The Great Southern State: WhistlingKite24 does South Australia

I don't want to dominate @WhistlingKite24 's thread, but for a number of reasons both destinations you mentioned are irrelevant to Monarto.

The only tourism advantage Monarto has is it is on Highway 8 (edit: Highway 1 at Monarto), which links to Melbourne. But you have to ask how many Melbournians would turn right onto the Bolte Bridge to take the seven-and-a-half-hour drive to Monarto, when they could see much the same animals by going straight ahead over the Westgate for a 44-minute drive to Werribee.

Both Dubbo and Monarto have the same issue, they are condemned to mediocre attendance figures because political machinations placed them in obscure locations.

All of this is spot on - and some of it we discovered to our cost over the years!

When you think of a tourist venue as being " on the way to somewhere" that is exactly what it is.

We discovered this when we initially set up our zoo in western Queensland. It was "on the way" to Longreach which is a significant outback tourist destination - Stockman's Hall of Fame, QANTAS Museum, Dinosaur Trail nearby and heaps of government money thrown at that area each year. We failed miserably and only lived to start anew by closing the park and subdividing the land to give us some funds to start this zoo. All the tourists "were on the way" to Longreach and were not going to stop short of that destination.

I was subsequently talking with Hans van der Drift [of Hans Smallgoods fame]. He started Andalucia Park, a very nice park on the Spit at Southport [on Queensland's Gold Coast]. It died a death - even though it was a very attractive property. When I asked him how could it possibly fail as it had great exposure - it was on the road to Sea World. That was it's problem, he said. It was "on the way" to Sea World" and potential visitors were not going to divert from their original plans.

All of the foregoing is to support [my take on] MRJ's contention that zoos such as Monarto and Dubbo are going to have a massive job ahead of them to increase their visitation figures to a level that will produce income commensurate with the huge investments in those properties. There are few, if any, complementary attractions near enough to support them.

At the risk of being a bit contentious, I will share with you my prophesy - straight from this morning's crystal ball gazing:

Monarto will be the winner of any comparison between the two zoos. Despite the relative unattractiveness of the property itself, growth will be driven by Adelaide's steadily growing population spreading closer and closer to the zoo. The zoo is connected to the metropolis by a superb highway and the zoo itself is investing in a philosophy that encompasses housing drawcard species in accommodation on a scale never previously seen in this country. A drawcard for locals and tourists alike.

Dubbo will stagnate if it follows it's present trajectory. This zoo only exists because a retiring local politician called in some political favours and secured the zoo for his electorate as opposed to the western Sydney site previously proposed. The region around Dubbo is not a tourism destination to any significant degree. Dubbo is a transport hub and many of it's visitors are "on the way" to somewhere else. The local population will never be high enough to support Monarto type advancement.

Just my two bob's worth. No ill will meant either of these zoos.

Sorry mods - once again I've diverted a thread from it's purpose. Please feel free to move this post to a more appropriate thread.
 
Wild South Australia [Part 1]:

After Gorge, I headed straight to the coast to West Beach, which is the coastal region that sits at the mouth of the Torrens River. In fact, from a bridge, you can see how the river flows straight towards the city on one side and it had the ocean on the other side. West Beach has large stretches of fenced-off sloping dune vegetation mainly for the threatened Hooded Plover which I was unsuccessful in finding despite a great mural for them and I even picked up a keyring of a Hooded Plover on Kangaroo Island the following day, but despite my lucky charm, no success finding them. There however were lots of Red-capped Plovers and they were chasing the waves whilst others were nesting among the dunes. They blended wonderfully against the sand. The walk along the coastal vegetation was successful in providing three lifers in the form of Singing Honeyeaters everywhere, Pacific Gull completing the set of three Australian gulls and monochromatic Black-faced Cormorants which are endemic to the coastal regions of southern Australia. Unlike the rest of Australian cormorants, this species is restricted to marine and coastal habitats, nesting on offshore rocky islands. New Holland Honeyeaters and a Little Wattlebird were other finds. I then spent the late afternoon at Adelaide Botanic Gardens where I enjoyed large flocks of small honeyeaters with more New Holland Honeyeaters but also Eastern Spinebills. Eastern Rosellas are abundant in any greenspace in Adelaide so they were here in the dozens. It’s such a different experience to see small bush birds like spinebills in an inner city region. Brisbane doesn’t have that much at all.

