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Design a Zoo 2018

Discussion in 'Speculative Zoo Design and Planning' started by birdsandbats, 31 Dec 2017.

  1. TheGerenuk

    TheGerenuk Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Location:
    Brampton, Ontario, Canada
    I'm expecting to add the last two areas of a zoo and aquarium I was developing soon.

    I know what you're thinking, "Wait, is that the guy who took a 1 and a half year hiatus from this thread?", and you are right
     
  2. amur leopard

    amur leopard Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
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    Location:
    London
    Over the next few days/weeks, I will be writing an in-depth description of what my ideal zoo would be. If you feel I have omitted any species, please feel free to add comments.

    I will be storting at the top of North America and progressing South through South America, through Antarctica, up Africa, Europe, into Asia, and then finally Australasia. My first exhibit is:

    Arctic Waters

    The visitor is faced with a large blue building with a fluid architecture to resemble the choppy Arctic seas. The building is glass to allow natural light in whilst shielding the animals and the visitors from the elements. The visitors enters the building through the two large front doors. These doors funnel the visitors into a corridor lined with photos and information about the Arctic. It gives details on global warming, the resources that can be found in the Arctic and the Northwest Passage that is planned to go right the way through the cold habitats of some of the Arctic's most charismatic animals ( Belugas, Walruses and of course Polar bears). This is the environmental message that this exhibit offers - trying to encourage visitors to think about the consequences of their daily actions, since even a tiny change in behaviour by everyone on the planet can help a lot.
    Further down the corridor, the visitor gets a clue as to which particular Arctic animals are housed in that particular building. Dark, life-size silhouettes of the different species of seals allow the visitors to compare their size to that of a walrus or a harp seal. Visitors can also weigh themselves and hence have the difference in weights between them and a walrus calculated, a fun interactive resource that will make the visitors enjoy the exhibit more.
    Finally, the visitors get to the centrepiece of the building. It is a massive a bit like the Guggenheim museum in New York, only less tall and with, instead of paintings and sculptures, massive exhibits for Pacific walrus, Harp seal, Steller sea lion and Northern fur seal. A spiralling ramp going around the cylindrical hall allows visitors to observe the walruses on land as well as in the water. White foam is painted and cooled to simulate ice, and the water in all the exhibits is held at around 5 degrees Celsius, or 41 degrees Fahrenheit. The water is subtly lit up by energy efficient LEDs and the bottom of the pools are darker, just like in real life. The ramp allows disabled access but also allows visitors to observe the animals at their chosen level and also observe their swimming skills, something that is always restricted in zoos to the sub-standard depth of the pool for these aquatic mammals. The land areas for all four species is behind the pool but there is also an outcrop right in front of the glass, allowing visitors and the animals to get up close and personal if they so wish. This exhibit is also a great opportunity to see species you would likely never otherwise see.
    Visitors also have the option to go right to the top of the ramp and see the seals from above, either swimming or lounging on land. There is a set of steps up the roof, where they have a magnificent view of the zoo.
    The visitor then moves into a discovery zone once they have finished marvelling at the seals' agility. This zone takes them past large tanks for smaller marine life of the Arctic Ocean. There are three tanks containing Arctic cod, Arctic char and Pacific sea Nettles. The jellyfish tank is larger than the rest and also deeper, whilst the cod tank depicts open icy sea. However, the char tank is long and thin and shows that part of their life is spent in rivers. There is information about all of the animals in the building in the corridor that leads out of the building to satisfy the curiosity of visitors as they exit the building.

    2.5 Pacific walrus from Novosibirsk, Moscow, Sochi and St Petersburg
    3.7 Northern fur seal from Hannover, Brno and Fasano
    2.4 Steller sea lion from Klaipeda, Antibes and Pairi Daiza
    1.1 Harp seal from Brest and Murmansk
    10.10 Arctic cod from Le Croisic
    12.12 Arctic char from La Mulatiere
    5.4 Pacific sea nettle from Monterey Bay


    Next exhibit:

    Wanderers of the North

    Wanderers of the North is an exhibit dedicated to the land animals of the Arctic tundra and ice floes. The visitor has just gone through Arctic Waters, but is disappointed by the lack of polar bears as well as other species that certainly should have been present. However, they head towards a promising wooden ship, resembling an old ship they used to use to transport furs and other goods from the Americas all the way back to Europe. The visitor notices that the zoo is going for the impression that the ship is stuck in an ice floe, since there are two large chunks of ice that have split in front of the ship, but the ship cannot get through them.
    The visitor (who is now male, cos I made it like that) goes around the back of the ship, where he spots an open door. A trickle of visitors are going in. He follows them in and at once notices that the inside of the ship is just as realistic as the outside. There is moss and lichen growing on the sides as well as barnacles hanging to the sides. A net of oysters hangs on a peg dug into the side. The ship has three floors, and gradually opens up more as the visitors go up to let natural light in. However the most noticeable feature is a large aviary split into two which goes right up to the top deck of the ship and down to the hull, where the visitor is standing. These two aviaries rise up through the middle of the ship and house Snow geese and Snowy Owls. The visitor observes the birds through panes of viewing panes inlaid into the mesh aviary so as to allow the visitor to have an unobstructed view of both aviaries. The visitor continues along the bottom of the hull and is faced with a massive viewing window on the stern-side. The visitor goes down three steps to a slightly lower platform from which visitors can observe Polar bears swimming above and below water. The pool is deeper than the platform is low, allowing the polar bears to reach the maximum depth they would in the wild. The visitor watches two of the polar bears play around in the water for a while and then move on. The visitor finds a well-signed staircase that takes visitors up to the middle floor. Here, visitors can once again see the aviary through inlaid glass or watch the bears through a small peep-hole in the stern of the ship. However, on this floor, visitors can also see other enclosures through gashes in the side of the ship (with glass set into them of course). On the port side, visitors can see Ermines and Norwegian lemmings, while on the starboard side, visitors can observe a family of Arctic hares. This allows the visitors to see smaller animals that live in the Arctic that they may not have known about before. These are also cute animals, so the visitors will love to watch them.
    The Arctic hares are kept in a rustic-looking fenced enclosure with a number of holes. The enclosure is covered with tundra-like plant life. Meanwhile, the ermine enclosure is smaller and more dense, with a few angled logs and a small tree to look like the floor of the boreal forests of Northern Canada. The lemming enclosure is similar but smaller.
    The visitor goes up the stairs to the top deck. There is also disabled access to the top deck so that handicapped visitors can also observe the view from above. From the deck, visitors can see the polar bear exhibit from above and appreciate its great size (one and a half acres). This could easily answer zoo critics who complain that polar bear enclosures are not big enough to comply with the bears' nomadic lifestyle. The visitors also notice that the bear enclosure is long and thin, allowing the bears to run for 130 metres in a straight line. This is the case for a number of the other enclosures in this section of the zoo, due to the great expanses that they roam.

