Any developments on the Asian lion front? When is the export of Asians to Europe due (as has been planned, the last info .. had it it had been deferred .. but since some time lapse perhaps info anew).
interesting. I guess they somehow thought they were Angolan when they imported them?? The WRS' own publications say they were Angolan. I wonder when they found out they were actually Cape giraffes?Kifaru Bwana said:Chlidonias, the 2 females Tamar and Roni are most definitely Cape giraffe (as their entire breeding herd is made up of the giraffa subspecies). The founder stock were directly imported from S.Africa - Umfolozi.
They only ever held a male reticulated till late 1987.
I guess it is a case of mistaken id / public announcement.![]()
Chlidonias, the 2 females Tamar and Roni are most definitely Cape giraffe (as their entire breeding herd is made up of the giraffa subspecies). The founder stock were directly imported from S.Africa - Umfolozi.
They only ever held a male reticulated till late 1987.
I guess it is a case of mistaken id / public announcement.![]()
Clearly, they hold ONLY Cape giraffe giraffa. Even their own original founder stock originated from South Africa (the ones' breeding now were 1.1 + 0.2 female imports from Jerusalem).
Common zebra (E. q. boehmi)
Clearly, they hold ONLY Cape giraffe giraffa. Even their own original founder stock originated from South Africa (the ones' breeding now were 1.1 + 0.2 female imports from Jerusalem).
This is otherwise known as Grant's Zebra, yes?
So all three in Sing Zoo are South African (Cape) Giraffe, thank you.
According to a thread in the Singapore Zoo Gallery the male is a Rothschild's giraffe from Burger's zoo in the Netherlands.
in 2005 the zoo opened their new giraffe exhibit (after not having displayed giraffes for the previous 11 years). The giraffes were the two females from Tisch in Israel (Lucy and Roni, called Angolan giraffes at the time but apparently actually Cape giraffes...) and a male Rothschilds from Burgers called Growie. All three are still at WRS as I understand it.Right into 2010+ they were still only breeding from the original gene pool + the Israeli females. This was always visible in the tallies of ISIS till 2011.
Along the way they did import a male Baringo Marco in 2005. However, this one was never in recent years listed on ISIS.
Are you sure you are not making a mistake?
Now, I do understand people would like to know ... (the plot thickens).
Are you sure you are not making a mistake?
in 2005 the zoo opened their new giraffe exhibit (after not having displayed giraffes for the previous 11 years). The giraffes were the two females from Tisch in Israel (Lucy and Roni, called Angolan giraffes at the time but apparently actually Cape giraffes...) and a male Rothschilds from Burgers called Growie. All three are still at WRS as I understand it.
Perhaps Growie was called Marco at Burgers?
only the Night Safari giraffes are breeding (as you say, two young, in 2008 and 2011). I'm not sure if the Rothschild's at the zoo has been rendered incapable or if the females there are on contraceptives, but the zoo hasn't bred from them at all. They are certainly old enough (the three are all about eight years old I believe) so I guess the WRS must be deliberately not breeding from them. I do wonder why they imported the Rothschild's in the first place though.The confusion may stem from the fact that the Night Safari exhibits pure Cape giraffe. It is a breeding pair + 2 offspring since 2008.
It puzzles me what a zoo like Singapore Zoo would do with breeding hybrids.
I do wonder why they imported the Rothschild's in the first place though.
Probably a matter of availability. The zoo needed giraffes young enough to be transported easily. So perhaps Marco was the only one available for transfer at that point in time and small enough to fit in a plane.