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Red-capped Plover

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Plover mural

The next day I was up early for a bus tour to Kangaroo Island. Run by Sealink Ferry, there is a day trip that allows you to see some of the sites on the island with pick up from Adelaide at around 6am and the ferry trip from the mainland to the island included as well. All up the trip finishes around 10pm but I thought it was worthwhile doing. The major point of interest was that the tour focussed the morning at Seal Bay Conservation Park to view a wild colony of Australian Sea Lions; an opportunity I couldn’t resist. The bus ride down passed constant mobs of Mainland Western Grey Kangaroos as we headed south. We regularly passed orange flashes of Adelaide Rosellas feeding on fallen seed along the roadside. I quickly realised how variable they are in colour and amount of orange and yellow plumage they have. Sulphur-crested Cockatoos were everywhere as well; perched on every other tree. I was even fortunate enough to see a flock of Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos. Reaching the terminal were more Black-faced Cormorants and they are very reliable with a proven roosting site right near where you board the ferry. The ferry took about 40 minutes and passed through incredibly calm and still waters with fishing Great Crested Terns and more cormorants. Apparently, the week prior the island had been cut off from the mainland due to very rough conditions which had thankfully cleared only a few days prior to my visit.

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Black-faced Cormorants

As we reached the shore of the island, a white sandy beach had Pacific Gull and regular Galah flyovers over some of the clearest water I have seen. Do note that at night Little Penguin are pretty reliable here as they come to shore and there are regular tours occurring from here for them. I would have actually probably seen the penguins on the way back but the ferry’s windows were thick with condensation. I did hear them. Upon reaching the small town of Penneshaw where there are various forms of accommodations for those seeking to stay longer, a pub and a shop or two, some of the town birds included Superb Fairywren (new subspecies), New Holland Honeyeater, House Sparrow and European Goldfinch even. The guide who picked up our group from the port was a former national park ranger and had lived most of his adult life on the island. We were in good hands. On the way to the seals, he knowingly pointed out several Kangaroo Island Kangaroos that were grazing in sheep paddocks. He was telling us how these stockier kangaroos often prefer to dig under fencing to get through over hopping, creating problems for farmers. Large flocks of Australian Shelducks and Black Swans regularly passed over the scenic rolling hills. I am still chasing better views of wild shelducks as whenever I see them down south it’s always a passing distant flock. They are a cool sight though. About an hour later as we entered into the wilder part away from farms it quickly became apparent how the island is still recovering from the 2020 bushfires. Blacken tree skeletons still fill the horizon with thick ground vegetation and smaller plants slowly clambering up the trunks reaching prime position. There were very few mature trees around the western part of the island at all. It was all very shocking and put into perspective the devastation of the event. Seal Bay is very isolated, located right on the south coast of the island in the middle. This rugged part of the island is what largely protected the colony of Australian Sea-Lions which is the third largest breeding colony for this species in existence at around 700 adults currently with a couple hundred pups. The total wild predicted population of this endangered species is around 10,000 individuals and is declining. Before we reached the sea lions, we passed a flash visitor centre with flocks of fairywrens, honeyeaters, Silvereyes and Brown Thornbills darting through the bushes as the waves crashed beyond.

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Kangaroo Island Brown Thornbill

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Kangaroo Island Superb Fairywren

These sea-lions are unique in the fact they need to always come to shore to sleep and rest so chances of sightings are very high. To access them there are two options; (1) members of the general public can walk the boardwalk that leads down to good views of the sea lions or (2) wait for a national park guide to take you down to the beach which is what our tour included which was slightly unnerving at times. I am not used to big wild mammals! Thankfully we had limited access on the beach. As we walked down to the coastline from a clear walkway I observed how these sea-lions pushed through the vegetation to seek warmth with large indentations in bushes showing where they had rested. Almost burrow-like. They do not have the insulating fur that the growing population of fur seals have so they often seek this additional shelter. The walk then reached a boardwalk section with a set of stairs to the beach. From this point onwards there was an overwhelming number of sea-lions everywhere I looked. Large bulls patrolled the beach with females and pups resting. The occasional female arrived from the waves and several pups were sparring on the beach. While I had seen of course captive males and females of this species, the sexual dimorphism was amazing to witness here with gold-capped chocolate matures males contrasting the sandy greyish-blue females. On the beach it was also interesting to see the little groupings from the shore. This species is also a slow breeder with a breeding cycle of almost 18 months with older pups often staying with the female while she rears another pup. Something I observed first hand. Incredible experience.

