Number of zoos kept (current and former during the holding period):
A 1 zoo
B 2-5 zoos
C 6-10 zoos
D >10 zoos
Time period kept:
1 < 1 year
2 1-5 years
3 6-10 years
4 11-20 years
5 > 20 years
* Species successfully bred
♱ Dead end (in case of species gained)
↑ Species gaining popularity (in case of species gained)
A 1 zoo
B 2-5 zoos
C 6-10 zoos
D >10 zoos
Time period kept:
1 < 1 year
2 1-5 years
3 6-10 years
4 11-20 years
5 > 20 years
* Species successfully bred
♱ Dead end (in case of species gained)
↑ Species gaining popularity (in case of species gained)
Cats - Felidae
46 species across 14 genera
32 species kept this century (70%)
The cats are the most well-represented carnivore family of them all in European zoos. Most zoos will have multiple cat species and several of the big cats are among the most widely kept large mammals in zoos. On the other hand the majority of cats are small and these generally attract less attention. Because there is so much to talk about, I have split this family into 2 posts.
Small cats - Felinae
# Species kept 1-1-2000: 22
# Species kept currently: 22
# Species gained: 2
# Species lost: 2
While not all small cats are small, they generally tend to be smaller than big cats. This is quite a diverse group that includes some real rarities. That overall diversity at the species level hasn’t declined slightly is mostly due to the fact that there have been multiple splits that better represent the real species diversity.
@Azubaa Not every small cat is small, the cheetah, including this Sudan cheetah, is one of the most popular carnivores of them all
Species gained
Southern oncilla - Leopardus guttulus B4*
While oncilla have been around in Europe for a while, these are generally thought to be northern oncilla. Southern oncilla were imported from Brazil twice this century. First Parc des Felins in Nesles, France, imported a pair in 2008 and in 2012 Zoo Dortmund imported 4 animals. The species has been bred in both these zoos since and offspring has made it to a few other zoos.
Sunda leopard cat - Prionailurus javanensis B4*
While mainland leopard cats have a long history in Europe, the recently split Sunda leopard cat has long been a different matter with only a few former holders. This changed in 2013 when Exmoor Zoo, Bratton Fleming, and Tierpark Berlin imported Palawan leopard cats (ssp. heaneyi) from the Avilon Zoo on the Philippines. While Exmoor only kept the species until 2016, Tierpark Berlin had more success and regularly bred the species. Tierpark Berlin ceased keeping this species in 2021, but it is still kept in 3 Czech zoos and 1 Hungarian zoo.
@Rayane Palawan leopard cats are one of the quite numerous new Philippine species in Europe this century
Species lost
African golden cat - Caracal aurata B5*
This has always been an extremely rare species in captivity, with little successful breeding. The final European animal appears to have been kept in the Port Lympne Wild Animal Park until 2000/2001.
Black-footed cat - Felis nigripes D5*
This was formerly an uncommon, but quite widespread, species that was bred regularly across the continent. But in the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century the European population completely collapsed from dozens of animals to none in a matter of 20 years. Disease played a large part in this decline, part of which can possibly be attributed to animals imported as new bloodlines. Since the final animals passed away first in Zoo Wuppertal in 2013 and in 2014 in Port Lympne Wild Animal Park, there have been rumours of imports from American zoos, but nothing has materialised.
@Arizona Docent The demise of the black-footed cat is one of the sadder stories in European zoos
Species gaining popularity
Iberian lynx - Lynx pardinus
Iberian lynx have long been bred in breeding centres for re-introduction purposes, but they hadn’t been visible in zoos until they went on show in 2013 after disappearing in the early 2000s. There are currently 7 zoos with Iberian lynx on show and most of these animals are retired from the breeding program and serve as ambassadors. Most holders are in Spain, but Lisbon acquired the species again in 2014. In 2021 the species arrived at Natur’Zoo Mervent, France, marking the first time this century that this species has left the Iberian peninsula. Given their flagship status as an European conservation success, interest in this cat will probably only grown in the future
Margay - Leopardus wiedii
While still relatively uncommon this ocelot lookalike has made some inroads this century and is becoming more commonly held in recent years.
