Worst Mixed-Species Combinations?

In Burgers' Zoo in the bush they kept African pygmy goose with black pacu. This was only for the adultbirds a good combination.
Why was this a bad mix? I can't imagine Black Pacu eating a pygmy goose!

Also, why were there pacu in with African Pygmy Geese anyway? Pacu are from South America!
 
In Burgers' Zoo in the bush they kept African pygmy goose with black pacu. This was only for the adultbirds a good combination..

Why was this a bad mix? I can't imagine Black Pacu eating a pygmy goose!

Also, why were there pacu in with African Pygmy Geese anyway? Pacu are from South America!

Not the both of you completely dismissing that the Bush is a ecosystem display of rainforest as ecosystem rather then trying to be geographically accurate :oops:
 
Well you learn something new everyday I guess... :oops:
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They aren't mixed, though? They rotate.

I haven't seen an elephant seal on exhibit for a while, so I'm not sure what the current setup is, but I can say with certainty that they were mixed in the past. The elephant seals barely ate, let alone shift on and off the exhibit.
 
Not the both of you completely dismissing that the Bush is a ecosystem display of rainforest as ecosystem rather then trying to be geographically accurate :oops:
Oh sorry, I didn't know that's what Burger's was going for.
 
No clue if this thread is dead or not, but while I cannot identify the zoo in question (due to the film’s age and it being focused on comedy), the final sequence in this comedy short from the 40s shows footage of three different types of bear in the same enclosure (Asiatic Black, Sloth and Sun, all given cartoon mouths), which raises an eyebrow (it appears several zoos have done such combos). Skip to 6:23 if you wish to see the bears. A warning though, the narrator uses some cringeworthy language to describe the bears.
It would be helpful if someone could identify the zoo that was used for this sequence.
 
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No clue if this thread is dead or not, but while I cannot identify the zoo in question (due to the film’s age and it being focused on comedy), the final sequence in this comedy short from the 40s shows footage of three different types of bear in the same enclosure (Asiatic Black, Sloth and Sun, all given cartoon mouths), which raises an eyebrow. Skip to 6:23 if you wish to see the bears. A warning though, the narrator uses some cringeworthy language to describe the bears.
It would be helpful if someone could identify the zoo that was used for this sequence.
This feels very Detroit-y. They’ve kept Brown, American Black, Sun, and Sloth bears together before, and that hippo exhibit looks mighty familiar.
(Also, good to know that animating mouths over animals was funny all the way back then :p)
 
Joke answer: Damian Aspinall and anything he's ever released into the wild.

Serious answer: I can name one example from North Carolina - white rhinos and marabou storks. The current Watani Grasslands setup is two elephant yards and the main rhino/antelope savanna. Before that, it was rhinos, elephants, and the antelope savanna. The marabou storks didn't really interact with the rhinos all that much, but here's the kicker - the marabous, which were pinioned, sometimes were blown into the neighboring elephant yard (the wind gave their wings enough of a push), and the understandably spooked elephants chased them around the yard. AFAIK, the storks never bred during their time in with the rhinos, and I'm pretty sure they've been totally phased out of the collection.
 
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