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Australian Sea Lions

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Australian Sea Lion bull

After the sea lions and hours of travelling, we stopped for lunch at Vivonne Bay. I birded of course and picked up my lifer Brown-headed Honeyeater in the trees outside. Despite huge losses of 40 000 individuals, Southern Koalas were dripping off the trees here and I spotted four individuals low in trees. Nothing like the casual sightings around Brisbane, these furrier and larger koalas I found to be easier to spot. These koalas on Kangaroo Island are introduced and cause environmental problems for the vegetation on the island if they reach unsustainable numbers. As the ranger who initially led the koala management program, our guide reflected on the backlash he faced after the proposal to cull them was put forward. Public outcry led to a sterilisation programme instead but the establishment of blue gum plantations on the island only fuelled the growth of koalas to an unmanageable point where the population was booming to the point of starvation as the koalas had limited space, reaching capacity. Their population is currently growing again rapidly. I later saw two wild koalas on the grounds of Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park. If there is a decent tree on Kangaroo Island it probably has a koala up it.

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Koala

We then headed to the largest national park in South Australia – Flinders Chase National Park. 96% of the national park was burnt to the ground in 2020. Coast to coast. There are still sections of the park that are completely blackened but life is coming back. Flocks of Cape Barren Geese relished the clearings between bushland to rear their stripey goslings. Our guide saw a Rosenberg’s Monitor on the roadside but only some people saw it and one of them wasn’t me unfortunately. A Nankeen Kestrel hovered over a rugged cliff face as we spotted for a quick photo opportunity of the dramatic landscape. We reached the incredible Admiral Arch which I hadn’t realised was a hotspot for fur seals so that was a pleasant surprise. First birds were low to the ground and included a Spotted Pardalote with my initial reaction being “what are you doing here?!”. Spotted Pardalotes are woodland birds in my mind but here I was with the ocean crashing below, seals vocalising nearby and blustery winds with a single little bird perched on a bare branch. Honeyeaters were the theme here with two lovely lifers; Tawny-crowned Honeyeaters were common with fleeting views and a single Purple-gaped Honeyeater emerged for a couple of seconds before darting into the scrub again. Australian Raven was keeping a close eye on things.

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Cape Barren Goose

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Purple-gaped Honeyeater – no chance to zoom in but one of the best birds of the trip

Onto the seals is a longish track down the side of a cliff essentially with a new boardwalk that allows visitors to travel down what seemed to be the edge of the earth towards crashing waves. There they were; brown blobs of mainly Australian Fur Seals which pups and a handful of Long-nosed Fur Seals among them as well. The first species tends to be larger and which a less prominent broader snout of course but there is wide variation especially among females and pups so careful identifications has to occur in the parts of their range where they overlap like Kangaroo Island.

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Long-nosed Fur Seal

It was approaching 3pm so we headed towards Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park for a quick tour of the place. It was only of a small section of the park unfortunately so I didn’t get a good feel for the place but I liked what I saw. I wasn’t in the mindset for exotics so two pairs of Blue and Gold Macaw and Serval were a bit random I must say as we walked around the park! As I mentioned earlier there were several wild koalas on the grounds especially active in the late afternoon; apparently at least nine different wild koalas can be seen at the zoo. In the walkthrough enclosures for grey kangaroos there were Crimson Rosellas among Red Wattlebirds. What I find strange is the fact that on the island the rosellas are red like they are in eastern Australia but when you cross back onto the mainland they are orange around Adelaide. I guess because the mainland birds intermingled with Yellow Rosella but still an interesting example of an isolated island population.