Manul - Otocolobus manul
Despite looking perennially angry and being quite a sensitive species there has been an uptick in interest for this Mongolian furball. Their hardiness against low temperatures makes it an attractive option as it can be displayed outdoors all year long and as such it is no surprise most holders are in Central and Northern Europe and EAZA zoos at that.
Rusty-spotted cat - Prionailurus rubiginosus
This species has been kept successfully in Zoo Frankfurt since 1976, but was long largely confined to there, despite regular breeding. This changed in recent years when Zoo Ostrava and Port Lympne Wild Animal Park have functioned as new rusty-spotted cat factories, churning out large amounts of offspring. With 20 current holders this species has never been as common as it is now.
Fishing cat - Prionailurus viverrinus
This is currently the go-to small Asian somewhat endangered cat of the big zoos. This comes at the expense of formerly more widespread species, though fishing cats themselves aren’t very common either.
Sand cat - Felis margarita
The first founders of the current European zoo population arrived in Zoo Wuppertal from Israel in 1990, with Zoo Mulhouse and Zoo Berlin acquiring the species shortly after. Since then there have been multiple imports from Asian countries and this century the popularity of this species has grown further. For most of the 20th century this was a huge rarity, but with 20 current holders it has never been more widespread.
Cheetah - Acinonyx jubatus
This is the odd one out when it comes to the small cats. This hyper specialised Usain Bolt cat was long considered hard to breed. That nut has been cracked successfully everywhere now as zoos have realised you can’t keep the sexes together most of the time. With over 100 holders the South African cheetah is one of the most common cats of the continent. Part of the increase can also be attributed by the arrival of the Sudan cheetah (ssp. soemmeringii) which arrived from the United Arab Emirates from 2005 onwards. The first holder & breeder in Europe was the Safaripark Beekse Bergen, but they don’t keep this species anymore, 17 other European, mainly French and British, zoos do. Given the popularity of this cat there should be ample room to maintain 2 (highly similar) subspecies.
@ThylacineAlive The Iberian lynx could well be a future poster boy of European conservation efforts in many more zoos
Species losing popularity
Asian golden cat - Catopuma temminckii
These endangered cats are experts in keeping themselves rare. It is relatively hard to breed and intraspecific kills are quite common, leading to a collapse of the European population this century. That the already closed Dierenpark Wassenaar stopped keeping this species too in the early 2000s also didn't help. It was always an uncommon species, but subspecies used to be managed separately. This is no longer the case, but even then there are just around 10 golden cats left in Europe. A 2022 import by Tierpark Berlin of a new pair from Indonesia shows there are still some zoos committed, now we just have to hope that the cats cooperate.
Jungle cat - Felis chaus
Once this wasn’t an uncommon species that was widely held in larger zoos too. Larger zoos now shun this species, opting for rarer Asiatic species like the fishing cat. This species is still quite commonly kept in private hands and there are over 20 zoos still holding this species, mostly being small and/or Eastern European zoos.
Leopard cat - Prionailurus bengalensis
This is another formerly quite commonly seen Asian small cat, that has been largely phased-out in favour of more endangered species. The unique looking Amur leopard cat (ssp euptilura) has a small but somewhat stable following in Germany and Eastern Europe.
Cougar - Puma concolor
This is the most widespread cat of the Americas and it used to be a common species in Europe too. While there is still a large number of holders, it is disappearing from EAZA zoos and becoming more confined to smaller zoos all over the continent. Several non-animal varieties of this species, such as the shoes, remain a common sight in zoos of all sizes.
Northern oncilla - Leopardus tigrinus
At the start of the century this was the only oncilla on the continent and this tiny cat was already rare at that time. But from a handful of holders it has decreased to only 2 remaining holders, with southern oncilla being more often bred these days. It could well be that this species will disappear the coming decades.
@Neva Contrary to other rare Asian cats the Asian golden cats has been in steep decline
Progress
19/22 orders completed
82/106 families completed
412-420 species present in 2000
421-423 species present in 2023
194-202 species gained this century
190-193 species lost this century