Species I would like to see in UK Zoos

I'm amazed Loro Parque does not tempt you ;)

The collection (excluding the Gorillas!) would, but the fact that it is abroad overrides that. I am currently taking a refresher course in driving as I did not take it up when I passed my test some years ago, but I keep saying to people that I doubt I can cope with the enormity of being able to drive and that people like me are not supposed to drive cars - exactly the same thoughts apply to the prospect of me going abroad.
 
I keep saying to people that I doubt I can cope with the enormity of being able to drive and that people like me are not supposed to drive cars - exactly the same thoughts apply to the prospect of me going abroad.

You never know; my girlfriend Helen has Aspergers and she - despite a little nervousness - took to Berlin like a duck to water when we visited earlier this year. Sufficiently so we plan a visit to Munich next year!
 
plus it has got Gorillas and the less of them I see the better

all I shall say is that I have only seen one writer raise the subject, but when I read the piece I was delighted as the matter is something I have wondered about and I was surprised no one else seemed to think the same thing.

No more Gold Stars for you for a while....:(

Jersey- now you've got us all interested- so carry on...:)
 
In the extremely unlikely event I'd like to think Paradise Park in its role as headquarters of the World Parrot Trust,

That would seem to be the obvious location too as they must have the most experience with the widest variety of larger Parrot species nowadays including most of the other Macaws, big and smaller.

Sadly I rather doubt it will ever happen though, given most birds bred are now being funneled back toward Brazil, rather than expanding the number of captive holders.
 
Species I would like to see.......

OK, so Parrotsandrew doesn't like Gorillas. I like them a lot and have some personal acquaintance with the Jersey group. I can't see enough Gorillas. I am also very fond of the whole Durrell organisation, and wonder what's not to like?
 
You never know; my girlfriend Helen has Aspergers and she - despite a little nervousness - took to Berlin like a duck to water when we visited earlier this year. Sufficiently so we plan a visit to Munich next year!

I think I do know!! Actually I did get a passport in 2004 with a view to visiting Walsrode on an organised trip - funnily enough this was the same period I was learning to drive for the first time, so something strange must have happened to me. When the passport expired this year I decided it would be a waste of money renewing it as I just cannot imagine ever going abroad.
 
No more Gold Stars for you for a while....:(

Jersey- now you've got us all interested- so carry on...:)

I don't find Orang-utans too offensive! And I do take some photos of great apes of course but I just do not understand why so many people seem to like Gorillas so much. But then I don't like Otters either and they are popular too (mmm, Paradise Park has two species, but the parrot collection more than makes up for that).

I'll sidestep the Jersey thing, other than to say the matter I mentioned does not relate to the actual place itself. Nor does the other one I then remembered.
 
Any sort of small rodent or insectivore not represented in UK zoos at the moment. They would be very easy to house, most have an easy husbandry and there are many many unique species. Pied shrews, maned rat, tree mice are just a few that spring to mind :D
 
Imperial Amazon.

Neither have I :rolleyes: It just beat the Tahiti blue lory: as they say, a good big 'un always beats a good little 'un.

Been doing a little research- we aren't likely to see one either, unless we go to Dominica. ;) There is just one captive pair in the World- in an aviary in a Botanic Garden run by the Forestry Department there. They were both rescued as juveniles(male in 1996- he has a deformed beak, the female in 2000) and are a bonded pair (a previous female having died from egg-binding in 1998). They started to lay eggs in 2006. Initially infertile but in 2010 they hatched a chick and reared it to 2 weeks then abandoned it in the nest. It was rescued virtually on point of death, dehydrated and starving. They managed to stabilise it and it was later flown to Florida to complete the handraising.

I am not sure if it has since been returned to Dominica, or whether the parent birds have bred again since either. The young bird is a male and must remain captive too, being completely tame having been handraised, and it has 'health issues' also. But if another bird comes into captivity one day, he may get a partner, otherwise he will have to stay as he is presumably.

Apparently the wild birds are very shy and secretive at the nest. Little is known about their breeding and the development of this chick provided a lot of knowledge. The wild population has recovered somewhat since the 1979 Hurricane David decimated the population and is now estimated at 250-350 birds.

There is video of both the adult pair, and the rearing of the chick, on YouTube.

Does anyone know which, if any, Zoos have exhibited this species in the past?
 
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Shoebill; Harpy Eagle; Kagu; a Long-beaked Echidna species; Bilby; Tasmanian Devil; a Wombat; Common Vampire Bat; a Douc; Proboscis Monkey; Pampas Cat; Baird's Tapir; Yellow-backed Duiker.

These are the ones I think could be attained....:p

Old fogies like me have the advantage of having seen some of those - echidna at Chester, Wombat & Vampire Bat at ZSL, Douc at Howletts, Proboscis at Twycross.

I sometimes feel sorry for you youngsters.

But not for long! :)
 
I sometimes feel sorry for you youngsters.

But not for long! :)

I believe Ian has seen many of these species at those locations too! I am sure it will do him a world of good being referred to as a youngster, hehe.
 
Old fogies like me have the advantage of having seen some of those - echidna at Chester, Wombat & Vampire Bat at ZSL, Douc at Howletts, Proboscis at Twycross.
I sometimes feel sorry for you youngsters.
But not for long! :)

The echidnas at Chester were short-beaked: the long-beaked were at Regents Park, along with all the other species mentioned here, except for the proboscis monkeys which were not far from the red uakari at Twycross. I won't rub things in by mentioning any of the other species we can't see in the UK any more (check out other threads or the Gallery), but I would remind everyone that we have never had more species of marmosets and tamarins, lemurs, reptiles or amphibians on view than we have now.

Alan
 
Does anyone know which, if any, Zoos have exhibited this species in the past?

Our friend vogelcommando posted this photo from Walsrode in the Gallery.



One of my old Yearbooks lists 1.1.1 at Walsrode in 1980. Zootierliste says that Regents Park has also exhibited the species, but I expect it was a long time ago.

Alan
 
Zootierliste says that Regents Park has also exhibited the species, but I expect it was a long time ago.

London Zoo definitely had imperial Amazon parrot in the 1960s.

I was fortunate enough to see the species at Walsrode several times during the 1980s but I doubt I'll ever see one again.
 
cetaceans more insectivores or marsupials and some subspecies of bears in uk zoos also maybe some more pinniped species
 
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