
15-08-2008
The woodland in the middle and surrounding the marsh paddocks is more sheltered and more mature than the wooded areas at the top of the zoo, and is completely unused. I had always wondered why the forest buffalo weren't housed where the ankole currently are, with access into these woods, which are at the back of the paddock. There is no reason not to allow them under the canopy, certainly Port Lympne has done it with Bongo and anoa and it works extremely well.
The paddocks Kiang mentions for desert species are so exposed, which is the problem for the whole site. I think the exposure to the sea winds does affect some of the animals adversely. The same is certainly true of their primates... mona, talapoin, hamlyns, l'hoest's, de brazza, eastern colobus, and spot-nosed monkeys all came and went in the last 15 years. I'm guessing that, without paignton-sized indoor space, the winters are cramped and unbearable for many primates they have tried to house. So I wonder how they'll do with the new King colobus monkeys. Having said that, those geoffroy's spider monkeys (now at cromer) were previously a larger, breeding group that survived for years at Kessingland up a mature tree in a hotwired enclosure with the use of something the size of a small garden shed for shelter (the site of which is now one of the mature trees in the african plains blocked off by rocks)......so what do I know?! I sort of hoped those vervets they acquired a year or so ago were destined to be mixed on the African plains....but I doubt that would happen.
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