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Hi there! I'm visiting Zoo Basel in a few weeks and I was wondering if there are any locals / regular visitors who could help me with species lists for the aviaries and indoor areas. I'm aware of the recent species list released by the zoo, but it doesn't mention where the animals are held.

I like having animal pages showcasing the animals of specific exhibits with me, to make sure I don't miss anything, as I've missed quite a few species or exhibits in the past

If you want to help me, maybe send a private chat, as to not fill up the news thread too much ;)
 
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Hi there! I'm visiting Zoo Basel in a few weeks and I was wondering if there are any locals / regular visitors who could help me with species lists for the aviaries and indoor areas. I'm aware of the recent species list released by the zoo, but it doesn't mention where the animals are held.

I like having animal pages showcasing the animals of specific exhibits with me, to make sure I don't miss anything, as I've missed quite a few species or exhibits in the past

If you want to help me, maybe send a private chat, as to not fill up the news thread too much ;)

As a general guide the zoo has quite an extensive overview of what is where on their own website under Tiere & Naturschutz > Anlage und Gehege. But that one isn't exhaustive. Most stuff is hard to miss, but make sure you visit all open houses. There is a large number of accessible ones and multiple have exhibits you would otherwise miss. Most notably Australis, near the kangaroos and the elephant house. The other houses like Gamgoas and Etosha would be hard to miss. Make sure you also visit the indoor holdings of e.g. the ostriches, hippos, rhinos and giraffes. Even when the animals are outside, many stables can be visited and are often interesting for a zoo nerd.

As for species lists per house.

Vivarium
This building holds the vast vast majority of fish, reptiles and amphibians + gentoo and king penguin. Exceptions are noted elsewhere. Just be aware the tentacled snakes are likely still behind the scenes. The Myuchelys latisternum turtle is unsigned in the Australian crocodile enclosure, which might also still hold Gould's amadines and diamond doves.

Australis
Mainly the kangaroo indoor house, but also holds green tree python, mourning gecko, cane toad, black widows and the brush turkey.

Geigy house
All primates, except the ruffed lemurs (near Etosha) and macaques (opposite snow leopards) are here. The outdoor cages for most S-American primates are located on the roof, so can only be seen from the path from the gorilla outdoor enclosure to the bird house.

Bird house
A species list is found on vogelhaus.zoobasel.ch

Etosha house
Holds Cape ground squirrel, round-eared elephant shrew, grass mouse, the mole rats, rock hyrax, carmine bee-eaters, red-billed hornbill, sociable weaver, black-headed lovebirds, horned vipers, meerkats and the cape porcupines. The cape porcupines are only held in the meerkat outdoor enclosure.

Gamgoas house
Next to the lions. Highlight are the two termite colonies. But also holds the Karoo dwarf tortoise. The nile crocodiles share their exhibit with dwarf mongoose, cape turtle dove, (possibly) golden-breasted starling, yellow-crowned bishop and strangely also the Cuban grassquit.. The birds are likely not signed....

Tembea elephant house
Holds the black-and-rufous sengi, ants and some fish.

Some odd bits and pieces:
- Both European tortoise species are in an enclosure opposite the meerkats. The kea are behind that enclosure in the former owl ruins. The only owls (little owl) are in a cage near the reindeer.
- Ground hornbills are in with the Somali wild ass
- The ducks, if on display are on the ponds between the entrance and bird house. The red-breasted goose are in with the flamingo
- Muntjac are kept with the rhino (just like visayan warty pig and possibly still the otters). They are often best seen from within the rhino house where they have access to an elevated outside part in front of a window.

Hope this helps and if you have questions let me know ;)
 
As a general guide the zoo has quite an extensive overview of what is where on their own website under Tiere & Naturschutz > Anlage und Gehege. But that one isn't exhaustive. Most stuff is hard to miss, but make sure you visit all open houses. There is a large number of accessible ones and multiple have exhibits you would otherwise miss. Most notably Australis, near the kangaroos and the elephant house. The other houses like Gamgoas and Etosha would be hard to miss. Make sure you also visit the indoor holdings of e.g. the ostriches, hippos, rhinos and giraffes. Even when the animals are outside, many stables can be visited and are often interesting for a zoo nerd.

As for species lists per house.

(...)

Hope this helps and if you have questions let me know ;)

Thank you so much for the extensive list. I did have a few more areas I was hoping you could help me with...