    The visitor then exits the ship and can observe the ermines, lemmings and hares as well as of course the polar bears from ground level at specific viewing points. This means that the animals can easily decide to withdraw from the probing eyes of the visitors if they so wish, enriching the animals' experience but also enriching the visitors' experience at the zoo.
    Moving on, the visitor spots two immense enclosures of tundra-like grass. They house Caribou and Musk Ox, both nomadic animals, hence the large enclosure to allow them to walk longer distances than they would otherwise with a smaller enclosure. These enclosures are also long and thin. Info boards tell visitors that the caribou have been domesticated by the local people in order to get meat, fur and fat. Meanwhile, the musk oxen enclosure is a bit hilly as in real life.

    Next to these two enclosures are a few more. A boreal forest exhibit is home to a pack of Arctic wolves, led by an Alpha female. The visitors can view the wolves through themed viewing windows or an Alaskan house with two storeys and binoculars, allowing the visitors to spot the wolves if they happen to be far away. The woods are dense, but it is still easy to spot at least one wolf because of their icy white pelage and their sheer number.
    Meanwhile, on the other side of the path, a small herd of Dall sheep are housed on a Styrofoam cliff-face painted grey and brown. The goats can demonstrate their climbing agility due to their cloven hoofs on this cliff. At the foot of the short cliff, there is a small ravine of scree and another sheer drop. At the foot of this drop is the viewing window. This means that the sheep will be far above the visitors, making their feats even more impressive-looking.

    Lastly, a couple of exhibits showcase Willow ptarmigans and Arctic fox. Info boards tell visitors their adaptations to the extreme cold of the Arctic. Another section of the zoo showcases the birds of the Arctic shores such as guillemots and auks.

    2.3 Polar bear from Toronto, San Diego, YWP and Detroit
    3.3 Arctic hare from San Francisco
    1.1 Snowy owl from Duisburg and Essen
    4.4 Snow goose from Berlin zoo and Jihlava
    2.2 Norway lemming from Ranua
    2.2 Ermine from Canterbury and Ranua
    1.5 Greenland musk ox from HWP and Koln
    3.6 Dall sheep from Krefeld, Tallinn and Plzen
    6.8 American woodland caribou from Hannover
    5.6 Arctic wolf from Beauval, Vienna and Amneville
    1.1 Arctic fox from Munich and Brno
    3.3 Willow ptarmigan from Weltvogel Walsrode


    Next: Yellowstone
     
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  3. Yi Qi

    Yi Qi Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    24 Feb 2018
    Posts:
    1,438
    Location:
    Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
    Khorov Park Zoo
    (a loose and expanded remake of this, itself based on a dream I had a couple days ago)

    Located in rural north Illinois, the first exhibit after the admissions booth for this zoo is a large flight cage with a sandy bottom. The exhibit was once home to bald eagles, spider monkeys and gibbons, hornbills, and red-legged seriemas, but is currently home to 1.1 King Vultures and 2.2 Patagonian Cavies. The cavies can enjoy digging around in its sand while the vultures have room to fly around, with toys occasionally hidden around as enrichment.

    The path goes left to the next exhibit, a large rectangular paddock with chainlink fencing, located on a mild slope. The centrepiece of the zoo, its currently home to 2.1 Cheetahs, consisting of brothers Han and Chewie and a female named Trina. Their exhibit can be view from all four size, but small bushes and four oak trees help alleviate any stress from noise of visitors. The exhibit is also home to 1.1 African Spurred Tortoises, who have access to another exhibit.

    Visitors can continue on straight ahead or turn right. If they do the former, they will come to the zoo's restaurant, which overlooks a marshy pond (its separate from the zoo). A small boardwalk is connected to its deck, which takes visitors closer to it and explain some of the zoo's conservation efforts for regionally endangered species (Lake and Pallid Sturgeon, freshwater mussels, and crayfish). It also loops by a pair of exhibits (also viewable from the main path). The first is a smaller pond, home to both 7.7 Koi and 1.1 Eastern Box Turtles. Small graphics explain how the zoo keeps the fish from escaping, and what would happen if they did. The other is a chicken wire-fenced pen for 1.1 Black-Necked Cranes. This particular species is rather rare in North America, and thankfully the zoo has had a number of successful births since their arrival in 2011.

    The pungent smell of dung in the air alerts visitors to the next exhibits, a pair of exhibits for hoofstock. The first is a pen with rocks (both real and fake), home to 1.2 Sichuan Takins (the black-necked cranes also have access to the exhibit). Around the bend is a roughly trapezoid-shaped enclosure for 1.2 Grant's Zebras, and 1.1 Grey Crowned Cranes. Next to them is a wooded paddock for 1.1 Yellow-Backed Duikers and 1.1 Saddle-Billed Storks. A paddock for 0.2 Llamas rounds this section out.

