So how many hippos are still at TWPZ?
You really need breedable females from elsewhere (multiples mind) to help the population expand sustainably in Australia! Is it likely now???A Bongo calf has been born!
He is the sixth calf to mother Djembe and is another male.
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Unfortunately, the region only has two female Bongo. They are both currently at Taronga Western Plains Zoo. One of the females was imported in 2017 from Singapore Zoo (via NZ), but hasn't produced any calves to date.You really need breedable females from elsewhere (multiples mind) to help the population expand sustainably in Australia! Is it likely now???
You really need breedable females from elsewhere (multiples mind) to help the population expand sustainably in Australia! Is it likely now???
I believe the female from Singapore zoo had an operation due to eating a foreign object before it came to oz I am hoping it still can be breedable!Unfortunately, the region only has two female Bongo. They are both currently at Taronga Western Plains Zoo. One of the females was imported in 2017 from Singapore Zoo (via NZ), but hasn't produced any calves to date.
It would be good to see more female Bongos in the region, both births and imports.
As it stands the observation given the sex ratios ZAA requires import of multiple FF and not one-offs on the off-chance it may breed or not! Population managers need to wise up and do real species management and not off-hand lip service with too little too few! Thinking outside the box and letting go off the various old well trodden excuses ...I believe the female from Singapore zoo had an operation due to eating a foreign object before it came to oz I am hoping it still can be breedable!
As it stands the observation given the sex ratios ZAA requires import of multiple FF and not one-offs on the off-chance it may breed or not! Population managers need to wise up and do real species management and not off-hand lip service with too little too few! Thinking outside the box and letting go off the various old well trodden excuses ...
As it stands the observation given the sex ratios ZAA requires import of multiple FF and not one-offs on the off-chance it may breed or not! Population managers need to wise up and do real species management and not off-hand lip service with too little too few! Thinking outside the box and letting go off the various old well trodden excuses ...
They are available to import and to source without a problem (pending IRA) the Nyala were just another whim!Agree this is the ideal. But in order to do that, you need to find a source population. Where can a zoo find a herd of unrelated bongo thats up for trade or sale? Not another zoo.
With African hoofstock the best bet it to find a private reserve in Africa that can sell them to you. I think thats why Nyala appeared. I think there was an opportunity to easily source large unrelated groups so they did. If I recall correct they all came from South Africa.
They are available to import and to source without a problem (pending IRA) the Nyala were just another whim!
No I never missed your point, there are enough Bongos in collections within the USA to start a founder population. Nyala as said were another ZAA whim!You missed my point. I was not saying Bongo cannot be imported. I was saying that the reason zoos might not import an entire founder population of bongo at once, is because perhaps sourcing an entire founder population is not possible. For Nyala it was. And perhaps that influenced the decision making.