Vivarium
This building holds the vast vast majority of fish, reptiles and amphibians + gentoo and king penguin. Exceptions are noted elsewhere. Just be aware the tentacled snakes are likely still behind the scenes. The Myuchelys latisternum turtle is unsigned in the Australian crocodile enclosure, which might also still hold Gould's amadines and diamond doves.

I was wondering if you (or anyone) had a list for some of the larger mixed freshwater aquariums present in the vivarium, especially the amazing European tank. And if there's any mixed other paludariums/terrariums?

Tembea elephant house
Holds the black-and-rufous sengi, ants and some fish.

What species of fish are held in the elephant house?
 
Thank you so much for the extensive list. I did have a few more areas I was hoping you could help me with...



I was wondering if you (or anyone) had a list for some of the larger mixed freshwater aquariums present in the vivarium, especially the amazing European tank. And if there's any mixed other paludariums/terrariums?



What species of fish are held in the elephant house?

There are plenty of mixed species aquariums and terrariums in the Vivarium, but I couldn't give you a good species list. There is now new electronic signage, I don't know how complete it is but it is likely going to be very helpful. The European tank is the largest in volume of them all, so locating species is not as hard as at home.

Basel has a very interesting zoo, just don't compare it with Burgers' Zoo as the philosophy is very different. It can teach most other zoos something about efficient use of space and on how to give up-close encounters of (active) animals with smart architecture. Attempts at naturalistism are mixed with functional concrete-dominated architecture which can be very beautiful in its own right.
 
Anybody has a photo of the past exhibit in the Etosha house with puff adders and harvest mice? I wanted to use it in a thread.
 
Anybody has a photo of the past exhibit in the Etosha house with puff adders and harvest mice? I wanted to use it in a thread.

I have this one, taken in 2015, but I can't remember if it shows the entirety of the exhibit.
 

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Anybody has a photo of the past exhibit in the Etosha house with puff adders and harvest mice? I wanted to use it in a thread.

I have both taken last
20230922_130414.jpg P1060306.JPG friday
 

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Thanks, I was not clear. I am looking for photos of the enclosure from the time when puff adders and harvest mice shared two parts of one exhibit.

Your photos are a bit later, when the terrarium was turned into one of horned vipers...
 
I visited Basel again for the first time in 5 years. The main reason to go back was the opening of the bird house, but there has been plenty going on in the meantime with several smaller changes. The Zoo will turn 150 years old in 2024, but I thought it looked better then ever. There is still enough to do and it isn't on Zurich level yet (and it doesn't aim to look the same), but I liked the recent developments.

2 snippets of news before some pictures of the newer developments:
- A partner to the black-and-rufous sengi in Tembea, the elephant house has arrived and the 2 now live together.
- 2 small terraria in the Vivarium are now home to the critically endangered Rio Pescado stubfoot toad. Zoo Karlsruhe was the first European zoo to keep (and breed) this species in 2023 and Basel is the second zoo with them.

Then on to the bird house, which consists of a renovation of the 1927 house as well as the addition of a new wing for Neotropical birds and a walkthrough for waldrapp ibis.

The waldrapp ibis walkthrough came on the place of the former aviary for scarlet ibis and little egret. The waldrapp have company of marbled teal and European roller:

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full


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There are 5 outdoor aviaries on the long end of the original building. These are home to 6 endangered SE-Asian species: Visayan tarictic hornbill, Vietnam pheasant + bali starling, Sumatran laughingthrush, purple-naped lory and common hill mynah:
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These aviaries all look stunning and are well-planted but I thought it was somewhat too small for the hornbill.

You can then enter the main building through an entrance that has been preserved, including the bird shaped door handle

full


The main hall consists of a large walkthrough which can be seen from the ground floor and from 2 stories. On one side are the indoor aviaries of the hornbills etc, the other side (which formerly had small exhibits with tanagers and finches) is now the main pathway.

A side aviary:
full


The main walkthrough houses 21 different bird species, which hail mostly from SE-Asia, but there are some African and American species in there too.

full


full


full


The species list is the following:

- Bay-headed tanager
- Yellow cardinal
- Turqoise tanager
- Montserrat oriole
- Bartlett's bleeding-heart pigeon
- Blue-crowned laughing-thrush
- Blue-crowned hanging parrot
- Asian fairy bluebird
- Nicobar pigeon
- Emei Shan liochlia
- Orange-bellied leafbird
- Palawan peacock-pheasant
- Red-billed leiothrix
- Red-tailed laughing-thrush
- White-rumped shama
- Black-naped fruit-dove
- Crested wood partridge
- Chestnut-backed thrush
- Fischer turaco
- Kilimanjaro white-eye
- Emerald glossy starling

