devilfish
Well-Known Member
This species is found in a few private collections in the USA. I have seen them at one in California.
Thanks - I'd heard rumours that they were dotted around in some private collections but nothing solid until now.
This species is found in a few private collections in the USA. I have seen them at one in California.
ahh, tnakyou for your opinion stulchyou seem to be very in the know and i like to hear your personal opinions because of it. I believe London has massively improved since the free fall of the 90's. my school runs a yearly trip too the zoo and hopefully i will get to go on the trip this year (last year i was on a trip too france with the school in which i visited Nausicaa sealife centre, which was worth it). I would love to see leopard at london zoo, what sub-species would you personally like to see? Have they decided what they'd like to do with the mappins yet? on the masterplan it says 'wild china, madagascar or part of wild indonesia' however, the only thing i think they could put on there to link with wild indonesia would be dholes or Sun bear. Possibly Orang-Utan.
Thanks for the Info
Dan
Identifying 'spare' land at an Urban zoo such as London is difficult, as much of the land not occupied by enclosures is used to promote biodiversity and encourage wild species to utilise it.
In a city like London I'm not sure how important this is. You have the rest of Regents Park which is enormous and has some quite wild (as in not cultivated or planted) parts, Primrose Hill, the vast expanse of Hampstead Heath, Highgate Woods, Waterlow Park and that's just in part of north London. Further afield there are many urban parks then places like Richmond and Epping Forest.
With all that I don't think it is too important for ZSL to be doing that kind of work in the zoo grounds.
Of course I think it's a great idea, BUT... can't imagine how it would work. How would the intersection between enclosure and rope be managed to stop the animals climbing out onto the roof of the enclosure, and thus away into the world? And the canal is outside the zoo, it's not ZSL land, and nor is the north towing path, whereas what you call the two "public bridges" over the canal aren't public as such: they're within the zoo. I don't think Camden council or whoever it is who has responsibility for the canal and towing paths would relish London Zoo animals being loose outside zoo land, even if (somehow) confined to ropes. But perhaps I'm lacking imagination... please explain! I still think it's brilliant!
^hey, the casson once held a walruson a side note, has zsl ondon zoo ever kept dolphins?
Sorry, you've said it all here.
London has had "problems" in recent years:- hanuman langurs and squirrel monkeys have got out into the Park, and a colobus got loose within the Zoo itself. Any of these have bitten someone - probably a child, being smaller and more likely to approach the animal - quite badly.
Any planning application the zoo makes, right down to litter bins, gets to be chewed over by Westminster City Council. I think they're more likely to approve a dolphinarium in the Casson than this idea.