    Across from the hoofstock is a glass-walled pen for 4.5 Meerkats, who naturally have a layer of sand to dig in. As mentioned before, the tortoises can enter this exhibit if they want through a tunnel. A small side exhibit is for 1.3 Emperor Scorpions is also here.

    Besides the meerkat pen, aside from another viewing area for the cheetahs, is the zoo's Monkey House, with painted walls that give the impression it is a massive Baobab tree. Even before that is a semicircular moated pen, home to a single male Olive Baboon. He shares and rotates the exhibit with 2.1 Rhesus Macaques, originally from a university's animal testing clinic. Inside the building is their dayroom with fake trees allowing climbing opportunities and enrichment, and a layer of soil. Next up is a similar exhibit, only smaller in size, home to 2.3 Golden Lion Tamarins. The next dayroom is for 5.5 Ring-Tailed Lemurs, where an opening in the glass allow them to hang out over zoogoers' heads. The last exhibit in the building, aside from the cheetah's indoor viewing and holding, is a terrarium for a female African Rock Python, where graphics explain how a scientific theory proposes large snakes played a role in human evolution.

    After exiting the house, visitors arrive near the zoo's aviary, the Hoffman Tropical Bird House, and the zoo's petting farm, to the left of them on the zoo's northern perimeter, across from the lemurs' outdoor habitat (its very similar the the macaques' only with a mesh around it and no moat). Small pens are home to Domestic Goats and Domestic Sheep, Rabbits and Guinea Pigs, Domestic Pigs, and Ducks and Chickens. Inside the barn are aviaries for 1.1 Barn Owls, 1.1 Eastern Screech Owls, and 1.1 American Kestrals.

    The final exhibit is the aforementioned Hoffman Tropical Bird House, a listed Depression-era building renovated in the early 2000's. It mainly consists of two parts: a walkthrough aviary and traditional ones attached to its sides. The walkthrough aviary simulates a amazon basin stream or wetland, and contains the following species:
    • 1.1 Scarlet Macaw
    • 1.1 Great Currasow
    • 1.1 White-Faced Whistling Duck
    • 1.1 Scarlet Ibis
    • 1.1 Sunbittern
    • 1.1 Violaceous Jay
    • 1.1 Blue-Crowned Motmot
    • 1.1 Toco Toucan
    • 1.1 Yellow-Shouldered Amazon
    • 1.1 Yellow-Headed Amazon
    After exiting the aviary are two cages against the wall. One is for 1.1 Lady Ross' Turacos, and the other is for 1.1 Moluccan Cockatoos and 1.1 Masked Lapwings. Along the building's right wall are a series of larger aviaries. From top to bottom, they are for:
    • 3.3 Turkey Vulture
    • 1.1 Short-Eared Owl
    • 1.1 Snowy Owl
    • 1.1 Great Horned Owl
    The zoo has final exhibits before the zoo's exit, directly next to its entrance. The first is are two terrariums against the admission booth, respectively for 1.1 Sugar Gliders and 1.1 Emerald Tree Boas, while the second is an aviary for 2.2 Burrowing Owls, 1.2 White-Winged Doves, and 2.2 Gambel's Quails.
     
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  4. Cat-Man

    Cat-Man Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    I believe that this is the latest design a zoo threat. I am using my newfound free time during the lock down to do something I should have done years ago - design my dream zoo! Feedback much appreciated.

    The Oxford Zoological Garden.

    This is a fantasy zoo that exists in an alternate timeline where Oxford is a significantly larger city than exists in our timeline.

    The Oxford Zoological Garden is one of three public sites run by the Royal Oxford Zoological Society; the others being the Cotswold Wild Animal Park and the Royal Aquarium Oxford. The ROZS founded as a collective between private membership and investment, The City of Oxford and the University of Oxford, founded in the 1930s with the aims of conservation, education and coexistence. It wishes to conserve the natural world, educate about the wonders of it and teach how crucial the coexistence and interdependence between the human and natural world is at a time when the conflict between the two seems irreversible.

    The Oxford Zoological Garden is based in a corner of one of Oxfords extensive parks, many of which are run and owned by the University. Originally built in the style of Hagenbaak, the Oxford Zoological Garden has pioneered and embraced a the most contemporary techniques of animal care. It is conveniently located next to both an Underground station and a tram stop, both of which are named after the Zoo.

    The Oxford Zoological Garden is set in extensive parkland but is at its heart a city zoo. I have drawn inspiration from my experiences at the Zoos in Berlin, Rotterdam, Paris, London, Budapest, and Washington DC. To a lesser extent, San Diego, New York and Los Angeles Zoos have also provided additional inspiration, being city zoos set in large parkland.

    The zoo will be split into a number of geographic zones, as well as an additional children’s themed area. I have tried to avoid giving them immersive or creative names as they sounded slightly too cringy when I tried to come up with some interesting ones. Suggestions welcome. These are as follows, and go broadly in clockwise direction from the entrance:

    - Entrance – The entrance to the zoo.

    - The New World – A series of exhibits highlighting the varying habitats of South America. This will include a section featuring the unique fauna of the Galapagos which rarely seen outside of their home range.

    - Land of the Rising Sun – Exhibits focussing on the fauna of Japan. A large garden will be the centrepiece.

    - Islands on the Edge – The largest part of the Zoo, taking up the central area of the park. This will focus on the part of the world where the conflict between humans and animals is perhaps most apparent – South East Asia. This area will be split into a number of ‘sub divisions’ each based on an (or a series of) Island(s) in the area. The Islands are Sumatra, Borneo, Java and the Flores, Sulawesi and The Philippines.

    - The Gir Forest – wildlife of the subcontinent, including the infamous Lions.

    - Oceania – Split into three sections showing the fauna of New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Australia. These exhibits will highlight the diversity of these lands, specifically Australia.

    - Africa – Split into the Savannah, the Forest and Madagascar.