You then enter the new extension which currently houses 8 bird species.

full


full


full


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The following species are currently kept there:
- Blue-necked tanager
- Bay-headed tanager
- Blue-backed grassquit
- Red siskin
- Red-legged honeycreeper
- Violaceous euphonia
- Soccoro pigeon
- Lessons amazilia hummingbird (1 male in the walkthrough, 1.2 behind the scenes)

I absolutely loved the new bird house, it combines the bare visitor areas with the lush bird areas very successfully and the whole building seems very well thought through. It will only become more lush in the coming years, but the atmosphere is already great. If one is looking for how to use concrete and modernist design successfully, this is a prime example. The whole building is stylish, but makes you focus solely on the birds. It is not the reinvention of keeping birds, but it is a very good modern interpretation of it. Vienna's small birdhouse is probably still my favourite, but this one is certainly not far behind. Had I written a 100 must see exhibits this year, it could very well have been included. It is a culmination of what Zoo Basel does very well in general: creating exhibits that let the animals thrive without any noise in the form of theming on the visitors side and giving visitors excellent viewing opportunities.

With the bird house also came a new otter enclosure, which feels a bit oversized for small-clawed otters and is screaming for smooth-coated otters ;). It is very good though:
full


full


full


There are a ton of other pictures in the gallery too, highlighting new developments in the Vivarium building (still going strong at the age of 51) and other new additions such as Nephila spiders in the succulent part of the Etosha house, the sengi enclosure and the Boulenger's cape tortoises in Gamgoas.

The zoo is currently renovating the pelican pond and the rhino house (where Asian forest tortoises will be added).

https://www.zoochat.com/community/media/categories/zoo-basel.700/
 
I visited Basel again for the first time in 5 years. The main reason to go back was the opening of the bird house, but there has been plenty going on in the meantime with several smaller changes. The Zoo will turn 150 years old in 2024, but I thought it looked better then ever. There is still enough to do and it isn't on Zurich level yet (and it doesn't aim to look the same), but I liked the recent developments.

2 snippets of news before some pictures of the newer developments:
- A partner to the black-and-rufous sengi in Tembea, the elephant house has arrived and the 2 now live together.
- 2 small terraria in the Vivarium are now home to the critically endangered Rio Pescado stubfoot toad. Zoo Karlsruhe was the first European zoo to keep (and breed) this species in 2023 and Basel is the second zoo with them.

Then on to the bird house, which consists of a renovation of the 1927 house as well as the addition of a new wing for Neotropical birds and a walkthrough for waldrapp ibis.

The waldrapp ibis walkthrough came on the place of the former aviary for scarlet ibis and little egret. The waldrapp have company of marbled teal and European roller:

full


full


full


full



There are 5 outdoor aviaries on the long end of the original building. These are home to 6 endangered SE-Asian species: Visayan tarictic hornbill, Vietnam pheasant + bali starling, Sumatran laughingthrush, purple-naped lory and common hill mynah:
full


full


These aviaries all look stunning and are well-planted but I thought it was somewhat too small for the hornbill.

You can then enter the main building through an entrance that has been preserved, including the bird shaped door handle

full


The main hall consists of a large walkthrough which can be seen from the ground floor and from 2 stories. On one side are the indoor aviaries of the hornbills etc, the other side (which formerly had small exhibits with tanagers and finches) is now the main pathway.

A side aviary:
full


The main walkthrough houses 21 different bird species, which hail mostly from SE-Asia, but there are some African and American species in there too.

full


full


full


The species list is the following:

- Bay-headed tanager
- Yellow cardinal
- Turqoise tanager
- Montserrat oriole
- Bartlett's bleeding-heart pigeon
- Blue-crowned laughing-thrush
- Blue-crowned hanging parrot
- Asian fairy bluebird
- Nicobar pigeon
- Emei Shan liochlia
- Orange-bellied leafbird
- Palawan peacock-pheasant
- Red-billed leiothrix
- Red-tailed laughing-thrush
- White-rumped shama
- Black-naped fruit-dove
- Crested wood partridge
- Chestnut-backed thrush
- Fischer turaco
- Kilimanjaro white-eye
- Emerald glossy starling

You then enter the new extension which currently houses 8 bird species.

full


full


full


full


full


The following species are currently kept there:
- Blue-necked tanager
- Bay-headed tanager
- Blue-backed grassquit
- Red siskin
- Red-legged honeycreeper
- Violaceous euphonia
- Soccoro pigeon
- Lessons amazilia hummingbird (1 male in the walkthrough, 1.2 behind the scenes)

