On Feb. 20 a Bearded vulture was hatched at Zoo Goldau. Prop. it will later be released into the wild.
Last week the pair of Bearded Vultures (Gypaetus barbatus barbatus) laid an egg.
Source:
Instagram of Tierpark Goldau (04/01/2024)
Around a week ago 16-year old male Carpathian lynx (Lynx lynx carpathicus) Lucki passed away. The zoo currently has one female left.
Source:
Instagram of Tierpark Goldau (18/01/2024)
The egg was recently checked, caretakers confirmed that the egg was succesfully fertilized and the chick's heartbeat could be seen.
Source:
Instagram of Tierpark Goldau (02/02/2024)
Zoochatters All: Darn, I am so HAPPY here! For Yonker Years the entire EAZA network has downplayed the threatened status of some of our brown bear species (Pyrenean - disaster, Marsicano - no action take, Northern Scandinavia - you all need reminding how for example in Sweden the local bear subspecies has a tenuous hold thanks to a politically nature averse and a happy shooting moose hunting community is killing / significantly reducing both safe and unsafe predator species -)!Tierpark Goldau imported 2 female Syrian browm bears from Tbilisi, Georgia. It is hoped they will breed with the remaining male
Neue Braunbären im Natur- und Tierpark Goldau eingezogen | Natur- und Tierpark Goldau
It's funny as I've written, a couple of weeks ago, an article (in French language) on my blog, hoping for a strenthening of the Syrian/Persian Brown Bear population in European zoos, more changes with Near Eastern / Caucasian zoos (actually the case with Tbilisi/Goldau !), and for their quick comeback in French ones (that used to keep them for decades, but completely cease that a few years ago with the departure of the last bears from Montpellier Zoo ; keep in mind that once there were these bears in the 2 main Parisian zoos, and perhaps even in the small Jardin d'Acclimatation).Zoochatters All: Darn, I am so HAPPY here! For Yonker Years the entire EAZA network has downplayed the threatened status of some of our brown bear species (Pyrenean - disaster, Marsicano - no action take, Northern Scandinavia - you all need reminding how for example in Sweden the local bear subspecies has a tenuous hold thanks to a politically nature averse and a happy shooting moose hunting community is killing / significantly reducing both safe and unsafe predator species -)!
The Syrian brown bear has disappeared from a major part of its range in the Near East (not just Syria, Jordan, Palestine, even Iraq I would not hold much faith in a safe population). It may be relatively still common, if alas with a threatened status to boot in f.i. central and eastern Turkey, Iran and perhaps some of the Caucasus mountain ranges .... but going west and south it is pretty dramatic. Syrian brown bear deserve an ex situ conservation program by EAZA (having both the means and the capacity and political clout). Period!
NOTA BENE: This so much so for the current emphasis on bear rescue and functionally extinct condemnation to zoos in the EAZA region! You might - already (from previous observations) my personal position on this: Best left to in-country authorities with outside conservation funding in rehabilitation centers.
I deliberately missed the more Eastern threatened bear populations (as well of some American ones !), as I think that European zoos shouldn't play any significant role for their conservation ex situ ; more feasibly with the funding of conservation projects in countries like Mongolia, India, Nepal... as it is realized for other species (Przewalski's Horse, Snow Leopard, Red Panda...) and conservation areas.@Haliaeetus, You speak from my heart!
BTW: I do personally know a few bear conservationists and they do thankfully know better....! Alas at the political \ policy level within Europe people continue to dream a dream that is not quite reality. Alas, this is particularly true of NW and SW Europe up till the central European Heartland... More easterly, it is the Syrian\Persian brown bears, the Himalayas and Tibetan plateaux ... et cetera!