    - Children Zoo – This will be a series of interactive exhibits aimed at children and young teenagers. The three main themes will be mythology, agriculture and invasion.

    - China – Set in an enclave of the zoo, accessed from the main zoo by crossing a bridge over a road through another part of the park.

    The above outlines each zone. Following these I will go into further detail regarding each zone, and a descriptive walk-through. Feedback will be much appreciated.

    Entrance

    Facilities – Ticket booths and automated machines, toilets, bike storage and hire, buggy and wheelchair hire, a gift shop, a book shop, small convenience store, locker storage and smoking area.

    Animal Exhibits – None. However, there would be two spaces, both inside and outside the gate for animal ambassadors.

    Walk-through – You arrive at the zoo at the metro station of the same name. You notice the platforms and hallways are designed by art in a variety of styles by local artists depicting the Zoo and the wildlife within. You exit the station to come to the entrance of the zoo. The Zoo entrance features a historic archway above the old-fashioned metal gates, just behind the ticket booths. This sign features the words ‘Oxford Zoological Gardens’ ; the words flanked by depictions of a number of animals. Having purchased a ticket of from the automated machines at the metro station, you head straight to the turnstiles at the gates. Once you scan your ticket and go through the turnstiles, you fund yourself at a large plaza, the centrepiece of which is a large fountain. The middle of the fountain hosts a statue of a lion. The above amenities are located around the plaza, in buildings which are contemporary but blend in well with the leafy zoo. You walk straight ahead through the plaza, to enter the main zoo..
     
  5. Cat-Man

    Cat-Man Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    GBR
    Continuing my above post:

    The New World

    This exhibit section was heavily influenced by jbnbsn99's South American Exhibit. This can be found here - jbnbsn99's Exhibit Design Thread

    Facilities – Toilets, snack shed with covered seating, smoking area, gift shop, fossil maze, garden with space for picnics.

    Themed Exhibits – The Cloud Forest, Flooded Pantanal, Pampas, Grand Chaco, Amazon,

    Species List- Spectacled Bear, Yellow Tailed Wooley Monkey, Ring Tailed Coati, Pudu, Northern Viscacha, Vicuna, Taruca, Andean Condor, Andean Cat, Greater Rhea, Black Necked Swan, Patagonian Cavy, Nutria, Maned Wolf, Giant Anteaner, Collard Peccary

    Walkthrough -

    The Andes-

    After exiting the entrance plaza you see the first exhibit of the zoo. You are welcome to turn right here, towards the African section of the park or press ahead to the South American section. The first exhibit you come to provides a grand entrance to the zoos collection. This is a recently updated exhibit that used to be a row of bear grottos. These have now been knocked into one, extensive enclosure for Spectacled Bear. This enclosure makes use of a large mock rock perimeter at the back which allows the bears to get spectacular views beyond the entrance of the zoo. The rest of the enclosure includes a small waterfall and a stream, and a mix of soft and hard substrate. As well as that, there are a number of large trees and climbing structures for the enclosures other residents – Yellow Tailed Wooley Monkey and Ring Tailed Coati; these will have spaces where the bears will be unable to reach. Viewing for this enclosure will be from above, with the previous moats of the grottos filled in to allow more space for the inhabitants. This enclosure came out One of the smaller former grottos will contain Pudu. The bear house will be open to the public, and will have a number of reptiles and fish from the Andes. These will be decided by the relevant departments; suggestions here are extremely welcome.

    Following the path to the left of the of the grotto you come to a fork in the road. Right would take you to the other South American Exhibits, while left would take you to the other Andes enclosures. As you stroll along this path, there will be a small enclosure for Northern Viscacha. This would be located in the moat of a larger paddock which contains a mix of Vicuna and Taruca. This enclosure would be large and sparse, with a rocky substrate with an occasional shrub and tall grass typical of the region. An offshoot of the main path will take you behind the Vicuna paddock to a large aviary for a pair of Andean Condor. A wooden walkway would allow the visitors to view the condors in the sky. The end of this walkway would bring you to a small netted enclosure from the little-known Andean Cat. Here there will also be a couple of smaller aviaries for bird species in the region; again, suggests are welcome.

    Back on the path by the Vicuna enclosure, we are now at the end of the Andes exhibits and will now be moving onto the grasslands of South America.

    Grasslands of South America –

    The grassland area will feature fauna and flora from the Cerrado and Pampas grassland areas of South America. The first part of the grassland exhibit would be themed around the Pampas; two enclosures would represent this. A large grassy field with a few spares trees- representing the typical habitat of the area. This vast habitat would be a mixed enclosure containing Greater Rhea, Black-Necked Swan, Patagonian Cavy, and Nutria. This enclosure would be viewed across a moat, which would provide the water area needed for the Nutria and Swans. Behind this enclosure is a tall enclosure of Cougar. This enclosure will be tall – allowing the cougars to see the Rhea field - but also wide, with tall grasses and signs explaining the cougar is a highly adaptable and widespread creature. These particular Cougar would be stand ins; they would be Florida Panthers. These critically endangered species would be represented at the Zoo’s sister institution.

    Further down the path, past the Rhea field we move to the Cerrado. The transition will perhaps be best illustrated by the appearance of large termite mounds along the pathway, and would continue into the animals enclosures. The primary attraction here would be two open enclosures, one each for Maned Wolves and Giant Anteater. These two enclosures will be interconnected, allowing for rotation and occasional mixing between the two. On the other side of the road, another open exhibit for Collard Peccary can be found, with plenty of soft substrate to encourage foraging for the large group. Viewing of the Peccary enclosure can also be viewed from the other side of their enclosure. This side is a large lawn, where visitors can enjoy a picnic they bring to the park. This grassy area is broken up by a couple of seasonal flower beds. Adjacent to this area is a block of toilets and a snack shed selling sandwiches, hot drinks and a variety of international beers and wines from South America; visitors can enjoy their purchase on the grass or if the weather is poor a partially enclosed seating area. To the rear of the shack can be found the only smoking area in the ‘New World’ exhibit complex.

