Irregardless of what’s gone on in the past, we’ve seen encouraging examples of coordination at a regional level, which is indeed how the decisions are made (not individual zoos making individual decisions as they did decades ago).
Lowland nyala were imported in large numbers to found a thriving breeding programme and other species such as Cheetah have been imported via group imports. In the future, there will be the Southern white rhinoceros import which will be of immense benefit to the region beyond the three receiving zoos.
While coordination has improved there is still quite a lot of improvement that could be achieved. A lot of the good imports appear to be spear headed by one or two majour zoos and then the rest jump on. Look at the francois langurs, gorillas, orangutans, and gibbon species. All of these have organised breeding programs and all of them seem to be acting out of there own accord rather then as a coordinated region making decisions.
I have no reason to believe that hoofstock will be managed any differently which is a shame. especially since Werribee have always had one of the better hoof stock varieties of our open range zoos.