Spec. Zoo Design questions

Can Pied Kingfisher be in an aviary in between the entrance and the exit of a "Hippo House" or would it be too loud for them (stress?)? If not, what African wetlands species would work? (I have lots of birds in a walkthrough aviary and hippo enclosure already)
 
Can Pied Kingfisher be in an aviary in between the entrance and the exit of a "Hippo House" or would it be too loud for them (stress?)? If not, what African wetlands species would work? (I have lots of birds in a walkthrough aviary and hippo enclosure already)
It should be fine
 
Would you mind, if there are Eurasian Oystercatchers and Pied Avocets in a Chilean coast aviary as a substitute for American Oystercatchers and Andean Avocets?
 
This is not an animal exhibit question but a question about stages. If a zoo has a show stage for dome cats, is it safe to have another show on that same stage using rodents and other animals which could otherwise be vulnerable to T. gondii?
 
This is not an animal exhibit question but a question about stages. If a zoo has a show stage for dome cats, is it safe to have another show on that same stage using rodents and other animals which could otherwise be vulnerable to T. gondii?

Well, I know you can't handle reptiles after handling their food because they'll bite you, so it's reasonable to assume they'll at the least be heavily distracted if the stage smells like their prey. I can't say for sure but I think it'll be difficult to get through a show like that
 
What would be a feasible way to house Addax, Arabian Oryx, North African Ostrich, and Rhim Gazelle together by allowing the more timid (or would aggressive work) species to go into another enclosure? Should the enclosures be separated? (I know this is border-line mixed species exhibit ideas but it's more about the enclosure design )
 
What would be a feasible way to house Addax, Arabian Oryx, North African Ostrich, and Rhim Gazelle together by allowing the more timid (or would aggressive work) species to go into another enclosure? Should the enclosures be separated? (I know this is border-line mixed species exhibit ideas but it's more about the enclosure design )

Addax and oryx can hybridize, so bear that in mind as well.
 
What would be a feasible way to house Addax, Arabian Oryx, North African Ostrich, and Rhim Gazelle together by allowing the more timid (or would aggressive work) species to go into another enclosure? Should the enclosures be separated? (I know this is border-line mixed species exhibit ideas but it's more about the enclosure design )
Despite it’s a very beautiful species, I would keep the Arabian oryx in a separate enclosure, because it’s lives in a whole other region, only in Saudi Arabia and Oman.

The mix with addax, North African ostriches and rhim gazelles would work well, make the enclosure big enough also with some shelter for the gazelles and I don’t think there would be a problem.
 
If I were to have the following three mixed tanks, what would the ideal dimensions/volume for each display be?
  • Fire Clownfish, Barrier Reef Chromis, Blue-striped Orange Tamarin, Bristle-tail Filefish, Coral Hawkfish, Flame Angelfish, Dragon Goby, Copperband Butterflyfish, Regal Tang, Scarlet Cleaner Shrimp
  • Miniatus Grouper, Snowflake Moray, Zebra Moray, Epaulette Shark, Brown-banded Bamboo Shark
  • Blacktip Reef Shark, Green Sea Turtle, Humphead Wrasse, Slender Shark-sucker, Foxface Rabbitfish, Unicorn Tang
Additionally, what would the recommended tank sizes for each of the below solitary-housed species be?
  • Ornate Wobbegong
  • Banded Pipefish
  • Peacock Mantis Shrimp
  • Pot-bellied Seahorse
  • Weedy Sea Dragon
  • Clown Triggerfish
  • Painted Frogfish
  • Bluespotted Cornetfish
  • Poison Goby
  • Blackspotted Puffer
  • Crown-of-Thorns Starfish
  • Bicolor Angelfish (housed alone to avoid competition/hostility with other angelfish species in main reef tank)
 
Would it be possible to mix howler monkeys with black-handed spider monkeys? I looked into a lot of New World monkey mixes but never found these two together.
 
