ZooAmerica: American marten
Miami Zoo- King Cheetah
Team Tapir - I checked ISIS. Erie still has the grivet. There is a dispute whether a grivet is related to the vervets, Chlorocebus aethiops, or to the guenons, Cercopithecus aethiops. I looked under its scientific name Chlorocebus aethiops and found it there. ISIS is wrong because it calls Chlorocebus aethiops, the Green Monkey. The Green Monkey is Chlorocebus sabaeus. So Erie still has the grivet, but in other [I
]Chlorocebus aethiops[/I] entries though, it mentions San Diego, Rosamund Gifford, Wildlife World, and Great Bend also having this species. But since their is an error between scientific name and common name, who knows which species each of these other zoos has in their possession. I apologize for the all scientific names, but sometimes it is easier to find an animal that way since names can vary.
Above Mentioned ISIS Entries
Yes, but only if you are lucky enough to be at one of the shows when they take him out. I have never understood why they did not put that animal on display. Seems like having the only one on public display in the country would be a major tourist draw (it would have gotten me there). There is (or at least was) another one used by a private cat eduacation group in California, but of course that is not in a zoo.
Detroit Zoo: harp seal
which species of bettong, because aren't there brush-tailed bettongs in several US zoos?BeardsleyZooFan said:The disgraceful Capital of Texas Zoo- Fanaloka, Bettong
which species of bettong, because aren't there brush-tailed bettongs in several US zoos?
The Prospect Park Zoo has dingoes, now, as well, although most of you are past that, it seems.![]()
I saw the video on the new dingoes, and thought that it was a pretty decent habitat. I might make a trip to Prospect Park to see some species I haven't seen before (dingoes, bettongs, hamadryas baboons, pallas cats, etc., etc., etc.)