I absolutely loved the new bird house, it combines the bare visitor areas with the lush bird areas very successfully and the whole building seems very well thought through. It will only become more lush in the coming years, but the atmosphere is already great. If one is looking for how to use concrete and modernist design successfully, this is a prime example. The whole building is stylish, but makes you focus solely on the birds. It is not the reinvention of keeping birds, but it is a very good modern interpretation of it. Vienna's small birdhouse is probably still my favourite, but this one is certainly not far behind. Had I written a 100 must see exhibits this year, it could very well have been included. It is a culmination of what Zoo Basel does very well in general: creating exhibits that let the animals thrive without any noise in the form of theming on the visitors side and giving visitors excellent viewing opportunities.

With the bird house also came a new otter enclosure, which feels a bit oversized for small-clawed otters and is screaming for smooth-coated otters ;). It is very good though:
full


full


full


There are a ton of other pictures in the gallery too, highlighting new developments in the Vivarium building (still going strong at the age of 51) and other new additions such as Nephila spiders in the succulent part of the Etosha house, the sengi enclosure and the Boulenger's cape tortoises in Gamgoas.

The zoo is currently renovating the pelican pond and the rhino house (where Asian forest tortoises will be added).

https://www.zoochat.com/community/media/categories/zoo-basel.700/

Haven't been there yet since the opening of the bird house so thank you for sharing. Some pictures remind me a bit of the Bird house in Artis.

The zoo was thinking about making a walkthrough with hummingbirds and butterflies - similar to the one in the Oasi de San Alessio in Italy. It is sad it didn't materialize but it was probably a bit too complicated to set up.

Very nice that the Boulenger's tortoises are on-show also!
 
Thanks for the detailed review of the renovated 1927 Bird House at Basel Zoo. The Smithsonian National Zoo in the USA just renovated its 1928 Bird House and it's great to see zoos preserve their historic buildings while modernizing them at the same time.
 
Haven't been there yet since the opening of the bird house so thank you for sharing. Some pictures remind me a bit of the Bird house in Artis.

The zoo was thinking about making a walkthrough with hummingbirds and butterflies - similar to the one in the Oasi de San Alessio in Italy. It is sad it didn't materialize but it was probably a bit too complicated to set up.

Very nice that the Boulenger's tortoises are on-show also!

It is indeed somewhat reminiscent of Artis in style, but much more spacious.

Given the species now kept in the Neotropical wing, it would probably still be possible to add butterflies to the mix. It could be that that is just for a later stage, though I wouldn't be surprised if they ditched it completely.
 
I know Basel really well, and the new bird house looks really good. It feels great to be able to walk again in there with birds around.

I'm really curious to know what the zoo is planning for the future. The parking next to the entrance will be used for new enclosures, as a new underground parling will be built.
 
I saw it last friday and spent in total about 1.5 hour in it. I saw all the species except de Palawan peacock-pheasant.

At the entrance from the waldrapp-roller-marble duck aviary, there's a small 6th indoor aviary as a refuge for the white-eyes: small holes allow these birds to find a resting (and breeding?) spot away from the other species.
 
Now that they have a new aviary for Waldrapps, I hope Basel Zoo becomes more active in their conservation.

Waldrapp bred around Basel - in Angenstein / Aesch, Mariastein and Sasbach. It seems to be ideal animal for conservation - big, locally native, globally endangered and not making any conflict with man. One of Swiss zoos or smaller aviaries could release a free-flying colony, similar to already present White Storks. Waldrapps could be sedentary or trained to migrate to some zoo in south France in collaboration with the Austrian initiative Waldrappteam. However, compared to them, the birds would be safer on the zoo grounds and migration distance would be much shorter between Switzerland and south France. For example, it is only 500-600 km as the ibis flies - possible to make a migration in a week - if somebody would train Waldrapps to summer in Basel and winter around Reserve Africane Sigean, Zoo la Barben or Parc Ornithologique du Pont de Gau in Mediterranean France.

Ah, dream on! It mostly needs somebody enthusiastic to pick such a project.
 
On the 1st of November 12-year old female South African cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus) Alima was euthanised. Therefore the cheetah enclosure is currently empty, the breeding pair is kept behind the scenes. Maybe the female of this pair will be move to the cheetah enclosure.

Source:
Instagram of Zoo Basel (03/11/2023)
 
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Does any Zoochatter have a photo of the exhibit with puff adders and harvest mice from the Etosha building from the 2000s-2010s? I am preparing a thread about zoo exhibits and hope to include it.
 
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