14 August 2012
They were from Australia and are now calling Singapore home. So comfortable are they that they even gave birth to their children here.
No, don’t start judging these new foreigners now until you see them.
Meet the Bernett’s and parma wallabies, new residents of the Night Safari. They are part of the family of marsupials, such as kangaroos, koalas, possums and wombats, which are native to Australia.
This Friday, these wallabies will get their first sniff of onlookers when the Night Safari - the world’s first dedicated night zoo - opens up its new Wallaby Trail to visitors.
Even before the trail was opened, zookeepers received a wonderful surprise in June when they saw tiny heads peeking out of the pouches of the wallabies. There were four babies in all – they are called joeys – two for each species.
It is a first for Night Safari since their arrival in January this year. Before this, both Night Safari and Singapore Zoo never had these two wallaby species in their animal collection, the Wildlife Reserves Singapore wrote on its website.
Apart from the cute Bernett’s and parma wallabies, there will be other mammals, birds and reptiles from the region of Australia, New Guinea and New Zealand on the Wallaby Trail, the Wildlife Reserves Singapore said in a statement.
There will be a vast array of flora and fauna on display as visitors walk through the trail - sugar gliders, a white-lipped python from Papua New Guinea, a tawny frogmouth, which is a native bird from Australia, and brush-tailed possums, which is the largest of its kind.
Another attraction is the Naracoorte Caves – a reconstructed, simulated limestone cave that is home to cave-dwellers such as free-flying bats, the giant river toad and the beauty snake.
Visitors can learn more about the wildlife and their habitats through an interpretive centre that showcases various animal and plant specimens from the region.
Mr Kumar Pillai, general manager at the Night Safari, said: “We’re excited to highlight these Australasian species in the Wallaby Trail because the Australasian region is home to more than one million species of plants and animals, many of which are found nowhere else in the world.”
The 4,800 sqm-trail will open on 17 August.