The platypus centre must be nearing completion then!Galapagos giant tortoise back on display:
Dubbo’s Galapagos giant tortoise are back on display, following six months of being off display while renovations to their exhibit were carried out.
Reported on socials.
The platypus centre must be nearing completion then!
No!! Hopefully this motivates them to finally import some more. This means the only bongo in the region that are able to breed are two males.Sadly, the bongo breeding pair, Djembe and Kulungu, have both died.
Wishful thinking perhaps: But if you are going out of Persian onagers, you might as well export the 2 wild ass to Europe where they at least have the opportunity to support the species as a whole.Updates from my visits 10/01, 11/01 & 12/01/2024:
Sadly, the bongo breeding pair, Djembe and Kulungu, have both died. Their final calf, Masikio, is housed with the imported female Maisha in the original bongo exhibit, where they have been paired for companionship, while the other male bongo, Kamau, is housed next to the giraffe/zebra exhibit. The regional population now stands at 4.1 animals and is desperately in need of further imports of females for its continuation.
The current tiger population (3 animals) was described as a comfortable holding capacity. Up to 6 tigers have been held in the past, which was aided by some of these animals being in a family group. The issue with holding more tigers (especially multiple males) is moving the animals between enclosures safely, given there are only two on-display exhibit and the other holding areas are functional BOH cages. Satu, Indah and Sakti are all alive and well.
Both Persian onagers are still alive and well.
Hippos Cuddles, Kibibi and Kendi are being housed together in a pod. While it was recently reported that Kendi had been separated from her mother and sisters, this seems to have been temporarily. Nile is also alive and well. During my visits, the family pod had access to the two exhibits closest to the primate islands, while Nile was in the Hippo Beach enclosure closer to the elephants.
The Platypus Rescue HQ is currently scheduled to open in February 2024. The building essentially appears finished from the exterior. It is located across the road from the new wildlife hospital. There is a little bit of work being done on the aviary side of the hospital, I'm not sure if that's just extra space for construction vehicles, re-landscaping or something else.
I have shared some information about elephant breeding plans and the zoo's recent lion history which @Zoofan15 will share in those species' respective population threads.
Sadly, the bongo breeding pair, Djembe and Kulungu, have both died. Their final calf, Masikio, is housed with the imported female Maisha in the original bongo exhibit, where they have been paired for companionship, while the other male bongo, Kamau, is housed next to the giraffe/zebra exhibit. The regional population now stands at 4.1 animals and is desperately in need of further imports of females for its continuation.
No!! Hopefully this motivates them to finally import some more. This means the only bongo in the region that are able to breed are two males.
No!! Hopefully this motivates them to finally import some more. This means the only bongo in the region that are able to breed are two males.
Wishful thinking perhaps: But if you are going out of Persian onagers, you might as well export the 2 wild ass to Europe where they at least have the opportunity to support the species as a whole.
The loss of Djembe (the only viable female) means it’s game over until we import. Hopefully the zoos involved import more than the 2.2 that founded the current population that soon resorted to inbreeding and even then wasn’t sustainable.
I don't know why Maisha hasn't been able to bred, but if it's a behavioural issue rather than a fertility problem, then just maybe housing her with Masikio could eventually result in a mating and a pregnancy, but that's a big, big if. I sense the issue is not an unwillingness on Dubbo's part, but rather the difficulty in sourcing animals.
Yes, sadly the entire population descends from one female founder (Nambala) due to the loss of the other female. That’s correct Djembe was the last non-inbred calf, with Djembe subsequently paired to related males.Maisha's lack of breeding, plus the early loss of the female originally intended to be Marraquie's partner, have been blows to the genetic diversity of the breeding program. It also didn't help that the majority of the calves born have been male. I believe the last non-inbred calf was Djembe herself, then her daughter Kiazi was swapped for Maisha.
