cerperal
Well-Known Member
This is the one posted about in this thread in late August, gives London a total of 1.3.1 (although this baby is clearly a male!)
This is the one posted about in this thread in late August, gives London a total of 1.3.1 (although this baby is clearly a male!)
They've actually moved over today, the public opening should be the end of the week. I'm guessing they're letting them get acclimated first before publically announcing it. Quite right about it being the old tortoise exhibit! Should suit them perfectly and will be nice to finally have that loop around the dragon opened up againLondon Zoo announced on Instagram that the capybara will soon be moving to a new habitat by Zoo Town. I presume this might be where the old giant tortoise enclosure was?
Edit: Looking on the London Zoo map it confirms it is in the location of the old giant tortoise habitat. It will be nice to have that area of the zoo opened up again.
London Zoo announced on Instagram that the capybara will soon be moving to a new habitat by Zoo Town. I presume this might be where the old giant tortoise enclosure was?
Edit: Looking on the London Zoo map it confirms it is in the location of the old giant tortoise habitat. It will be nice to have that area of the zoo opened up again.
They've actually moved over today, the public opening should be the end of the week. I'm guessing they're letting them get acclimated first before publically announcing it. Quite right about it being the old tortoise exhibit! Should suit them perfectly and will be nice to finally have that loop around the dragon opened up again

While I do have some concerns about people potentially stressing out the capybaras by banging on that big window, overall the enclosure looks very good based on the images and videos I've seen, and I can't wait to see them when I next visit in the Summer.- Now the Capybara have moved to their new enclosure that area of the zoo is fully open again with no more dead ends. Both seemed very comfortable, already coming right up to the glass.
I actually happened to go just a few days ago! Was meant to be going later in the week but changed plans, I got to see the new Capybara enclosure from the end of the Dragon House though:Now the Capybara have moved to their new enclosure that area of the zoo is fully open again with no more dead ends. Both seemed very comfortable, already coming right up to the glass.



The first enclosure in Nightlife now also has 2 unsigned Mouse Lemurs with the Giant Rat occupying just the second enclosure. Appear to be Grey ones rather than a new species but could be wrong. One came right up to the glass as well which was great to see.
Saw this too! Shame the shrew was always a no-show, but at least now there’s an opportunity for something new to take its place. I also took the liberty of taking some photos:Tree Shrew enclosure has been emptied and is under redevelopment. Unsure if this will still be for Tree Shrew or a new species.



Based off of the habitat type and morphology I would say this is a Round Island SkinkI actually happened to go just a few days ago! Was meant to be going later in the week but changed plans, I got to see the new Capybara enclosure from the end of the Dragon House though:
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Definitely looks a lot different from beforehand, and I can’t wait to go check it out the next time I visit
Conversely, their old temporary enclosure on the Cotton Terraces is now entirely vacant, with the signs made blank:
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When I visited, the Pygmy Hippo was swimming outside, which was unusual given she never did during my visits in warmer weather (it was extremely cold that day):
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I saw them too, but as I wasn’t expecting it I just thought it was an actual mouse (they do sometimes get into indoor enclosures, as they do in every zoo/farm). The fact it was climbing should have probably clued me in to that, although I’m not entirely sure why they’re there. I don’t imagine the zoo is moving all of them over, as their presence in the Lemur House ties the space together quite nicely.
Saw this too! Shame the shrew was always a no-show, but at least now there’s an opportunity for something new to take its place. I also took the liberty of taking some photos:
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The right enclosure is still intact, but they’ve begun stripping the left. Maybe they’ll be keeping two different species in either one, and need to redo the first for something non-arboreal?
In other news, the Snake-Necked Turtle tank in the New Reptile House has almost finished refurbishment. I actually found out a couple weeks ago that the turtle is coming back (apparently the glass needed redoing/rebuffing), I just forgot to share that here:
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I also saw this lizard through the window into the backstage area, anybody got an ID for it?
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Lastly, managed to spot a fox climbing up the Mappins! Surreal to see an animal doing it in the modern day (except of course for birds), but unfortunately it’s barely visible in the photo I managed to get of it :/
But all in all, some interesting things going on at the zoo right now! I also do take videos, but unfortunately video uploads aren’t working on ZooChat right now (there’s some issue with the system apparently), so they’ll have to wait for another day.
Based off of the habitat type and morphology I would say this is a Round Island Skink
They’ve had the species for several years. I photographed them in the old reptile house in 2019.Oh cool! Seems like it’s a Vulnerable species, so makes sense that ZSL would be keeping them
In looking them up, found out the island also had a species of snake known as a “burrowing boa” that has sadly been extinct since the 70s![]()
Oh cool! Seems like it’s a Vulnerable species, so makes sense that ZSL would be keeping them
In looking them up, found out the island also had a species of snake known as a “burrowing boa” that has sadly been extinct since the 70s![]()
They are (or at least were) onshow in the new reptile house too; is this still the case? It would be a shame for such an interesting species to be moved offshow even if it’s still partly visible.They’ve had the species for several years. I photographed them in the old reptile house in 2019.
Looks like an impressive job and will be even better once the grass grows back. I hope the pool is still there though? Capybaras probably need it even more than the tortoises did!
Agreed, I genuinely don't think the average visitor could guess what it used to hold. But the pool is still there, and has been slightly deepened - it's a little over a metre and a half apparently, plus the indoor heated one.And wow, they’ve done a lot of landscaping with that new capybara enclosure and it looks almost unrecognisable compared to when the tortoises were in there. Looks like an impressive job and will be even better once the grass grows back. I hope the pool is still there though? Capybaras probably need it even more than the tortoises did!
RE the mouse lemurs and tree shrew - the mouse lemurs I believe are the young from earlier in the year, and the zoo isn't going to hold tree shrews again (certainly not in Night Life at least). I'm looking forward to seeing what goes in there
Nos that the former tortoise enclosure is occupied once again, the only empty enclosure is the small one in front of the otters and meerkats, right?
The bokibokys are split because they're still hoping they will form 2 breeding pairs again, and to be honest I quite like having them both in the Lemur house (being Madagascan) and Rainforest Life because of how showy they are. I've always found tree shrews to be fairly shy and given the bokibokys are also endangered unlike the tree shrew I suspect they'd take precedentOne thing I’m wondering is, why doesn’t the zoo put the Tree Shrew in the Rainforest House? I imagine they’d be able to live just fine in the main centre treetops, and if they really need it to be in a separate enclosure then they could put it where the bokyboky is now.
The latter makes a lot of sense when you consider that there’s already a display for them in the Lemur House, and the zoo has been trying to reduce doubling-up lately (which can be seen with the shifting of meerkat keeping, where their traditional home by the Round House is now occupied by mongooses).
The bokibokys are split because they're still hoping they will form 2 breeding pairs again, and to be honest I quite like having them both in the Lemur house (being Madagascan) and Rainforest Life because of how showy they are. I've always found tree shrews to be fairly shy and given the bokibokys are also endangered unlike the tree shrew I suspect they'd take precedent
Oh cool! Seems like it’s a Vulnerable species, so makes sense that ZSL would be keeping them
In looking them up, found out the island also had a species of snake known as a “burrowing boa” that has sadly been extinct since the 70s![]()
They’ve had the species for several years. I photographed them in the old reptile house in 2019.
They are (or at least were) onshow in the new reptile house too; is this still the case? It would be a shame for such an interesting species to be moved offshow even if it’s still partly visible.