    This is all I have time to do tonight. I will try and complete the rest of South American area tomorrow; feedback and species suggestions are greatly appreciated. If you have any questions please do not hesitate to ask :)
     
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  6. Crotalus

    Crotalus Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    11 Jun 2019
    Posts:
    276
    Location:
    USA
    South American Plaza
    Guests come to a large (likely 40 feet across) square cobblestone plaza ringed with tropical plants. Bromeliads, ferns, palms, orchids, and coffee trees make up some of the lush green flora, immediately immersing visitors in the world of the Amazon rainforest. Small misters emit fog into the plaza every now and then to simulate rainfall and humidity. The left side of the plaza as guests enter leads into the jungle, and under a wooden archway covered with vines, with the words, “Amazonian Trek” just visible. The right side, meanwhile, has various guest amenities, including bathrooms, a zoo map covering an informational board, and a small guest services building. There is a path straight ahead as well leading to a rocky, mossy archway with World of the Andes as it's title, also covered with vines.

    There is also a restaurant here on the right side serving up Latin American dishes. It is primarily a brunch and lunch spot, but does have some dinner options. Meals from Brazil, Peru, Columbia, Chile, Venezuela, and more make up the menu. All the fruits and vegetables used in dishes are grown on zoo grounds, as are the coffee beans used in the various beverages offered here. It's titled "Café da Selva", which I believe translates to Jungle Cafe or possibly Jungle Coffee. It's applicable either way.

    Next time I will be covering the first exhibit, Amazonian Trek. The idea with the layouts of most of the zones is that the most well known areas are represented first, followed by less well-known habitats and biomes. As such, the Amazon Rainforest comes first in South America.

    Amazonian Trek is up next...Stay tuned.
    - Crotalus
     
  7. Cat-Man

    Cat-Man Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Opposite this grassy area, and reconnected from the aforementioned fork in the road, will bring you to a large grassy paddock. This will serve as the entrance to the amazon section of the New World part of the Zoo. This large paddock will be netted over, and contain Brazilian Tapir, Capybara, and Hyacinth Macaw. This enclosure is a large, grassy meadow with several large, mature evergreen trees and a lot of undergrowth. Viewing will be from across a moat providing bathing areas for the inhabitants. This moat will rise and sink depending on the season, as an added enrichment element. In order to ensure unobscured views of the tapir and Capybara, the visitor viewing would be inside the netting, allowing the Macaws to gain access to where the public view from. Exiting this enclosed viewing area will bring us to the centrepiece of the New World exhibit complex.


    The Amazon Dome is a huge indoor exhibit, at least double the size of Gondwanaland, with a focus on wildlife from the Amazon. Unlike many inside tropical houses which follow a linear trail from entrance to exit, the dome will have several pathways which will allow the guests at the Zoo to explore at their own pace. The dome will have three levels, themed as ‘Forest Floor’ ‘Tree top trail’ and ‘Creepy Crawly Cavern’; as expected this will allow visitors to explore the dome along the pathways, through a series of rope bridges in the canopy, and under the ‘ground’ floor of the dome. The undoubted highlight of the dome would be a river system that would flow throughout the building. Three or four different river streams would connect two large lakes at either end of the building. The main species present in this river system would be a group of Amazon River Dolphin. The river system would provide a source of enrichment and allow the dolphins to be separated from one another should it be necessary. Other species present in this exhibit would be turtles; yellow spotted river turtle and Giant River Turtle, and a numerous Amazonian fish species such as Arapaima, Pacu, Red-Tailed Catfish, Freshwater Stingrays, and Arrowana.

    Some birds (deemed appropriate by their respective collection curators) and perhaps even Squirrel Monkey’s would be allowed to roam freely in the building however most species would be contained in their own enclosures. The first enclosure as you enter the building would be a large pool, separate from the lake, for Giant Otters; this would be their indoor quarters while a separate river would wind out of the building to their outdoor accommodation by the Tapirs. There would be a large central enclosure for White Lipped Peccary, a dusty clearing in the centre of the rainforest and an isolated lake for a pair of Black Caiman. Several islands in the centre of one of the Dolphin lakes would contain Red Faced Spider Monkey’s which would be able to swing across the vines from island to island. Several enclosures would feature a number of smaller monkeys, such as tamarins and marmosets would feature, with the possibility of mixing them with a number of smaller mammals at ground level; species could include Agoutis and Tree Porcupines. A large enclosure for Green Anaconda would take up a part of the building. Time and time again zoos often cramp these magnificent snakes into vivarium’s; this enclosure would be large and partly open air to allow unobstructed viewing of the snakes. Small mammal ideas in this part of the house would include an enclosure for Tamandua. Small carnivores would be dotted around the building and the species list will at the very least include: Ocelot, Bush Dog, Tayra, Oncilla, Hoary Fox, Jaguarundi and Grison. There would be numerous aviaries in the dome whose collections I would be left to the relevant department, while tall enclosures for out larger monkeys. Species included would be: White Faced Saki, Bald Uakari, Red Howler, Capuchin and Black Headed Uakari. A final mammal enclosure on the ground level would be the indoor Jaguar exhibit, which would be viewed through a large fallen log. After completing viewing on ground level, visitors would be welcome to go ‘into the trees’ and view the exhibits from a set of rope bridges set way in the canopy of the building. This would allow better views of the many monkeys and birds which are better at home in the trees. Highlights would also be the ability to see a Jaguar up high, and the opportunity to get an unobstructed view of the Dolphin lakes from above. One ‘corner’ of the dome would take you below the forest floor to the ‘Caverns’ part of the exhibit.

