Join our zoo community
dbyrd

Looking at me.

The Giant Eland is a hard subject to photograph because the location of their compound allows for harsh sunlight in the mornings.

Looking at me.
dbyrd, 21 Sep 2008
    • dbyrd
      The Giant Eland is a hard subject to photograph because the location of their compound allows for harsh sunlight in the mornings.
    • kiang
      This is a giant eland
    • Zebraduiker
      Great Picture of a great antelope, my Favouritre antelope species. Have you seen any youngsters ?
    • Moebelle
      One of the elands at the zoo a little while ago was the first to give birth to an actual bongo. To answer your question, I cannot remember there being baby elands.
    • Kudu21
      I think that you'll find that the birth of the bongo calf to the eland cow was not "a little while ago", but rather in 1984. You'll also find that the eland that gave birth to the bongo calf was a Common Eland, not a Giant Eland like the beautiful animal in this photograph.
    • Fuzzball
      Giant elands have bred very well in cincinnati. A shame, they stopped keeping them.
    • Kudu21
      It is quite the shame that the zoo quit keeping Giant Elands. They had such success with the species, and, in my opinion, they are among the most beautiful and impressive of the antelopes. I was hoping that they might make a return in the African exhibit, but from what I have heard from zoo officials it will be the Common Eland that will be returning.
    • Fuzzball
      I agree with you, Kudu21. Especially both subspecies of Giant Eland are highly endangered in the wild, so it is important to increase the captive population, it makes no sense to keep instead of them common elands.

      What species is now kept in the former giant eland exhibit ?
    • Moebelle
      There are currently Eastern bongos and Grey crowned cranes in that exhibit.
    • Kudu21
      Those were exactly my thoughts. It doesn't make much sense. The zoo moved the Giant Elands out of the zoo when Vanishing Giants closed and the Okapis moved to the Veldt. The bongos moved to the former Giant Eland yard, after a short period of a few months where it held Scimitar-horned Oryx, and the Okapis took over the former bongo yard. Then about two years ago they split the former Giant Eland yard in half to hold both the bongos and the Okapis. This was to make room on the other side of the Veldt for another Indian Rhinoceros enclosure. Now they have a perfect chance to bring the species back, and they're settling with their very common relatives. The zoo did such work with the species, and then just ships them out... I'm curious of their reasons.

      As Moebelle said, there are bongos and crowned cranes in half of the former Giant Eland yard, but in the other half there are Okapis and supposedly the old male Yellow-backed Duiker.
    There are no comments to display.
  • Category:
    Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
    Uploaded By:
    dbyrd
    Date:
    21 Sep 2008
    View Count:
    3,059
    Comment Count:
    17

    EXIF Data

    File Size:
    252.4 KB
    Mime Type:
    image/jpeg
    Width:
    1000px
    Height:
    825px
    Aperture:
    f/7.1
    Make:
    NIKON CORPORATION
    Model:
    NIKON D1
    Date / Time:
    2004:07:07 01:29:49
    Exposure Time:
    10/2000 sec
    Focal Length:
    230 mm
     

    Note: EXIF data is stored on valid file types when a photo is uploaded. The photo may have been manipulated since upload (rotated, flipped, cropped etc).