I just noticed today on the ZAA website that WRS (zoo, Jurong, etc) and Resorts World Sentosa (i.e. Marine Life Park) are ZAA members. Any ideas on when this happened?
I just noticed today on the ZAA website that WRS (zoo, Jurong, etc) and Resorts World Sentosa (i.e. Marine Life Park) are ZAA members. Any ideas on when this happened?
New Caledonia's Noumea Zoo is another new one (Fiji's Kula Eco Park has been a member for years) but makes more sense in that it is actually in the Pacific, even if it is a French possession. Apparently their patas monkeys came from Taronga, so not being in ZAA then certainly didn't affect them getting surplus ZAA animals. Although I guess it will now make it easier for Australian zoos to import New Caledonian geckoes.
In NZ there is now a huge push to try and make all the smaller collections holding kiwi and other natives to become ZAA members, which really serves no useful purpose for them. But then you hear about the struggles some Australian zoos have to get admitted, when they would actually be of benefit to the ZAA!
That's the kiwi house I was referring to but I actually meant somewhere else (I put down Whangarei by mistake, and so I removed the comment). I think I probably shouldn't say any more, or the other things I'm thinking about DoC and ZAA. But thumbs up for Jarkari's comment.....zooboy28 said:The Whangarei Museum & Heritage Park (holds kiwi) is already a ZAA member, is this the one you mean? Some of the NZ ZAA members are small, especially those council-run public avaries: Palmerston North's Esplanade Avaries are quite big, but the Fielding ones are tiny. I can see the benefits of DOC liasing with just one body in regards to captive natives however, and it wuld make management of programme species easier wouldn't it?
that certainly is an optimistic viewCGSwans said:I actually had quite a different (and more optimistic, perhaps) interpretation of this move. Singapore is a highly developed island nation that is a lot closer to Australasia than Europe or North America. I'm certain it would have world-class quarantine facilities and, perhaps most importantly, perhaps the best bird collection in the entire world.
I saw that WRS were in ZAA and immediately figured it was for them to act as a staging post (in return for wildlife and perhaps cash) for imports into the ZAA region. Particularly birds. Jurong Bird Park could provide flamingos, crowned cranes, hornbills, birds-of-paradise, toucans, crowned pigeons - basically everything that Australian zoos might want, and they can do it with impeccable disease control and known founders.