    The caverns would contain the majority of the Amazon domes reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates as well as suitable small mammals; suggests of which would be welcome. The caverns would also contain the underwater viewing for the Dolphins. There would be several points to view the Dolphins with one particularly impressive view of their main pool at the back of the dome. There would be one enclosure for Vampire Bat in the cavern, and at least one tank for Red Bellied Piranha. The lower level of the dome would not be free roaming like the ground level and would be a trail due to its lower lighting level and would take you to an exit of the building. The outside of the building would contain a couple of outdoor and densely planted enclosures for the Jaguars. These would be netted to allow the Jaguars the opportunity to climb while viewing would be through a ‘cave.’ This cave would include a small seating area with an underwater viewing window for keeper talks and feeding sessions. On the other side of the Amazon dome would be a connected building with its own entrance. This would be adjacent to the larger of the dolphin’s pools at the back and would contain a large theatre and additional pool space for the dolphin displays.

    Exiting the Amazonian complex would take you to a rocky area representing the Chaco. This would be a small area containing enclosures Chacoan Peccary, Armadillo and Geoffreys Cat. There are several options for armadillo species and an ideal selection would include Pink Fairy and Giant Armadillo. The Peccary would take centre stage and highlight the importance of conservation as the Peccary was previously thought to be extinct. A larged mixed species aviary would include black-legged seriema blue-crowned parakeet, Picui ground dove guira cuckoo and little thornbird. Next to the Chacoan area would be the aforementioned fossil maze and dig site which would provide an interactive experience for younger children.

    The final part of the New World exhibit complex would be the building for the Galapagos islands. I could not do a better job than fantastic exhibit designed Gomphothere. This can be seen here Gomphothere's Zoo Design Thread. This building would be located directly at the back of the Amazon dome and would include outdoor enclosures for Galapagos Sealion, Galapagos Fur Seal and Galapagos Penguin.

    This would bring us to the end of the New World exhibit complex, which forms the first major themed zone at the Oxford Zoological Garden. Feedback and additional species suggestions are much appreciated.
     
  8. Cat-Man

    Cat-Man Well-Known Member 15+ year member

    Joined:
    6 Jul 2008
    Posts:
    3,009
    Location:
    GBR
    Land of the Rising Sun

    Facilities – Self Service Restaurant, Full-Service Bar, Toilets.

    Species List: Japanese Macaque, Japanese Giant Salamander, Iriomote Cat, Japanese Serrow, Japanese Sika Deer Red Crowned Crane, Demoiselle Crane, Sandhill Crane, Green Pheasant, Racoon Dog, Asiatic Black Bear

    Walkthrough- The Japanese themed exhibit makes up the boundary of one side of the zoo, and is approached from the back of the Amazon zone. The first part of the Japanese exhibit is a medium sized lake. A wooden bridge cuts through the centre of the lake; to the left is a peninsula, with a building at the back for indoor accommodation while to the right of the bridge is a rocky island. This is an enclosure for Japanese Macaque. The Macaques would be able to access the island from ropes well above the head of the visitors, or they can swim under the bridge. The pool would be able to be heated in the winter and cooled in the summer to encourage the primates to make full use of it. The island side of the enclosure would be able to be viewed from the outdoor seating area of the restaurant. This restaurant is in a contemporary style with some Japanese decoration on the outside, is self-service; serving a mix of Japanese cuisine such as sushi, tempura and curries. Sandwiches and snacks are also available. The outdoor seating section would include a full-service bar, decorated with a variety of Japanese artwork, both traditional and contemporary. The toilets would be located inside. Taking a left after the bridge would allow you to see the indoor accommodation of the Macaques. This building would contain a number of small mammals native to Japan as well as some reptiles and amphibians, principally the Japanese Giant Salamander. At the exit of the building, set back from the path, will be a small and densely packed enclosure for Iriomote Cat. Back at the end of the bridge from the macaque enclosure, there are a row of enclosures for hoof stock at the perimeter of the zoo, located next to the monkey house. The first is a sloping enclosure for Japanese Serrow, while the next is a lush meadow for Japanese Sika Deer, almost a clearing in the woodland. These enclosures would be viewed as an offset to the main path which would run parallel to it, and would be viewed across a dry moat in classic Hagenbaak style. The main path would allow visitors to view a large aviary, set in a similar meadow to the Deer, containing a pair each of Red Crowned Crane, Demoiselle Crane and the Sandhill Crane. Adjacent to this aviary will be a stylised Japanese garden which could contain a number of waterfowl aviaries and ponds. One species sure to feature would be the national bird of Japan – Green Pheasant. The gardens would also feature several semi-exposed Japanese cultural exhibits. The offshoot reconnects to the main path bringing us to enclosures for Japans larger mammals. The first would be a glass fronted exhibit for Racoon Dogs. This enclosure would be heavily planted at the rear with a variety of softer substrates and enrichment devices at the front. The final enclosure in the Japanese area is, much like the Sika Deer enclosure, based at the perimeter of the zoo. This would be a large, hilly enclosure for Asiatic Black Bear. The enclosure would have primarily soft substrate with a number of heated rocks to encourage the animals to remain in view. A few mature trees would dominate the landscape of the Bear enclosure, with a number of smaller artificial climbing structures for the bears to make use of. Viewing would primarily be across a dry ditch which the bears will also have access too, however at one end of the enclosure would be a large glass viewing window. The bear den would be inside a large mock rock structure at the rear of the enclosure which, again, would have space for a number of Japanese reptiles and fish.
     
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  9. Crotalus

    Crotalus Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    11 Jun 2019
    Posts:
    276
    Location:
    USA
    Amazonian Trek
    Guests walk in a thick and dense tropical rainforest for a bit, planted with coffee, kapok, cacao, and other Amazonian trees, alongside ferns, bromeliads, orchids, palms, heliconias, and dangling vines. Fallen trees and forest clearings break up the landscape a bit. Tropical bird, frog, and insect calls are played onto the path through hidden speakers. The concrete path has paw prints, bird tracks, and some sliding prints in it, as if an animal dragged itself across. Guests eventually come to the first exhibit in Amazonian Trek, the series of monkey enclosures.


