The short answer is lots of mixed mammal and bird exhibits.
Obviously madagascar / lemur walkthroughs are prevalent and a number also add birds (Cotswold Wildlife Park has a very nice one for example where three types of lemur are mixed with whistling duck and purple swamphen and in the past various Ibis) and mammal walkthroughs are common (macaques, wallabies, prairie dogs, exotic and domestic sheep and goats, various sorts of deer etc etc). Some tropical houses also mix mammals with birds (sloths, potoroo, bats spring to mind) and they are also walkthrough in that sense.
Marmoset walkthroughs, less common as far as I am aware. Colchester has two 'walkthrough' areas where a glass partition at roughly chest height divides visitors from the animals for example, so you get a nice no wire and no glass view, but they lost their Geoffroy's marmoset recently and neither share the space with birds.
What specific mammal are you interested in being mixed with birds? Just marmosets? Or are you interested in walkthroughs in general? There are so many it's hard to make a list based on just mammals and birds if that makes sense.
London does not currently mix birds with their primates -- I don't know details but another poster said there was an issue when this was attempted. They do have Goeldi's monkeys (which are sometimes called marmosets) alongside Golden-headed lion tamarin, Coppery titi and White-faced saki monkeys, mixed with Tamandua, Sloth, and I think I'm forgetting another non-primate.
On the 29th of March the armadillo was signed in Rainforest Life but I didn't see any. I may have probably missed them in the night house.When I last went in January, there were red-footed tortoises in the London Zoo rainforest mix. There was also a single red-cowled cardinal, which was unsigned. There were armadillos in there, but I think on my last visit it had moved into the nocturnal house.
When I last went in January, there were red-footed tortoises in the London Zoo rainforest mix. There was also a single red-cowled cardinal, which was unsigned. There were armadillos in there, but I think on my last visit it had moved into the nocturnal house.
There were armadillos in there, but I think on my last visit it had moved into the nocturnal house.
You are correct - the Large Hairy Armadillos have been moved to the Casson Terraces, where they are off-display but come out for certain presentations on the Display's Lawn. I can't remember seeing them inside Rainforest Life for years now, but I certainly hope that they are put back in there, as it gave you a reason to search the floor as well as the canopy, and brought more life to the ground than the Red-footed Tortoise ever did. The Southern Three-bandeds were also kept offshow in the Cassons, however as mentioned upthread they moved onshow into Night Life. However, I wonder if that is still the case, seeing as on my visit last Friday they were neither signed nor visible in any of the enclosures, although of course that may not mean much.Think the armadillos (formerly?) in Rainforest Life were Large hairy armadillos, while the armadillos now in Night Life are Southern three-banded. Haven't seen the armadillos in forever though, wonder if they only come out for the show?
I believe armadillo is signed in Rainforest Life at least on the 29th of March but I forget the species.You are correct - the Large Hairy Armadillos have been moved to the Casson Terraces, where they are off-display but come out for certain presentations on the Display's Lawn. I can't remember seeing them inside Rainforest Life for years now, but I certainly hope that they are put back in there, as it gave you a reason to search the floor as well as the canopy, and brought more life to the ground than the Red-footed Tortoise ever did. The Southern Three-bandeds were also kept offshow in the Cassons, however as mentioned upthread they moved onshow into Night Life. However, I wonder if that is still the case, seeing as on my visit last Friday they were neither signed nor visible in any of the enclosures, although of course that may not mean much.
It is nice to know where the last Red-cowled Cardinal went, as I had no idea where she went after departing her home in the second walkthrough room in Blackburn Pavilion, but the latest stocklist still listed her and it would be a shame to have such a rarity offshow. Odd that she isn't signed but good to know that the species is still kept at London, and a good reason for me to pay more attention for birds on my next Rainforest Life visit!
You are correct - the Large Hairy Armadillos have been moved to the Casson Terraces, where they are off-display but come out for certain presentations on the Display's Lawn.
It is nice to know where the last Red-cowled Cardinal went, as I had no idea where she went after departing her home in the second walkthrough room in Blackburn Pavilion, but the latest stocklist still listed her and it would be a shame to have such a rarity offshow.
I meant the Casson (labelled on the map as 'Cassons' plural, which is why I assumed it was followed by 'terraces' as opposed to 'pavilion'). Immediately upon walking in from the entrance by the Display's Lawn, to your left, is a line of bamboo fencing with a staff door in the centre of it - behind that door is where the armadillos, and potentially a few other offshow species, are kept.When you say Casson Terraces - is that the Casson Pavilion or Mappins? There's been a large indoor enclosure for some sort of likely large, apparently arboreal mammal under construction (recently finished) within the Casson for a while, but I'm assuming that's not where they're kept
Indeed it does! On the topic of the Cassons, however, it is that same influence that meant I had no idea how rare Bearded Pigs were until it was too late!Had no idea they were so rare not only in Europe but beyond... Funny how having a species at your home zoo messes with your perception of how widespread they are beyond.
Interesting - I visited on the same day as you but saw no such sign, although I admittedly wasn't paying much attention to the signage within Rainforest Life, merely in Night Life as there had been a few rotations since my last visit downstairs.I believe armadillo is signed in Rainforest Life at least on the 29th of March but I forget the species.
I believe armadillo is signed in Rainforest Life at least on the 29th of March but I forget the species.
Interesting - I visited on the same day as you but saw no such sign, although I admittedly wasn't paying much attention to the signage within Rainforest Life, merely in Night Life as there had been a few rotations since my last visit downstairs.
This was originally built as the elephants' indoor bathing pool. It was, indeed, used as temporary accommodation for the young (and sadly short-lived) walrus "Alice" in 1966/1967 and was later used for pygmy hippo......It is the same enclosure that provided the indoor area for the Pygmy Hippos back when they were kept on the Cassons, and at one point in the sixties it even held a Walrus...