One can not blame the public for complaining they pay their money while the zoo slowly deletes one species after another, Whipsnade use to have a wonderful collection of interesting herbivores now many are long gone, How bad does it have to be before many people just do not visit?
I lament the loss of the hippos as much as anyone, but Whipsnade is still very much a collection of interesting herbivores. Compare the collection of today to the collection of thirty or so years ago and of course it is far weakened, but s far in the 2020s decade both ZSL collections have been steadily on the rise and the ungulate collection at Whipsnade reflects that.
So far this decade Whipsnade has gained the following hoofstock taxa:
Visayan Warty Pig (2020)
Lowland Anoa (2022)
European Forest Reindeer (2023)
Sulawesi Babirusa (2023)
Defassa Waterbuck (2023)
Javan Banteng (2024)
Philippine Spotted Deer (2024)
Michie's Tufted Deer (2025)*
*assuming the ZTL update is accurate
Eight new species without a single major exhibit opening. And as far as I can tell they haven't lost a single hoofstock taxa in that time period, although of course that will change soon with the hippos. At the end of the 2010s it was looking bleak with a lot of unnecessary departures and failed attempts to establish populations, with rarities like Thomson's Gazelle and childhood favourites like Roan Antelope, kudu and especially the European Moose making for miserable departures. But that has all turned around now. I can say a similar thing about London - with the closure of the Aquarium rounding off a decade of steady decline for the zoo, I was convinced that the lockdown couldn't have come at a worse time and the zoo was about to collapse further. But somehow both ZSL zoos have came out of the pandemic looking stronger than ever, with new species in departments (ungulates at Whipsnade, birds at London) that were in desperate need of revitalisation and the opening of a major new exhibit of each with a series of smaller, equally lovely ones.
And it isn't just a big hoofstock collection, but a really good one. The new Tufted Deer and forest reindeer only have one other UK holder, while the waterbuck and babirusa only have two others; that makes them rarities by my count and all four of them are new this decade. Do those not qualify as 'interesting' to you? And the zoo still has the nation's only gaur and gemsbok, the latter breeding, as well as plenty of large crowd-pleasers such as elephants and two species of rhino that are wonderful as ever and growingly hard to come by these days. Big herds of deer and banteng, with a breeding herd of Przewalski's Horses, in Passage through Asia as well.
For the record, I don't take back a word of my hippo rant earlier and still firmly believe that Whipsnade is wrong not to further pursue this species. But to suggest that it is no longer a 'collection of interesting herbivores,' and that people should stop visiting as a result of this, is in my mind grossly unfair and provably incorrect.