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Kangaroo Island Crimson Rosella

The park breeds a lot of Quokka and they have recently separated the breeding male and placed him in a koala enclosure as he has done a very thorough job shall we say with a large mob of females and joeys popping their heads of their pouches. I then saw an aviary with Red-tailed and Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos as we breezed past Little Penguin, Common Wombat, Dingo, Australian Pelican and more Southern Koala. Tammar Wallaby as well was good see after missing it in the wild; their numbers haven’t recovered to pre-bushfire levels. After a brief tour of this section of the park and a snack to refuel, we headed back to the ferry to return to Adelaide. An exhausting but thrilling day. Of course, I would have loved to spend longer on Kangaroo Island but the day tour was a full and satisfying way to see a good range of the island with memorable wildlife, landscapes and stories. I had to get some rest as I had a long walk ahead of me at Monarto Safari Park the following day.

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Quokka

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Dingoes
 
Monarto Woodlands and Monarto Safari Park [Part 1]:

This day was dedicated to exploring a few birdy sites as well as Monarto Safari Park; an expansive park that is the sister site to Adelaide Zoo. I started the day at Monarto Woodlands that sits along Browns Road about 40 minutes from the city centre. It’s a wide mix of habitat that is prime habitat for many mallee birds. Opposite the parking area for the site were a few Emus in the paddocks which were excellent to see considering Emus are only seen in south-east Queensland after a three-hour drive west or north. Along the trail the first species seen was a single Brown-headed Honeyeater along with a Grey Fantail as well. Birding was difficult initially as the canopy was very dense and everything was backlit but luckily things picked up as I got deeper into the dry landscape. A Singing Honeyeater caught my eye as well deep in casuarina while a Grey Strike-thrush was hopping about in the undergrowth. Yellow Thornbill was a fantastic little lifer hopping about as well as I reached a clearing along the main road, improving visibility and sightings generally. There was a small flock of babblers hopping about and I realised they would be a different species; the White-browed Babblers were good fun to watch as they forage and chattered. They’d regularly dart in and out of view as I walked along the fence line. The small birds were constant in the canopy. I think I saw a whiteface among them but I couldn’t confirm well enough. What I did see plenty of were Weebills and another new species; Chestnut-rumped Thornbills which have a white eye and a striking flashy rich brown rump. I hear Australian Ringneck around the area as well and although very keen to see them, didn’t find them (saw them at Monarto Safari Park later on). Adelaide Rosellas were up every other tree. These birds were far more solid brick reddish-orange in colour than the patchy yellowy ones in the city interestingly.

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White-browed Babbler

Lifers were coming in thick and fast. Spiny-cheeked Honeyeaters are truly unique birds for example. They reminded me of smarter-looking wattlebird with a splash of white across the face, blue eyes and a pink bill. Their plumage is a nice blend of textures notably with streaks and smoother buffy parts. Big fan. A small flock of fairywrens further passed through only briefly. They were Purple-backed Fairywrens; the western split of Variegated Fairywren past the Great Dividing Range. I got a clear view of a male and noted that slight purplish hue of the neck that melded with the blue head. A female Red-capped Robin showed well on an exposed branch which put a smile of my face. No Hooded Robins unfortunately but a Yellow-rumped Thornbill were spied on my way out. Not bad for an hour around the place.

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Purple-backed Fairywren

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Spiny-cheeked Honeyeater


Monarto history:

Time for the safari park and as I approached I realised I had severely underestimated the size of the park and how long I would need to stay here to explore the site in full. I reached the entrance and was incredibly impressed with what I saw. The modern entrance place was circular with a range of facilities; toilets, gift shop, admission, a lookout of the sweeping land Monarto possesses and an interesting gallery space with a fascinating insight into Monarto’s history which I thought I’d share here. It’s probably a bit listy but it provides a good sequence of Monarto’s growth and development since those early years, especially for those not familiar with the facility. I certainly learnt lots reading these before and after I explored the park. The first animals at Monarto arrived in the 1980s with two female bison imported from Auckland Zoo in 1983, a pair of Wapiti from Melbourne and Fallow Deer, Blackbuck and Ostrich from Adelaide Zoo being the founding animals for Monarto. This was then followed in 1984 by more animals from Adelaide Zoo with more individuals of the aforementioned species along with Red Deer, Barbary Sheep, Himalayan Tahr, Emu, Red and Western Grey Kangaroos and Yellow-footed Rock Wallabies. 150 animals were transferred from Adelaide Zoo in 1984, capturing the shift of ungulates out there. In that same year, Mongolian Wild Horses arrived from Taronga Western Plains Zoo with a two-year-old pair with another two females from Dubbo and a male from Adelaide Zoo in 1986 arriving, forming the basis of the breeding group. Their first zebra arrived from Adelaide as well which was initially imported from the UK in 1976. In the mid 1980s as the ungulates settled, an animal care facility was built for vet services and further enabling the establishment of breeding colonies for Woylies and Greater Stick-nest Rats. More antelope herds were founded; a pair of Eland arrived in 1986 from Taronga and five Scimitar-horned Oryx arrived from Orana and Dubbo in 1988. The oryx didn’t breed successfully till 1993. Their first giraffe Lanky from Adelaide also arrived in the same year as the oryx. In 1991, booked tours commenced, and after three decades at Adelaide Zoo, Samorn, the Asian Elephant moved out to Monarto. In 1993 Monarto officially opened only being initially open on Sundays or weekdays by appointment. 300 animals were on site at the time of opening. Species on-show at the time of Monarto’s opening included Nilgai; a species no longer found in Australian zoos. A year later, two pairs of bilbies arrived from Alice Springs, started a long history with the species. Two bilbies were born in 1996 before a trial release. Two pairs of Malleefowl also arrived in the same year from Adelaide Zoo and by the end of 1995 Monarto was open full time and a grant was given for a visitor centre. 1995 was a big year for Monarto with four Mongolian Wild Horses leaving for Mongolia with the Monarto herd approaching 25 individuals. The same year marked the arrival of their first surviving giraffe calf, Moja. The park also received their first Addax from the USA via Werribee with two births in 1996. Two years later, eight cheetah were imported from South Africa with a new habitat opened in October 1999.

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Monarto entrance

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Wild Red Kangaroos caught my eye as I was reading the signage

At the turn of the century, two female African Wild Dogs arrived from Adelaide which were joined by nine dogs imported from De Wildt Cheetah and Wildlife Trust in 2002 as all other wild dogs in Australia were related. Zebra started breeding for the first time in 2001, the first white rhino arrived from Singapore followed by more rhinos from Kruger. Meerkats were added as well. 2002 saw Monarto’s sweeping lion exhibit open for the park’s first lions; males Leroy and Levi from Mogo arrived in July 2003. In 2004, Monarto received their first hyena Vinnie from Whyalla via Gorge Wildlife Park who was joined in 2007 by hyena from Singapore. They first bred in 2009. Across the early 2000s, Monarto started a captive program for Tammar Wallaby, had their first white rhino calf and had their first Tasmanian Devil births in 2007 with the new program at the time. The Zu-Loop bus system which stills takes visitors around the park was established around this time as well, providing a much-needed regular shuttle service to complement the extensive walking tracks. Chimps were also acquired with the new enclosure opened in July 2009. The vision for Wild Africa started in 2008 with 550 hectares adjacent to the original site acquired. The initial map from that year included African elephants, cheetah, giraffe, ostrich, kudu, oryx, waterbuck, white rhino, impala and sable antelope. Into the 2010s, Pygmy Blue-tongue Skink were breeding for the first time in 2016, female chimps were added from the Netherlands and their new lion encounter space was opened.

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Main entrance courtyard

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Wild Emu


The 2019-2020 period was Monarto’s most successful breeding year with dozens of Tasmanian Devil joeys, seven Western Swamp Turtles, lion cubs, 14 oryx calves, 14 nyala calves, zebra and bison births, four giraffe calves, a white rhino calf, six wild dog pups, two hyena cubs, two bilby joeys, innumerable stick-nest rats and macropod joeys from their Tammar Wallabies and Yellow-footed Rock-Wallabies. Their first Plains Wanderers arrived as well with six founding birds. A lemur walkthrough was also opened. In 2021, Wild Africa came to fruition with breeding herds of zebra, oryx, eland, blackbuck and ostrich making the move. Up to the current day, rhino, hippo and giraffe among others have made the move to Wild Africa loosely based off national park names. Amboseli is the latest addition to Wild Africa with cheetah. The upcoming addition of Asian Elephants at Monarto has slowed a few of the other Wild Africa projects but overall, 2025 is shaping up to be another big year for Monarto with the addition of accommodation on site as well.

