The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore The Maryland Zoo News 2024

Wow, I totally didn't expect that at all, since red pandas were not mentioned anywhere in their master plan and they hinted at the whole Main Valley becoming part of an 'Americas' section. I never thought they'd reintroduce Asian species in the near future. But red pandas are a very popular species and a lot of fun to watch!

Do we think this means their master plan is totally shifting focus? It still says on their website that adding new snowy owl/ bald eagle exhibits in Maryland Wilderness, adding the porcupine trail between the old owl/eagle exhibits, and the planned gibbon exhibit in Main Valley are their top priorities.
 
Wow, I totally didn't expect that at all, since red pandas were not mentioned anywhere in their master plan and they hinted at the whole Main Valley becoming part of an 'Americas' section. I never thought they'd reintroduce Asian species in the near future. But red pandas are a very popular species and a lot of fun to watch!

Do we think this means their master plan is totally shifting focus? It still says on their website that adding new snowy owl/ bald eagle exhibits in Maryland Wilderness, adding the porcupine trail between the old owl/eagle exhibits, and the planned gibbon exhibit in Main Valley are their top priorities.

Not necessarily. Master plans are more guides than anything - things are added, others removed so not that surprising a fun, crowd pleasing animal has been added. Upper Valley seemed to have been going for an Asian theme anyway with the gibbons and Stellar's sea eagles.

I've been out of the Zoo field for a number of years now, but there could be a sudden SSP need for housing/ breeding as well which might explain their addition. Or the Zoo has been planning this for a while since the goal is to add more exhibits by the entrance.
 
Huh, you're right. Despite totally knowing where gibbons are from (the ones at Disney's Animal Kingdom are displayed in a faux Asian temple), I think I've been mentally mixing the proposed Maryland Zoo exhibit up with spider monkeys this whole time and thinking of them as a Central/South American exhibit.
 
The State's FY 2025 Budget has been released in greater detail and includes a few projects mentioned previously for the Zoo, including a red panda exhibit and snowy owl/ eagle exhibit.
  • $1.6 Million to Construct a New Eagle and Owl Flight Cage Habitat: Two new bird enclosures will be constructed in the Maryland Wilderness area, a quieter section of the zoo, and will allow for increased space to fly compared to the existing enclosures, which will improve the birds’ well-being. A portion of funding authorized in fiscal 2024 was used to begin the design for this project, which began in December 2023 and is ongoing. Construction is expected to begin in March 2026 and conclude in March 2027.
  • $1.6 Million to Construct a New Red Panda Habitat: A new habitat will be constructed for the red panda, which is an endangered species, to advance the zoo’s conservation mission. Private donors and zoo trustees have provided funding for the design of this project, which will begin in June 2024. Construction is expected to begin in May 2025. The total cost for this project is estimated at $2.8 million.
  • $1.2 Million to Address Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Regulatory Deficiencies: This project will correct life-safety and animal welfare deficiencies identified by AZA and USDA inspectors to enable the zoo to retain its AZA accreditation and meet USDA standards. Additional changes are needed to comply with new federal regulations related to the USDA inspection of birds, which went into effect in August 2023.
  • $300,000 for Roof Replacements for Several Buildings: The roofs of the rhino and zebra building, the bear holding building, and the life support system building for each of the bear pools are past their useful lives and require replacement.
  • $100,000 to Repair and Replace Perimeter Fencing: USDA regulations require that an eight-foot-tall perimeter fence topped with barbed wire is maintained around the entirety of the 135-acre campus. The total length of fencing maintained by the zoo is 3.25 miles, or 17,160 linear feet. Approximately 1,000 feet of fencing requires replacement due to age, fallen trees, vehicle collisions, and vandalism.
  • $100,000 to Design and Install an Emergency Backup Generator: The emergency backup generator will provide power throughout the zoo’s animal, staff, and guest areas in the event of an outage to maintain lighting, refrigeration, and other electrical equipment and infrastructure.
 
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It seems the recently discussed animal habitats are happening and been planned going forward till 2026. I am glad the zoo is fixing some of its maintenance costs from the new household to meet AZA/USDA requirements.
 
The Zoo has updated it's Master Plan to include some new schematics of the proposed red panda exhibit. The plan also updates the Upper Main Valley including a redesigned gibbon and Steller's sea eagle exhibit, the latter now being proposed to be located behind the prairie dog exhibit where one of the old Kodiak bear pits is now. Since funding was secured last FY for the design of the gibbon/eagle exhibit, I would think these proposals are what will eventually be built once construction funding is completely secured - but hold that thought until ground is broken. Here are a few of the changes:
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I'm having a hard time picturing where the new gibbon exhibit will be. In my mental image of the zoo, the crane barn is right behind the prairie dog town. Will the gibbon exhibit cover the current path between the two exhibits?

