ericnielsenpdx
Well-Known Member
Hello
I am new to this site, so I wanted to say thanks for sharing your thoughts and information.
Ever since visiting Zoo Negara in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and getting to walk with a keeper ,and sit next to a fence ,just inches from the gorgeous face of a striped hyena - I have loved these animals. So I am very pleased at the number of facilities in the US that have added these animals. Last year San Diego added a new public exhibit for the stripeds at the Zoo , in addition to several animals being conditioned for inclusion in special programs at the Wild Animal Park. Last fall 1.2 stripeds went on exhibit in an outdoor enclosure of the Feline Building at the Denver Zoo, that may have previously housed their spotted hyenas before they moved to the wonderful Predator Ridge exhibit. The keeper told me they were wild caught.
And now, Lowry Park Zoo in Tampa, FL , which has quietly been building quite an impressive little collection in its Safari Africa area, has added an exhibit with 1.3 stripeds. A staff member at the Miami Metrozoo told me they had been confiscated after someone tried to import them illegally, so they held them there, before finding a home at Lowry Park. I haven't confirmed that story, but with the number of illegal importations these days it wouldn't surprise me ( anyone else remember the tree pangolin that LA Zoo got from a confiscation a few years ago , taken on a plane past one attendant who thought it was just a pet of some kind and making it from Africa to Paris, then finally stopped in LA ).
I know the last Canid/Hyena Advisory Group called for US zoos to eliminate striped hyenas since numbers were so low ( at the time just 1.1 at Living Desert, Palm Desert, CA ) but now, perhaps if these animals breed, we may get to keep another really interesting species from being "phased out" of our zoos.
Thought I'd share this info with any other hyena lovers out there. There's some good news for spotted hyena numbers in the US as well, if anyone is interested I can share a little of that too.
Eric in Portland, Oregon
I am new to this site, so I wanted to say thanks for sharing your thoughts and information.
Ever since visiting Zoo Negara in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and getting to walk with a keeper ,and sit next to a fence ,just inches from the gorgeous face of a striped hyena - I have loved these animals. So I am very pleased at the number of facilities in the US that have added these animals. Last year San Diego added a new public exhibit for the stripeds at the Zoo , in addition to several animals being conditioned for inclusion in special programs at the Wild Animal Park. Last fall 1.2 stripeds went on exhibit in an outdoor enclosure of the Feline Building at the Denver Zoo, that may have previously housed their spotted hyenas before they moved to the wonderful Predator Ridge exhibit. The keeper told me they were wild caught.
And now, Lowry Park Zoo in Tampa, FL , which has quietly been building quite an impressive little collection in its Safari Africa area, has added an exhibit with 1.3 stripeds. A staff member at the Miami Metrozoo told me they had been confiscated after someone tried to import them illegally, so they held them there, before finding a home at Lowry Park. I haven't confirmed that story, but with the number of illegal importations these days it wouldn't surprise me ( anyone else remember the tree pangolin that LA Zoo got from a confiscation a few years ago , taken on a plane past one attendant who thought it was just a pet of some kind and making it from Africa to Paris, then finally stopped in LA ).
I know the last Canid/Hyena Advisory Group called for US zoos to eliminate striped hyenas since numbers were so low ( at the time just 1.1 at Living Desert, Palm Desert, CA ) but now, perhaps if these animals breed, we may get to keep another really interesting species from being "phased out" of our zoos.
Thought I'd share this info with any other hyena lovers out there. There's some good news for spotted hyena numbers in the US as well, if anyone is interested I can share a little of that too.
Eric in Portland, Oregon