    OUTDOOR EXHIBITS
    Larger Monkey Exhibits
    Guests step onto a raised wooden boardwalk after going under a crumbling stone archway. They enter a sort of an open-fronted long wooden building with long glass windows on either side. It is themed around a mock observation post for primates of the Amazon rainforest. Maps of various portions of rainforest with thumbtacks, the skulls of various primates, notes about primate behavior, and mock fruits and nuts complete the feel of having stepped into a research facility. Guests can actually press buttons on certain recording equipment to hear the notes left of various researchers (this is all for the sake of just world-building, and are not actual researchers, but the facts are truthful).

    The glass windows are about 15 feet long each and 10 feet in height, allowing for good views of the primates and their arboreal habits.

    There are 3 exhibits on either side, consisting of outdoor and mesh-covered exhibits separated from each other by mesh covering and moats. All are fairly similar in layout. They are connected at the backs by a large U-shaped building, with the middle of the U being directly ahead of guests, and the building extending to their left and right. Each is about 500 square feet, with the exhibits having a maximum height of 25 feet above the ground to allow for climbing and treetop behavior. These have bare soil substrate covered with leaf litter, and a dense ground cover of ferns and lush shrubbery. Kapok, fig, cacao, palms, and coffee trees are planted for climbing, with ropes connecting them as well. Trees of varying heights would be planted so it could actually simulate the understory and canopy. These exhibits have a small shallow pool, tall logs, and heated flat rocks as well. The exhibits are densely planted but would have enough animals for them to be visible.

    On the left are 3 mixed species exhibits. The first is for 1.2 Black-Bearded Sakis, 1.2 White-Faced Sakis, and 0.2 Red-Rumped Agoutis. The second in the row is for 1.3 Brown Woolly Monkeys and 1.2 Red Acouchis. The third and final in this row is for 1.3 Venezuelan Red Howler Monkeys and 1.3 Red Uakaris.

    All of the enclosures on the right are mixed-species exhibits as well. The first has many ropes, more so than most of the other habitats, and is home to 1.3 White-Bellied Spider Monkeys, 0.4 Northern Amazon Red Squirrels, and 1.2 Azara’s Agouti. This mix should not be a problem, as spider monkeys are generally herbivores, only consuming small insects. The middle exhibit is home to 1.6 Tufted Capuchins, 1.4 White-Fronted Capuchins, 1.4 Guianan Squirrel Monkeys, 1.5 Red-Backed Bearded Sakis, and 1.1 Double-Toothed Kites. This exhibit would likely be the liveliest, with several species of very active monkey and some interesting feeding interactions. The last and final exhibit in this complex displays 1.3 Red-Bellied Titis and 1.2 Green Acouchis.

    Guests then exit this exhibit and enter the U shaped building, also themed around the observation post, with wooden walls and ceilings. Desks are up against certain walls, and observations are thumbtacked to the wall everywhere about primate behavior and ecology. Guests could wander back behind the exhibits and see what is the indoor holding for the primates; they have glass skylights to promote the growth of resistant plant species. There are small pools at the bottom of the 30 foot tall glass-walled exhibits, connected to the outdoor enclosures by tunnels at tree and ground level. Ropes and branches are suspended all across the exhibit to promote climbing, while there is some undergrowth for the smaller ground animals to hide in. There are also off-exhibit outdoor and indoor pens for aggressive or expecting animals to be moved for a time until they can be returned to the main enclosure. There are ground paths for the rodents to get away from the other animals as well as arboreal pathways the primates and birds can use to get away from each other.

    Guests exit through double doors and emerge again onto the rainforest path.


    Riverbanks of the Amazon
    Guests come to a large exhibit on the left side of the path, and step onto a raised wooden boardwalk overlooking it, with an alternate path sloping down in the form of a ramp to the left. Both look into the same enclosure.

    The enclosure in question is an acre large riverine enclosure with tall wooden posts as its borders, though these are hidden by dense vegetation. The exhibit has tall kapok, fig, palm, and cacao trees, some of which grow over the water to provide some shade on the riverbank and the water itself. Water lilies grow over some of the exhibit’s waterways and reeds grow on some of the mud banks. Some of the enclosure is grassy, but most of it has bare mud and soil substrate. Logs and boulders provide resting places for the animals. There are various waterways in the exhibit, with one very large pool at the front of the exhibit fed by creeks starting at a slightly higher elevation in the enclosure. There are several grassy islands with low brush on them as well. There are several channels and inlets where the water does not move, and vegetation grows. The pools range from 1 to 6 feet deep.

    The indoor shelters for the species are not accessible to guests and are located to the left of the exhibit as guests face it. They consist of several large pens with pools of water, glass skylights allowing resistant vegetation to grow, and wooden posts some animals can fit between allowing them to escape and reach separate areas if need be. However, the animals can also be moved to the indoor complex of Amazonian Trek, discussed later.

    The above water viewing is on a wooden boardwalk separated from the main exhibit by a large moat, and is raised 10 feet above the exhibit. There are informational boards on the wooden handrail talking about the threats of deforestation and damming and the effects they have on the environment and the Amazon River.

    Down below is underwater viewing consisting of a dimly lit tunnel looking into the main front pool. There are signs about the swimming habits of tapirs and capybara as well as how many other animals in the Amazon can swim because the forests seasonally flood. The (fake) skulls of various otter species when compared with the Giant Otter are also on display in illuminated glass cases.

    The residents of this enclosure are 0.2 South American Tapirs (a male is kept in a large exhibit seen later and is occasionally rotated in), 2.9 Capybaras, 2.6 Giant Otters (a family group consisting of offspring of a mated pair), and 1.3 Red Brockets.



