wasn't anything, so I guess it is in your Chinese Takeaway thread? That's the problem with having a single thread of multiple diverse reviews.
Which leopard subspecies?
BTW: thanks for the wealth of new info on comings and goings at Shanghai Zoo.
Hopefully, more to follow!
Yes indeed@Ding Lingwei is the current population of Golden snub-nosed monkeys in Chinese Zoos as healthy and growing as I assume?
Yes indeed![]()
It would be really nice to have a country wide update on snub-nosed monkeys in P.R. China zoos around the country (and this for the 3 species in residence).Yes indeed![]()
News based on photos from Chinese forums and my visit last month:
-Other notable recent births include mona monkey, lion-tailed macaque, Francois' langur, yellow-cheeked gibbon, pileated gibbon, orangutan, chimpanzees, black-backed jackal and hog deers.
-A sarus crane was newly added to the crane exhibit.
-The announced East China exhibit plan includes an entrance plaza, an otter exhibit, wetland bird exhibits (with common crane, hooded crane, white-naped crane, oriental white stork, black stork and possibly Siberian crane) and seven mammal habitats (Malayan porcupine, raccoon dog, Asian badger, hog badger, masked palm civet, Reeves' s muntjac and Chinese water deer). The new cat complex will feature South China tiger, leopard and clouded leopard (not sure how they're gonna source the last one as the whole captive population in PRC is down to two females in Chongqing).