Chirus have not been kept in any zoos in the world, including zoos in China. Beijing Zoo tried to exhibit the chirus for several years, but failed to get even one individual. There are several chirus kept in the rescue center of a nature reserve in Qinghai Province, and Beijing Zoo tried to get them, but the former refused to hand out their chirus. The other way to get chirus is catching them in the wild, but no one like this way.
The Tibetan gazelles can't be seen in the zoos outside China, too. Beijing Zoo used to exhibit them, but now there are no Tibetan gazelles in the zoos outside Tibet and Qinghai. The wild yaks in Beijing Zoo met the same fate, and it seems that these Tibetan species are not suitable for lowland zoos.
However, both chirus and Tibetan gazelles are easy to see in the wild, if you go to Tibet by train, you will see both species grazing next to the railway!
Are Przewalskis's gazelles the same as goitered gazelles? If that's the case the Minnesota Zoo has those.
They are two different species.
~Thylo![]()
I would like to see Chiru and Tibetan gazelles in american zoos, but I highly doubt thats going to happen, it is probably less likey that i will see chiru because even beijing zoo failed to obtain them, @elephante, besides tibetan gazelles, did you ever wonder about other procapra gazelles in zoos, the reason i ask is because i thought you might be interested in knowing that the Osaka Tenoji Municipal Zoo in Japan had Mongolian gazelles, I dont know of any Przewalskis gazelles in zoos but @baboon, do you know of any holdings of the species ?
They are two different species.
~Thylo![]()
Hi, there is only one zoo displaying Przewalskis gazelles. Xining Zoo in Qinghai Province has a population of 15 individuals, six of them are born in the zoo (the information is updated in 2012). By the way, the zoo also has the largest collection of snow leopards and black-necked cranes in China.
Thanks for the info baboon, I really appreciate that a lot, are there any photos of them in the Xining Zoo gallery here on ZooChat ?
Has anyone (Chinese or otherwise) looked at how it is that alpine/steppe species such as Kiang, Vicuna, White-lipped Deer and (for that matter) domesticated Yak are able to acclimatise to life at lower altitudes, when Tibetan Gazelle haven't? Is it possible that Beijing's summers are too hot?
Your point is interesting. In the San Diego Safari Park and San Diego Zoo it is hotter than hot in the summers and the White-lipped deer and the kiang survive alright, but I don't know their breeding success, if any. SD is also a low altitude. What is interesting, is that certain animals don't seem to do well in captivity. The okapi used to be one of them. So was the gorilla. I don't know how many animals they went through before they got their basic needs/husbandry figured out. For most zoos, the moose is too hard to keep, and the saola has utterly failed in Vietnam. I doubt there are enough of them to experiment on to ever get them to succeed in captivity. The Sumatran rhino has not done well in the U.S. Now they are considering breeding a brother and sister to "save" the species. Yaks do very poorly in the heat. Bison do alright, but I have observed a herd in southern California panting in the heat, and not enjoying it. It could very well be that certain Tibetan Plateau denizens are flops outside their native habitat, for various reasons, and will never be suitable for life in captivity. The California condor is not suited for life outside of captivity. They are constantly getting killed, even now, after release into the wild, even with the total protection and legislation and coddling and the millions of dollars spent on them.
The American bison is acclimated to the hot temperatures of the Great Plains, for the summer, and they have been translocated to multiple areas where I doubt they were native, including Santa Catalina Island, and do ok. I believe they prefer the cooler temperatures of Autumn, Winter and Spring. They definitely are better adapted to the rugged winters of North Dakota and Yellowstone than to the "Winters" of southern California where the temperatures may not dip below 40 or 50 in some areas. I also feel sorry seeing the Tule Elk in the Tule Elk Preserve in Kern County. It's a million degrees outside and they do ok, but they aren't as happy as back in the day when they had a riparian habitat and tall prairie grasses and bushes and trees to frolic in, which is gone now (almonds and cotton and dairies and houses now). The elk up in the cooler Rocky Mountains thrive more than the Tule elk, and are huge in comparison. Plus, in the San Diego Zoo and Safari Park, all mammals are perkier and more active in the relatively cooler seasons.