It's interesting that so much of the Main Valley will be empty, as the red panda exhibit is rather far back. Or does the map imply the crane barn yards will be expanded to cover where the cages on the left currently are?
 
I'm having a hard time picturing where the new gibbon exhibit will be. In my mental image of the zoo, the crane barn is right behind the prairie dog town. Will the gibbon exhibit cover the current path between the two exhibits?

It's interesting that so much of the Main Valley will be empty, as the red panda exhibit is rather far back. Or does the map imply the crane barn yards will be expanded to cover where the cages on the left currently are?
From my understanding the Stellar’s Sea Eagle exhibit will be the first exhibit you see at the zoo with the new location on the hill between the prairie dogs and playground.
Then the prairie dogs remain where they are with the gibbon exhibit directly adjacent. As far as I can tell, the first few cages will be demolished and the Northern Ground Hornbill yard will be too. This and the current pathway between this cluster of smaller exhibits will be used for the gibbon exhibit, holding, and viewing.
The Crane barn will remain in place and the yards will be reconfigured. This will become the raptor show I think. The current inhabitants could be maintained or moved to other parts of the zoo easily as they all work well in multi species exhibits (ofc barring individuals with personalities that don’t fit with them).
The red panda exhibits and holding will take over the current hillside area that currently houses the Snowy owl exhibit (which appears to house only a single individual again, I’d love to know why). Judging by the size of that area and the arena needed for two panda exhibits plus holding it’s likely they’ll use some space close to the old Lion cage (the big circle cage) and the new gibbon holding.

The pictures NAIBvolunteer posted show a good illustration.
 
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I'm having a hard time picturing where the new gibbon exhibit will be. In my mental image of the zoo, the crane barn is right behind the prairie dog town. Will the gibbon exhibit cover the current path between the two exhibits?

It's interesting that so much of the Main Valley will be empty, as the red panda exhibit is rather far back. Or does the map imply the crane barn yards will be expanded to cover where the cages on the left currently are?

I've posted a few schematics a few weeks back and all are from the Zoos master plan. Take a look there to orient yourself .
 

On March 25th, the zoo announced that a (1.0) African penguin hatched and was named Crab Cake.

The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore
 
The Zoo has updated it's Master Plan to include some new schematics of the proposed red panda exhibit. The plan also updates the Upper Main Valley including a redesigned gibbon and Steller's sea eagle exhibit, the latter now being proposed to be located behind the prairie dog exhibit where one of the old Kodiak bear pits is now. Since funding was secured last FY for the design of the gibbon/eagle exhibit, I would think these proposals are what will eventually be built once construction funding is completely secured - but hold that thought until ground is broken. Here are a few of the changes:
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Thanks for sharing these! I looked at the master plan on the main site, but the PDF's are not up to date. Where was this document located?

We received the Red Panda notice in the mail a few weeks ago and are so excited! I have fond memories of them on Main Valley back in the 90's. I have maps up to 2003 that still list them, but I don't necessarily remember seeing them quite that far along. I also remember as a kid being easily confused/frustrated that I couldn't always differ between them and the Red-Ruffed Lemur, also nearby, when they were curled up sleeping!

Anyway, that one artist rendering of the aerial view of Main Valley is quite interesting for many reasons. First, the relocation of the Stellars Sea Eagle. I think this makes a lot more sense than the hillside behind the Mansion House. It'll also give you something to see right away, especially if they're re-doing the playground hill there, sounds like a lot of dirt being moved! Second, the exact placement of the Gibbons. It looks to me like their outdoor habitat is going to fill the space entirely between the old concession stand/members booth and the Crane Barn, basically consuming the current African Ground Hornbill yard? Then, it looks like their building is going to consume the first large cage on Main Valley, and probably spill into the space of some of the smaller, newer ones as well. Third, it seems that the yards extending off the Crane Barn are going to be about doubled or even tripled in size, presumably to make up for space lost on the south side of the barn? Lastly, it seems as if the entire pathway of Main Valley is being re-routed once reaching the Red Panda habitat. Rather than the steep decline and curving path to the right of the round stand, it looks like the path will only extend to the left of the round stand. It also looks like the old sea lion pool will be history.

A few other little thoughts/notices... I'm VERY intrigued that the Mammal House is still listed. In the original release of the masterplan, that was slated for demolition. I don't expect anything to ever be housed up there again, I just thought it would be one of the first things gone. Also, I'm sure someone can correct me on this, but I was once told that the zoo/park were "stuck" with the Elephant House and Reptile House back in the 90's because they were protected as historical sites after 70+ years. If that is true, and still holds up in the 2020's, then the Mammal House will qualify for that very soon, too.