Updates from my visits 10/01, 11/01 & 12/01/2024:
The current tiger population (3 animals) was described as a comfortable holding capacity. Up to 6 tigers have been held in the past, which was aided by some of these animals being in a family group. The issue with holding more tigers (especially multiple males) is moving the animals between enclosures safely, given there are only two on-display exhibit and the other holding areas are functional BOH cages. Satu, Indah and Sakti are all alive and well.
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Very well said @Kifaru Bwana . There has been quite a few species badly managed which ever way one wants to spin it not just the species you have mentioned above but more besides. Poor management has been at the core of many of them luckily some of the smaller zoos have stepped in to manage the situation as Altina did saving the Maned wolfs and others have done importing pure bred Grants Zebras something the big major zoos should have done instead of hybrid and inbreeding being done when it can be avoided with imports. The Bongo situation is a classic to bad planning having imported such a tiny base of core of animals needed to be backed up with more imports. Exporting the one and I believe only female bred here instead of retaining it was a bad mistake. One asian zoo in resent years import 10 bongo from the USA, this is the sort of planning needed here and not the bare minimum at bast and then hope for the best does not cut the mustard.Forget all the statistics: be witness to another unnecessary species management program disaster. Even a decade ago it was more than obvious you require 4-5 dedicated zoos to take on a species and follow through with careful monitoring throughout those 10 years.
In order for a successful bongo breeding program tp become established would require at least between 4-6 new individuals on import for the Australian zoo community and to be distributed between 2-3 breeding groups and 2-3 other holders. This import could have been done years ago and its development could be calculated at the outset (with number of founders needed, number of births required per year, space availability and species specific goals).
When the Singapore female bongo exchange happened would have been a perfect opportunity to import more individuals for the regional program and it would have flourished. The last thing Singapore needed ATT was another bongo female, they would have benefitted from having an unrelated bull ... a lot more.
In conclusion: Now what we see in this case is major mismanagement of a species ex situ conservation breeding program. It seems there is a lack long term policy planning and/or statistics and population monitoring expertise in dealing with being able to manage a program sustainably over 90/100 years.
Unfortunately, the way I see it is not a one-off: we have had Malayan tapir, dusky langur, pygmy hippo, hippo and a considerable list of other species. It seems that in many cases at the outset low numbers, lack of expertise on husbandry, ecological parameters, no accomodation nor allocation of sufficient zoo spaces almost foreboded a big hole in the ground under the program opening swallowing it up whole and all.
Very well said @Kifaru Bwana . There has been quite a few species badly managed which ever way one wants to spin it not just the species you have mentioned above but more besides. Poor management has been at the core of many of them luckily some of the smaller zoos have stepped in to manage the situation as Altina did saving the Maned wolfs and others have done importing pure bred Grants Zebras something the big major zoos should have done instead of hybrid and inbreeding being done when it can be avoided with imports. The Bongo situation is a classic to bad planning having imported such a tiny base of core of animals needed to be backed up with more imports. Exporting the one and I believe only female bred here instead of retaining it was a bad mistake. One asian zoo in resent years import 10 bongo from the USA, this is the sort of planning needed here and not the bare minimum at bast and then hope for the best does not cut the mustard.
Species management in Aus has always been lack lustre. Until we get better species management/ stud book management. Im honestly surprised the Nyala import went so well. But then im guessing maybe a NZ zoo was spear heading it.
I agree with you also I give the NZ zoo full marks for an outstanding job which should/could be used as a bench mark for others to follow,Species management in Aus has always been lack lustre. Until we get better species management/ stud book management. Im honestly surprised the Nyala import went so well. But then im guessing maybe a NZ zoo was spear heading it.
I agree with you also I give the NZ zoo full marks for an outstanding job which should/could be used as a bench mark for others to follow,
With the Bovid IRA now in place for Australia, there’s no need to import via a third party in New Zealand.
However, it wouldn’t surprise me to see one of the Australian zoos undertake a group import on behalf of multiple holders. It would certainly be exciting to see multiple Eastern bongo imported for distribution between multiple holders. Females build up numbers, but males are just as important to maintain genetic diversity across subsequent generations.