  • Fire Clownfish, Barrier Reef Chromis, Blue-striped Orange Tamarin, Bristle-tail Filefish, Coral Hawkfish, Flame Angelfish, Dragon Goby, Copperband Butterflyfish, Regal Tang, Scarlet Cleaner Shrimp
At least 180 gallons with gentle circulation and rockwork
  • Miniatus Grouper, Snowflake Moray, Zebra Moray, Epaulette Shark, Brown-banded Bamboo Shark
At least 400 gallons with many caves and smooth bottoms
  • Blacktip Reef Shark, Green Sea Turtle, Humphead Wrasse, Slender Shark-sucker, Foxface Rabbitfish, Unicorn Tang
1200+ gallons with open-water lanes and good filtration
  • Ornate Wobbegong
180 gallons with low flow, sandy bottom, and rock ledges
  • Banded Pipefish
30 gallons with coral and gentle flow
  • Peacock Mantis Shrimp
20 gallons with deep sand
  • Pot-bellied Seahorse
A vertical tank with 20 gallons along with many hitching posts
  • Weedy Sea Dragon
180 gallons with gentle flow and macroalgae
  • Clown Triggerfish
125 gallons with caves
  • Painted Frogfish
50 gallons with rockwork and hiding spots
  • Bluespotted Cornetfish
220 gallons (long, narrow tank)
  • Poison Goby
10 gallons with fine sand and live rocks
  • Blackspotted Puffer
125 gallons with rockscape
  • Crown-of-Thorns Starfish
50 gallons with coral
  • Bicolor Angelfish (housed alone to avoid competition/hostility with other angelfish species in main reef tank)
125 gallons with hiding places and live rock
 
Would it be possible to mix howler monkeys with black-handed spider monkeys? I looked into a lot of New World monkey mixes but never found these two together.
It's not recommended. Howler monkeys are very territorial and both species might stress/bully each other. It could work with two adjacent primate islands though
 
1200+ gallons with open-water lanes and good filtration

Even with one reef shark, one turtle, and one wrasse I wouldn't go any less than 10-15 thousand gallons, they wouldn't even fit together in 1,200 gallon tank - that's only 8' x 5' x 4' (or equivalent dimensions).

180 gallons with low flow, sandy bottom, and rock ledges

Again, too small - Ornate Wobbegong typically gets 5.5 to 6 ft long, 6 ft long being about the length of a typical 180 gallon. It would work for a baby, but definitely unsuitable for an adult.

220 gallons (long, narrow tank)

I'd again argue a bigger tank is necessary, and not a narrow one. The fish needs to be able to comfortably turn around.

125 gallons with hiding places and live rock

If it's going to be the only fish, 90-100 gallons would do, Bicolor tops out at 6 inches, and more than likely isn't attaining that unless kept in a very large tank. 125 wouldn't hurt anything, but if the only thing in it is a single 3-5 inch Angelfish spending about half the time in view, it's going to look pretty empty and won't get much attention anyway.
 
Got a reverse scenario: what species would work in a 330-370sqm habitat (under uk guidelines)

what species would work in a 1,900sqm habitat with fairly dense forest (under uk guidelines). I thought about Persian leopards but might be a bit small for them and wrong biome

fiinally, what species would work in a 220sqm habitat (under uk guidelines)

looking for mammals
 
Got a reverse scenario: what species would work in a 330-370sqm habitat (under uk guidelines)

what species would work in a 1,900sqm habitat with fairly dense forest (under uk guidelines). I thought about Persian leopards but might be a bit small for them and wrong biome

fiinally, what species would work in a 220sqm habitat (under uk guidelines)

looking for mammals
For the first exhibit: Warthogs? Meerkats?

I should go for Sri Lankan leopards or black panthers for your second exhibit idea, if you want it to be a leopard. Or maybe red river hogs or clouded leopards.

For the third one: Red foxes? Golden jackals? Asiatic small-clawed otters?
 
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