Lastly, it seems as if Main Valley is moving in a direction of Asian theming. I hope this is the case and that it isn't drifting back into menagerie status but preserving the geographical organization of the rest of the Zoo. I'm dreaming and picturing large spaces for Tiger and Snow Leopard on the backside of Druid Hill, along the Buffalo Yard path. Could be remarkable! BUT, those Prairie Dogs would need to go somewhere else...perhaps the old box turtle exhibit in the Children's Zoo, that seems emptier and emptier each visit...
 
Updates from my recent visit:
- This is the most exciting probably. Chimp breeding is back. I won’t say much, but apparently Bunny is (hypothetically) the third most valuable female in North America. While she is still on birth control as of my last visit, two of the other females have been off for a while. So fingers crossed for babies.
- Red Ruffed breeding is under way, though the female is I believe less than receptive and the male is a bit older, so I’m not feeling very confident there. Sifaka breeding is being delayed until next year to allow the pair more time to settle in.
- Guenon breeding is still on pause until a second female can be acquired for support of the current female as the male is VERY dominant.
- A total of five penguin chicks were born this season (4.1), and the youngest one just received her name, Peabody.
- I got to see one of the rhinos swimming in the rain which was AWESOME.
- Trumpeter Sawn breeding season is upon us.
- Otter breeding is halted until the rescue female receives a recommendation to move elsewhere and our new female matures, so no pups this year.
- Only one Saddle Billed stork was on exhibit at the crane barn, while the whole hornbill family was on exhibit together.
- The african swam exhibit is empty right now with the birds and sitatunga confined to the other exhibits behind it and adjacent the African barn.
- A pair of white faced whistling ducks appear new to the zoo in the African aviary. They certainty weren’t there before the bird flu epidemic, but now that it’s open I noticed them for the first time.
- The new crested porcupine was out snuggling with the male.

I have a couple questions too if anyone can answer them, and I figure this is the right forum.
- Does anyone know what happened to the female snowy owl? She was quite young, but I’m guessing she’s died.
- Considering there’s no breeding recommendation for the Duiker this year, does anyone know if the pair have been separated. I only saw one on my visit, and I know they’re good hiders, but with signage in the aviary and antelope yard, are they being kept in both? Or are new animals coming in for the aviary?
- And I know this is a tired question, but what the heck is going on with giraffes? We’ve been down to two for over a year, last I heard (which was a while ago) they were being kept separated all the time because Kesi was overwhelmed by Caeser’s advances. She hasn’t calved in 7 years, and neither one is a young animal.
- Where are the ostriches?

Thank you, and I hope this is insightful! Sorry most of it is bad news, but we could shape up to have a very nice baby year in the next year or two.
 
Wow, it would be so cool to have another baby chimp! It's interesting that Bunny is one of the most genetically valuable chimps. I know she is deaf and has always been low-ranking in her troupe, so it's cool that even if she's not the most valued or understood by her peers, she is valuable to zoos.

I haven't seen the ostriches on either of my recent visits (2021 and 2023), but I wasn't sure if that was due to avian flu or them only being on-exhibit in the warmest months.

I love the Maryland-themed names of the current penguin chicks.
 
The white-faced whistling ducks have been there for about two years now, but with the African Aviary being closed for much of that time, it's no wonder you haven't seen them before.

The zoo has three saddle-billed storks - a younger pair, which are generally on exhibit in the sitatunga exhibit, and the old man, who was recently relocated to the Crane Barn.
 
Wow, it would be so cool to have another baby chimp! It's interesting that Bunny is one of the most genetically valuable chimps. I know she is deaf and has always been low-ranking in her troupe, so it's cool that even if she's not the most valued or understood by her peers, she is valuable to zoos.

I haven't seen the ostriches on either of my recent visits (2021 and 2023), but I wasn't sure if that was due to avian flu or them only being on-exhibit in the warmest months.

I love the Maryland-themed names of the current penguin chicks.
I wish chimp-wise the AZA would research their genetics properly and try to document what chimps they have (Pan troglodytes: West African verus (Yerkes?), troglodytes (Central basin Gabon to Congos) elliotti (Nigeria-part Cameroun) and or schweinfurthii (East African Arc mountains).


Really cool that the zoo maintains a larger herd of African elephants. I do hope they get proper breeding back on track over time. Anyone what the news is around adult bull Tuffy (unproven to my knowledge).

Sire for young male Samson was the iconic "Willie".
 
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