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Wild Africa plans

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Red-capped Robins were common and very bold around the front of the zoo

I started the trail and I entered the cheetah trail which then led to a detour to the aviary loop as well. It was a very long walk, several kilometres long without seeing a single captive animal but it was fantastic to be among wild emus, kangaroos and regular flocks of lifer White-winged Choughs and lots of Spiny-cheeked Honeyeaters. Wild Red and Western Grey Kangaroos were very common at Monarto. No Euros were seen but they are also found on their grounds. The kangaroos were joined by wild Emus everywhere. If there was an open spot they would surely be a wild emu. Adelaide Rosellas, Red-rumped Parrots and Galahs were frequent as well along with more of those new babblers. There were Rufous Whistlers, Weebills, Yellow-rumped Thornbills and Chestnut-rumped Thornbills. A birder’s paradise. I finally reached the first zoo exhibit after an hour or so of walking. Quite a modest but spacious aviary with an ugly tarp on top, providing necessary shade. I only saw Tawny Frogmouth but there should be Malleefowl in there as well. The old signage still up lists a range of mallee birds that would be great to see a return for Monarto like Regent Parrot, Bush Stone-Curlew, Common Bronzewing and Peaceful Dove. I could picture an adjoining space for emu-wrens. The next part will delve into Monarto’s enclosures and captive animal collection further to ensure this post doesn't get too long.

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Malleefowl/Tawny frogmouth aviary

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Monarto walking trail
 
Monarto Safari Park [Part 2]:

About an hour and half into my Monarto tour, I’d only seen a single captive animal after walking several kilometres. I had to venture deeper into the bush before I encountered the first set of additional enclosures that were for Meerkat and Cape Porcupine. All were well-sized exhibits but I couldn’t help but think that Monarto could create a really enormous complex for a mix for both species that encompasses the area of all of the bitty exhibits into a single space that blends into the dry landscape. This area is named the outpost area and would further be a good site I though for a “Little Africa” complex with Fennec Foxes and a waxbill aviary. The latter which was toyed with in the original masterplan and the foxes being in an average exhibit at Adelaide currently. There was an incredible walkthrough exhibit for Zoos SA’s signature species nearby – the Yellow-footed Rock-Wallaby - that surrounded the mallee and had several complex rocky gorges within a vast space with empty visitor trail. I didn’t see any rock wallabies but it was the best enclosure I have seen for rock-wallabies by far and impossible to capture in a single image. Monarto is further currently ramping up efforts with native species (and rightfully so) and is building a mallee walkthrough enclosure for guests. The only species mentioned so far are Long-nosed Potoroo but could surely include Tammar Wallaby, Greater Bilby and Woylie among others which are housed off-show. Perhaps craving more animals after a long walk, the whole outpost area has great potential for more smaller species but is currently alright.

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Cape Porcupine enclosure

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Yellow-footed Rock-Wallaby enclosure

Another walk ensued towards the chimps with Red-capped Robins galore along this stretch of bush. Easily half a dozen of them in the scrub and some at eye-level. Amazing birdlife. The chimp enclosure is a large open board-walked outdoor space with a great deal of height. The vegetation had coped well with the chimps and there were grasses and the odd tree still present in the enclosure, adding a naturalistic albeit drier context for these chimps. Something I further think is often missing from city zoos is decent width in terms of how far apes can get away from the public but Monarto has plenty of space across the display for male patrols especially. There is then a glass-fronted day room that is well-shaded from the elements. Monarto has a few infants currently in the troop and then were good fun to watch. There was a pregnant female making a nest at the bottom of the day room but unfortunately within days of my visit her infant did not survive. In terms of personal preference, I preferred Monarto’s chimp exhibit over Taronga’s historic exhibit simply with Monarto’s attempt to create something incredibly organic and spacious for their growing troop. There were large enclosures for Scimitar-horned Oryx and Addax mixed with Barbary Sheep but these were better seen from the Zu-Loop Bus. I could envision Adelaide’s small troop of baboons along the rocky outcrops with the sheep.

