Ah, thanks for that. I've seen that document before, but had struggled to track it down again to confirm what the plans for the Congo precinct looked like. I would be interested to see how they do plan to overlap the Okapi exhibit like that, considering the slope of the site, but I gather that slither would be the land on the top level or perhaps on a gradual slope.
It’ll be interesting as neither of the obvious replacements for Okapi (Eastern bongo or Pygmy hippopotamus) are better suited to a sloping terrain.
Given Australia has no Giraffidae IRA even on the horizon, Okapi remain a pipe dream at this stage. It wouldn’t surprise me to see a scaled back exhibit to house Eastern bongo (which may not need to overlap with existing gorilla exhibit); combined with Black and white colobus or similar.
Taronga have always maintained through my enquiries that the gorillas will remain the focus of the exhibit and either way, I’m excited to see provisions made to better accomodate and breed them into the future.
As a side note, there seems to frequently be confusion on the forum as to the origins of the existing gorilla exhibit. I thought the document linked above sums it up nicely:
The area occupied by the current gorilla enclosure was originally designated for ‘running birds’ that include ostrichs, emus and rheas. This remained the case for many decades until in 1988 the western end was redesigned to accommodate giant pandas from China as the Chinese government’s Bicentennial gift to Australia. However, this was never intended to be a permanent exhibit. At the eastern end, an earlier circular aviary for parrots and parakeets was reused as a Guenon exhibit. Both of these sites were subsumed in the 1990s for a new gorilla exhibit.