Onychorhynchus coronatus
Well-Known Member
This is interesting. Wonder where they will be put? Are the Macaques hardy enough for Whipsnade?
Why would they not be hardy enough ?
This is interesting. Wonder where they will be put? Are the Macaques hardy enough for Whipsnade?
Can't think where they will go, surely no ready made enclosure waiting for them?This is interesting. Wonder where they will be put? Are the Macaques hardy enough for Whipsnade?
The only possibility I can think of is building a house and bridge onto the Squirrel monkey island. I really hope they aren't thinking of the Chimp or Sloth Bear enclosures, they aren't a big enough animal and will be too far from the visitors. I really hope nothing will leave, but don't see where the money will come from for a new enclosure, so this may not be good news at all!!This is interesting. Wonder where they will be put? Are the Macaques hardy enough for Whipsnade?
Possibly the Francois Langurs?What will London replace them with in the old enclosure near the gorillas?
Sorry about that, guilty as charged of "ZSL bashing".
But I think it is worth mentioning that those of us who do "bash" ZSL do so constructively and because we know that the organization is capable of so much more.
Whipsnade is on a chalk escarpment of the Chiltern hills. It can get very cold up there. However the dip slope of the escarpment is flatter and less exposed. But its never as warm as e.g. the city 'microclimate' of London zoo.Why would they not be hardy enough ?
I call it constructive critisism rather than bashing, but anyway- to return to the Blackbuck as an example of what appears to be inertia on WHipsnade's part- a year or so ago they sent a Swamp Deer male to Knowsley- who happen to hold one of the few breeding herds of blackbuck still in the UK- it has at least a dozen males so could easily spare one- but Whips...
Whipsnade is on a chalk escarpment of the Chiltern hills. It can get very cold up there. However the dip slope of the escarpment is flatter and less exposed. But its never as warm as e.g. the city 'microclimate' of London zoo.
Possibly the Francois Langurs?
They moved fairly recently to Whipsnade didn't they ?
Seems a bit musical chairs to keep shifting them around.
Wouldn't it be better to keep the langurs at Whipsnade and obtain another African primate species for that enclosure in order to keep with the Central African theme ?
Perhaps cherry capped mangabeys or Roloway monkeys ?
They already have two very closely related examples at London Zoo- a good reproductive group of White-naped Mangabey- and a pair of non-breeding Dianas- again the latter without trying to rectify that situation with exchanges.
No! No room... plus they would never double up with very similar species, it just wouldn't happen...no mileage exhibit-wise.Yes, I know, I enjoyed watching both of these species when I visited London a couple of times in 2019 but they could quite easily go into keeping more mangabey and guenon species , couldn't they ?
No! No room... plus they would never double up with very similar species, it just wouldn't happen...no mileage exhibit-wise.
Quite a shame in my opinion, the francois langurs really don't go with the Central theme
From what I read on here they are being held offshow- not the best option. just a holding facility. Get rid of them if they don't want to build an enclosure for them. Seems they just juggle these species around with no real plan.Quite a shame in my opinion, the francois langurs really don't go with the Central African theme and I would imagine that they have it far better at Whipsnade.
Nor did the Sulawesi macaques, once they were moved there in place of the Colobus, again due to the building of the new Lion exhibit!
From what I read on here they are being held offshow- not the best option. just a holding facility. Get rid of them if they don't want to build an enclosure for them. Seems they just juggle these species around with no real plan.
I have a book about London zoo and Whipsnade zoo with one photo of the Tommie herd in the past, it had many animals in that herd at that time!Indeed Whipsnade had a thriving group of Thomson's gazelles from the 1950s until the 1990s; I remember when the herd numbered more than twenty individuals.
There's a good postcard of that herd too.I have a book about London zoo and Whipsnade zoo with one photo of the Tommie herd in the past, it had many animals in that herd at that time!
Dublin keeps both cherry crowned and white collared mangabeys (yes I know they have these on islands but still).
Twycross and the Aspinall parks have both Diana and De Brazza's guenons.
What about L'Hoest's monkeys or Hamlyn's owl faced monkeys ?
Yes, absolutely agree, they should send them to a zoo which will both exhibit them and value them too.
I don't think there is a plan either, it all seems to be sleepwalking.