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Chimp enclosure

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Barbary Sheep/Addax enclosure

I walked more towards the South-central Black Rhinos of which Monarto had two males at the time. They only have a single bull now following a transfer out to Dubbo for breeding. The black rhino facilities were incredibly spacious with one enclosure being seen from the viewing area and another from the bus behind it with a dedicated, well-landscaped trail that leads up towards the paddock. The male rhino was very active and kicked up a bit of dust. Nearby, construction was ongoing for Monarto’s recent project to bring Asian Elephants back to South Australia with a large 12-hecatare elephant complex with four separate areas for five leftover elephants from various facilities across Australasia with New Zealand’s last elephant arriving last month with future transfers in from Perth and Taronga due in 2025 to have a total of five elephants on-site. During my visit they were working on fencing and the exhibit spaces were coming to life with further work seen on the elephant barn. The location of where the elephants are being housed is excellent as well; drawing the visitors into the emptier section of Monarto in terms of number of exhibits.

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South-central Black Rhino bull


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Black rhino enclosure

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Asian elephant enclosure - opening soon

Yet another kilometre or so later I was met with a large paddock for a good mix of several dozen Giraffe, Eland and Ostrich. All three species had young in this exhibit but I particularly loved seeing eland again after almost a decade ago at Werribee. Although they are incredibly inbred, there were heaps and heaps of calves jumping around the lanky legs of giraffe. A mature eland bull is an impressive sight as well. There was a small off-show paddock for a single male Plains Zebra that was the only zebra seen at Monarto with most of them being in the new Wild Africa complex. There was a bus stop here so I decided to catch the bus back to the front; about a half an hour journey. While I waited I saw an enclosure for Tasmanian Devil and I regrettably missed their well-vegetated scrubland enclosure for Nyala; my favourite. I didn’t realise there were nyala until I was on the bus in the giraffe enclosure and was seeing the enclosure from a distance.

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Giraffe/eland/ostrich enclosure

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Eland bull

The bus was very unpleasant. Up until now, Monarto had been so empty. Hardly another person was seen along the trails but suddenly hordes of people were shoved onto the bus. Understandable as most people see the park via this mode mainly and hop on and off the bus for closer views, but it still wasn’t ideal with so many people making viewing a challenge at times. We passed an enclosure for female White Rhinoceros with a nearby boma for a male and I got off for a better look. The final bus ride took me right around the site again which included the carnivore complex with jaw-dropping enclosure for carnivores; Cheetah, African Wild Dog (the smallest of the lot), Spotted Hyena and hard-to-comprehend 10-hectare enclosure for a large pride of African Lions that were being recalled in for the afternoon following a visitor encounter where visitors enter a cage and the lion leap onto it to be fed. All very impressive spaces with some visitor raised platforms that would connect onto the visitor trails. Finally, I did manage to see two remaining paddocks for Red Deer and the other had Mongolian Wild Horse and American Bison before returning to the entrance plaza, exhausted.

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White rhinoceros enclosure


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Lion enclosure

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Mongolian Wild Horse/Bison enclosure


Megafauna is not always my number one preference but Monarto is very memorable. Cohesion of such a large and arid site is a work in progress but I was often left very impressed with the quality of standard of enclosures here even if they were several kilometres apart. The luxury of space. The Wild Africa area will further increase Monarto’s footprint with more species that aren’t currently on-show like waterbuck and hippo. Minor point - I must admit I think that Monarto’s lemur/tortoise complex should have been incorporated into the heart of the site instead of behind a paywall not accessible to all. An active primate species and reptiles would have enhanced some of the sleepy corners of the safari park. In saying this, elephants will ramp up appeal for the original footprint of the site. In comparison to Werribee being the other Australian open-range zoo I’ve been to, there really isn’t anything to compare. Monarto sits heads and shoulders above with charismatic species among sweeping exhibitory with an arid context that just works.

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Monarto walking trail
 
There was then two callitrichid enclosure for Cottontop Tamarin and Emperor Tamarin with two reptile enclosures that weren’t signed and I didn’t see anything in them opposite the monkeys. It would be interesting to know what they contained; looked like turtles according to the map.
They both had Eastern Water Dragons today, but were unsigned.
 
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