captive wombats have a reputation for ferocity (apparently well-deserved).
Which is why I'm surprised. I think everyone's heard stories about people (usually a friend of a friend) getting bitten.
captive wombats have a reputation for ferocity (apparently well-deserved).
Harvest mice- they are small and cute but would also be fast and agile enough to keep away from poking fingers
Other more potentially risky/boring walk-throughs I can imagine would be for things such as nocturnal prosimians (lorises/pottos/aye-ayes), aardvarks or smaller mustelids like Siberian weasels or mink.
I was surprised to see a photo in the gallery of a walk-through with Barbary apes at Apenheul - perhaps they are calmer than other speci Crested macaques always seem pretty relaxed too. Does anyone know if all species of macaques carry Herpes-B, or only some species, because that is obviously an issue (!).
Colobus seem like a good thing (mentioned earlier in the thread, with a photo link from Maguari). De Brazza's always seem very gentle to me but someone can say the opposite if I'm wrong.
that's what I was thinking. I'm always more circumspect with domestic and zoo animals which have lost fear/respect for humans than with wild animals which haven't (not counting wild macaques!!Pertinax said:Don't know about Geladas' temperament in captivity but I imagine they have the potential to be aggressive in zoos as they have lost their fear.
from what I've seen (in video and photos) that seems to be the way they are at Gibraltar too. They always seem like a really casual sort of macaque.Barbary Macaques are a very well-established walkthough species - been in with them many times in several countries and never seen trouble. Light pilfering seems to be the major risk!
They always seem like a really casual sort of macaque.
Does anyone know if all species of macaques carry Herpes-B, or only some species, because that is obviously an issue (!).
Nearly all (73-100%) pet and captive macaques are carriers of the herpes B virus. This virus is harmless to macaques, but infections of humans, while rare, are potentially fatal, a risk that makes macaques unsuitable as pets. A 2005 University of Toronto study showed urban performing macaques also carried simian foamy virus, suggesting they could be involved in the species-to-species jump of similar retroviruses to humans.
I would rather go into a walk-through with, say, diana monkeys than crab-eating macaques. They can be really aggressive and easily angered. The black crested macaque, though, I wouldn't have a problem with. In Sulawesi they are just a really cruisy sort of animal, no bother at all (although of course captive animals may well be a different story, as we were earlier saying may be the case with geladas; certainly a male crested macaque could do a great deal of damage to a child if it got ticked off!)Pertinax said:macaques I would have less fear of; Barbary, Rhesus, Bonnet, Crab-eater. Stumptail.
Macaques I would be far more scared of; Lion-tailed. Moor/ Hecks. Sulawesi.
I sort of skim-read that earlier, but couldn't see sample sizes or which species were tested (I think it just mentioned which species were commonly kept), so I'm still not sure.According to Wikipedia....
It footnotes to the following research -
Ostrowski, Stephanie R.; et al. "B-virus from Pet Macaque Monkeys: An Emerging Threat in the United States?". Emerging Infectious Diseases (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Volume 4 Issue 1
This study can be read at http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/4/1/pdfs/98-0117.pdf
Are there any walk-thru flamingo exhibits out there?
I would rather go into a walk-through with, say, diana monkeys than crab-eating macaques. They can be really aggressive and easily angered.
Certainly a male crested macaque could do a great deal of damage to a child if it got ticked off!)
I know that 5 years later those plans may be very outdated and irrelevant to the current plan for the zoo, however it shows that at one point and maybe still, colobus monkeys have been planned for a UK zoo.
macaques I would have less fear of; Barbary, Rhesus, Bonnet, Crab-eater. Stumptail.
Macaques I would be far more scared of; Lion-tailed. Moor/ Hecks. Sulawesi.
I've been following this thread, and have to say i agree about the risks to the public, which could also lead to the potential prosecution of the zoos concerned.Just a thought against walk-throughs -- they all involve visitors being potentially inside an animal's living space, with the boundaries more fluid than in a non-walk-through exhibit. There is a lot to be said for viewing an animal that can't get at you, and that knows you can't get at it. Even some male squirrels can get aggressive to people. All hoofstock are potentially dangerous, all primates are either dangerous, vulnerable or both. Birds are the safest group, but even then you've got to be careful with other than small passerines. I would never trust Emus, which are in walk-throughs in some places. Not too comfortable with Rheas either. A moment's misunderstanding by either visitor or animal can do a lot of damage.