What would you like to see in the UK?

Why are Doucs difficult? Is it climate or diet? They do fine at Khao Din.

I think it may be both but climate may be the more major factor. I saw a cage full of Douc Langurs years ago in the Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. Despite quite poor housing they were clearly bursting with health and lively in a way the ones in Europe never appeared to be.
 
Why are Doucs difficult? Is it climate or diet? They do fine at Khao Din.
In European and American zoos, they seem to be delicate and particularly prone to digestive disorders. Both climate and diet are likely to be factors - particularly the problem of supplying fresh browse in winter.
 
In European and American zoos, they seem to be delicate and particularly prone to digestive disorders. Both climate and diet are likely to be factors - particularly the problem of supplying fresh browse in winter.

I remember reading in one of the IZYearbooks or Zoonews how the Doucs in Cologne were prone to spontaneous abortions and/or fits of some sort from which they would normally recover. I agree diet was probably as much a problem as climate.
 
I saw proboscis monkeys several times at Twycross Zoo in the 1980s; however, I am very surprised to learn that the species returned to Twycross in 1997……………..I always thought that this was the last proboscis monkey in Europe (until the recent animals at Apenheul) so really am surprised to learn the species was at Twycross in 1997.

As mentioned in my earlier post in this thread I was very surprised to read that Twycross had a proboscis monkey in 1997 However, without knowing the source of that information, I didn’t like to categorically say it was wrong.

I do, though, agree with those who have posted since that it is probably an error.

ZooTierListe is a great resource but it needs to be used with caution. I am sure, for example, that the claim on ZooTierListe that London Zoo received a Sulawesi tarsier in 1930 is fallacious. The ZSL Annual Report for 1930 year does not list a tarsier arriving that year.

Moreover, the ZSL report for 1948 lists the arrival of a trio of Philippine tarsiers and records these as not only a species but also a genus new to the collection – which indicates there wasn’t a tarsier there eighteen years earlier.

Sorry to rub it in(hehe) but I have a photo on my desk of myself feeding him(Torgamba). Probably my biggest zoo highlight ever.
clip_image001.png

I’ve a photograph of myself feeding “Torgamba” too :).

I hasten to add that I wasn’t flouting the ‘no feeding’ rule; this was with the permission of a keeper.
 
I’ve a photograph of myself feeding “Torgamba” too :).

I hasten to add that I wasn’t flouting the ‘no feeding’ rule; this was with the permission of a keeper.

The keeper actually took the photo(s) for me- loaded me up with fruit to feed him with too.:)
 
Well, what do they feed them on at Khao Din?
I don't know but it would far closer to their natural environment e.g. leaves of native or similar plants. In Europe browse would have to be of species quite foreign to them and an all round supply only obtained by storing or freezing it too.
 
I don't know but it would far closer to their natural environment e.g. leaves of native or similar plants. In Europe browse would have to be of species quite foreign to them and an all round supply only obtained by storing or freezing it too.
I agree completely. Tropical zoos can provide native foliage all year round and a much greater variety of species too.
 
If you can get bamboos for pandas, and Eucalyptus for koalas, then somewhere like Kew and the Eden Project might help with douc langurs and proboscis.
 
If you can get bamboos for pandas, and Eucalyptus for koalas, then somewhere like Kew and the Eden Project might help with douc langurs and proboscis.

I once read that for each koala a zoo keeps, they'll need access at least 1000 eucalyptus trees. I'd imagine it'd be similar for the langurs? Except, several eucalyptus species and, for pandas, bamboo species, are hardy enough to grow in the UK and the rest of Europe. Whatever the langurs eat may not be so tough, and I doubt anywhere is willing to invest in a greenhouse big enough to keep 1000 full grown trees.

I'd love to be proven wrong though!
 
Some animals are best managed in the tropics then. Do proboscis do fine in Asian collections?
 
International Zoo Yearbook 1978 (volume 18, page 425) lists Twycross as holding 2.2 proboscis monkeys in 1977, both males were casptive bred. The original references looks like just a printing error, 1997 instead of 1977.
 
If I were to be really specific, I would like to see Koala at Bristol zoo (my closest zoo). It would be perfect for Bristol given it is a small site and they don't need much room, and a real crowd puller.
 
If I were to be really specific, I would like to see Koala at Bristol zoo (my closest zoo). It would be perfect for Bristol given it is a small site and they don't need much room, and a real crowd puller.

Koala, echidna and a potorid: maybe an egernine skink and some birds (rosellas?) for a walkthrough. Bettongs seem a bit diurnal in captivity, compared to potoroos (based off SLWAP). Sadly a lot of fauna like numbats and platypus seem off-limits for Bristol, and others are nocturnal. But especially if you blur Australasian biomes the way S American exhibits usually do...
 
Australasian animals are fascinating. Is there anywhere in the U.K. You can see Quokka, Bilby, Platypus or Kiwi? Would be great to see an Oz exhibit somewhere with weird and wonderful marsupials
 
Bettongs seem a bit diurnal in captivity, compared to potoroos (based off SLWAP).

I'm sure bettongs and potoroos can all be trained to be somewhat active during daylight hours. However in my experience left to their own devices, long-nosed potoroos are more likely to be active during daylight than any of the three bettong species we have kept.
 
Australasian animals are fascinating. Is there anywhere in the U.K. You can see Quokka, Bilby, Platypus or Kiwi? Would be great to see an Oz exhibit somewhere with weird and wonderful marsupials
Paignton have a kiwi which is kept off-show but there is a CCTV camera showing it in it's den
 
I know kiwi are often displayed with boobook owls but I assume Owls pose some danger to hatchlings. Kiwi are supposedly too shy to breed or thrive in a zoo exhibit with human disrurbances. Tuatara are present outside NZ but are predatory.

What prey size do tawny frogmouths take? The stone curlews and kookaburra will prey upon rats; maybe just placid-ish hookbills (not cockatoos), pigeons etc are suitable. Magpies are too aggressive.
 
Back
Top