What are the Rarest Birds you've Seen in Zoos.

EW Birds You've seen?


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In Mexico I have seen resplendent quetzal and horned guan at various animal collections or zoos. In the U.S. I have seen Kagu, Puerto Rican parrots and guam kingfisher,all at Lincoln Park zoo in Chicago.I lament never having seen a Socorro dove.
 
It is a little surprising that Socorro Doves are much more widespread in European collections (33 holdings listed on ZTL) than in North American ones (6 according to ZTL).
 
I remember seeing Hoatzin back at the Bronx Zoo in the 80s. No NA Zoos have them now due to their very difficult husbandry
 
CR
Baer's Pochard
Bali Myna
Blue-Billed Curassow
Blue-Crowned Laughingthrush
Blue-Throated Macaw
Guam Rail
Puerto Rican Parrot

EW

Guam Kingfisher

≤5 Zoos

African Jacana
Black Guillemot
Flying Steamer Duck
Lesser Green Broadbill
Malaysian Pied Hornbill
Piping Plover (Seen at Lincoln Park Zoo in 2019, but currently held by 0 institutions according to Zootierliste)
Puerto Rican Parrot
Razorbill
Screaming Piha
Storm's Stork
Wattled Curassow
White-Throated Bee-Eater
Wait, I didn't know African Jacana's were rare under human care. I know I saw one for a few years at San Diego Zoo's Africa Rocks area.
 
I remember seeing Hoatzin back at the Bronx Zoo in the 80s. No NA Zoos have them now due to their very difficult husbandry
I was fortunate to see hoatzin in the Diving Bird House at Bronx Zoo in 1990.

(It is possible I also saw hoatzin at London Zoo in 1955 but I was only a very young child at the time land have no recollection of seeing them then.)
 
In the Bronx Zoo, I’ve seen Bail Mynahs at both World of Birds and Jungleworld on some occassions, but the one rarest bird that the Bronx has a successful breeding program is the Maleo, which is one of the first birds you see in the exhibits at World of Birds.

I had no idea Maleos, like the Bail Mynahs, were also critically endangered which is why I admire the Zoo for helping save those unique birds from the very brink of exintction.
 
When I used to live in Texas, I visited DWA often and I remember their species list was phenomenal. I just revisited a few months ago, and was blown away by the bird species diversity, (multiple firsts for me)
-Ornate Hawk Eagle
-Great Tinamou
-Screaming Piha
-Shoebill
- Pesquet’s Parrot
 
My memory is foggy as I was both young at the time and rushed through the area (it was incredibly crowded and overwhelming for little me), but I do recall seeing Socorro doves in the Smithsonian zoo's bird house. Whilst back here in Canada, I've seen both crested partridges (not sure just how rare they are in captivity but they are considered vulnerable by the IUCN) and a macaw hybrid of some sort at the Bloedel Conservatory. I've also seen and worked with Northern spotted owls, though they weren't at a public zoo so I'm not sure if they count. :p

Side note, there's quite a collection of non-releasable birds of prey at a local bird rehab here, which I've visited on multiple occasions, and I'd be curious to know if any of them are considered rare in captivity...
 
My memory is foggy as I was both young at the time and rushed through the area (it was incredibly crowded and overwhelming for little me), but I do recall seeing Socorro doves in the Smithsonian zoo's bird house. Whilst back here in Canada, I've seen both crested partridges (not sure just how rare they are in captivity but they are considered vulnerable by the IUCN) and a macaw hybrid of some sort at the Bloedel Conservatory. I've also seen and worked with Northern spotted owls, though they weren't at a public zoo so I'm not sure if they count. :p

Side note, there's quite a collection of non-releasable birds of prey at a local bird rehab here, which I've visited on multiple occasions, and I'd be curious to know if any of them are considered rare in captivity...
Crested Partridge are very common in zoos.
 
It depends on what you mean by "rarest". If rare in zoos, Moonlit Sanctuary had the only Australian owlet-nightjar in captivity for several years, so that is pretty rare, and I doubt there were many holders ever prior to the birds we held (which came from Taronga)

If in terms of conservation, orange-bellied parrots were down to 17 wild birds in spring 2016, so that is also pretty rare. Extinct in the Wild is not regarded as a threatened category, they have gone past threatened.
 
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In the Bronx Zoo, I’ve seen Bail Mynahs at both World of Birds and Jungleworld on some occassions, but the one rarest bird that the Bronx has a successful breeding program is the Maleo, which is one of the first birds you see in the exhibits at World of Birds.

I had no idea Maleos, like the Bail Mynahs, were also critically endangered which is why I admire the Zoo for helping save those unique birds from the very brink of exintction.
Bali starlings (mynahs) breed very well in captivity, so are common in zoos. Indeed there are reasonable numbers in private hands, especially in Europe.

Maleos, though, are extremely rare, both in the wild and in captivity.
 
I've seen a lot of "rare" birds at zoos in places like Fiji (e.g. Orange and Golden Doves spring to mind), New Caledonia (e.g. Cloven-feathered Dove, New Caledonian Imperial Pigeon, Ouvea Parakeet), New Zealand (e.g. Takahe, Kakapo, Okarito Kiwi, Orange-fronted Kakariki), Australia (e.g. Australian Owlet-Nightjar, Orange-bellied Parrot), and southeast Asia (e.g. Maleo, Sumba Hornbill, Helmeted Hornbill, New Guinea Harpy Eagle, Philippine Eagle). The "rarest" bird I've seen in a European zoo is Grey-necked Picathartes.
 
Obviously Philippine eagle which I've seen in both Antwerp and Planckendael zoos.

Furthermore certainly white-necked picathartes in Frankfurt, Lear's and Spix macaw at Pairi Daiza, African golden cat in Blijdorp Rotterdam, Coquerel's sifaka in Köln (a very rare species in Europe but rather common in America) and seven-coloured tanager in Antwerp and Eberwalde.
 
Furthermore certainly white-necked picathartes in Frankfurt, Lear's and Spix macaw at Pairi Daiza, African golden cat in Blijdorp Rotterdam, Coquerel's sifaka in Köln (a very rare species in Europe but rather common in America) and seven-coloured tanager in Antwerp and Eberwalde.
Did you mean to include the African golden cat and Coquerel's sifaka, Philipine eagle?
 
In terms of status in captivity the rarest I’ve seen would be the Black-faced Cormorant. There is only one individual of this species on public display (at Melbourne Zoo in the Great Flight Aviary) in the world, however, this is an easy species to see in the wild.

As for wild status, that would be the Orange-bellied Parrot which is restricted to coastal habitat in Tasmania, Victoria and South Australia in very low numbers that are prone to fluctuation. Several zoos have this species on display
 
The "rarest" bird I've seen in a European zoo is Grey-necked Picathartes.
Furthermore certainly white-necked picathartes in Frankfurt...
I saw both grey-necked picathartes and white-necked picathartes at London Zoo when I was a very young child; these were, I believe, the first individuals of their species ever displayed in any zoo. In those childhood days birds, however unusual, didn't interest me as much as mammals so, regrettably, these picathartes didn't get the attention they deserved.

Fortunately, though, years later I subsequently saw grey-necked picathartes in Frankfurt and white-necked picathartes in Antwerp, Rotterdam, Vienna and Frankfurt.
 
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