    Ruins of the Yaguara
    The largest of the outdoor exhibits, Ruins of the Yaguara is themed around lost and crumbling ruins of an ancient and long gone Brazilian or Peruvian civilization. Although there is no basis for this tribe with real geography, it is true that the jaguar featured prominently in many Mesoamerican cultures, so this exhibit is based off of the temples and remaining structures of the Incas, Aztecs, and Mayans and pulls from their cultural view of jaguars.

    Guests come to a crumbling stone archway covered in vines and moss, with small signs saying that it may be unsafe to enter as the structural integrity of the buildings have not been tested. Guests continue anyway and come to a large mossy stone plaza with the remnants of old city all around them. It is themed somewhat around Machu Picchu and various Mayan ruins. Structures, though degraded, are still standing, and serve as the walls and boundaries of the exhibits. The theme is nature retaking the city, with kapok, fig, and cacao trees growing from the ground and splitting portions of wall apart, with vines draping down many of the buildings.

    This exhibit is all about predators, so is home to some of the larger predatory species contained within Amazonian Trek.

    The stone plaza is a large square with four paths radiating from the center. One is the path guests took to get to the exhibit, while the other three lead to different exhibits. The right hand path leads to a covered part of a temple, with a stone hallway leading to an exhibit. The left leads up some steep stone stairs with an accompanying stone ramp up to another series of exhibits. The path ahead has two exhibits encountered before guests get to the indoor complex of Amazonian Trek.

    The right path leads into a crumbling mossy temple. Guests walk down a short, dimly lit stone hallway with signs telling about the importance jaguars had in Moche, Muisca, Olmec, Maya, and Aztec cultures, as well as the importance they play in their own ecosystems today, and their near extinction in the southwestern United States/former range. Continuing on, guests come to the large room of the temple, which serves as one of the viewing areas for the zoo’s jaguars. A 30 foot long glass window makes up the back of the room as guests enter it, and looks out onto the jaguar’s spacious 20,000 square foot habitat, which slopes down to the front where the window is. The windows are also 15 feet tall. The jaguar habitat is grassy and has dense ground cover throughout. It is entirely covered with mesh rising 30 feet into the air to provide ample climbing opportunities. Open patches of soil covered with leaf litter are also present. Kapok, cacao, fig, coffee, and palms are planted fairly densely throughout the exhibit. The front of the exhibit has a small wooden roof extending over the enclosure that the jaguars can use to get out of the weather. There are large fallen trees and rock outcroppings for some variety within the exhibit. The jaguars can climb all the trees in the exhibit, as it is covered with mesh. This is 1 of the zoo’s two jaguar exhibits. The zoo has 2.2 Jaguars, consisting of two unrelated males and two sibling females. The siblings can be exhibited together, while the males must always have the exhibit to themselves. They are rotated into this exhibit regularly. Misters occasionally make the exhibit foggy and humid for the jaguars, often on hot afternoons. This exhibit empties into a 5 foot deep pool at the front of the exhibit which the jaguars can swim in, with a log over the pond. This pond extends for 10 feet of the 30 foot viewing window. On the temple walls are various Mayan/Aztec style paintings and drawings of jaguars and other animals featured prominently in these cultures. Also on the walls are notes from the same fictional research team about the ruins themselves and jaguar ecology/behavior. In glass cases are the model skulls of various South American predators when compared with the jaguar, noting its strong jaw muscles. Guests can exit the way they came or from either side of the temple, which loops back to the main stone plaza.

    The left path has an immediate exhibit on the left side, while the others are on the higher levels. This immediate exhibit is around 200 square feet, and is a mesh enclosed rainforest exhibit, with the mesh being attached to a part of the ruins’ walls. Guests view this exhibit from under a gray stone roof supported by thick wooden posts using large glass windows looking into the exhibit, around 10 feet long and 8 feet high. There are two windows looking into the square exhibit, which has its corner jutting into the square. This exhibit has fig, cacao, palm, plantain, and palm trees, with ropes connecting the trees as well. There is some dense ground cover with a small stream emptying into a shallow pond in the exhibit. Fallen trees and rocks make up some structures the animals can rest on. This is actually a mixed-species exhibit, for 0.1 Tayra (another male is kept in an exhibit seen later) and 0.2 South American Coati (there is also a male kept off-exhibit and he is actually an animal ambassador, and another male kept in a later exhibit).

    Continuing up the stone stairs and accompanying ramp with handrails, guests come to a series of exhibits in the higher portions of the city ruins. Guests eventually come to a T in the path, with one exhibit dead ahead of them, several more to the right, and one large one to the left. These are all stone paths and consist of broken and damaged parts of the city ruins. The exhibit dead ahead is a 500 square foot exhibit viewed from a raised stone path running alongside the exhibit. It is a very tall, 60 foot high mesh enclosed aviary, held aloft by wooden posts and trees. Kapok and Brazil nut trees are the main tree species, while other aforementioned tree species make up the understory and canopy. There is a small pool at the bottom of the exhibit fed by a clear stream over rocks. Fallen logs dot the forest floor, which is bare soil covered with leaf litter. Vines hang down from the trees and many of the plants are covered with moss. The residents of this enclosure are a mated pair of 1.1 Harpy Eagle.

    There are 4 enclosures to the left, and this path is a dead end. There is 1 exhibit on either side of the straightaway, and there is a large circular pavilion at the end of the path, which also has two exhibits. They are all in general similar and serve as rotational exhibits. They have pretty dense vegetation throughout, with kapok, fig, cacao, and coffee trees providing shade, with dead trees and rocks providing cover alongside brush. They are also all mesh enclosed, but darkened thanks to the canopy of trees above. They have small water features, usually consisting of a shallow pond fed by a rocky stream. The animals can freely climb the trees at will. All the enclosures are around 100 square feet. Research notes about various species are pinned up on the old stone walls, with many signs describing the dangers these animals face, from deforestation, poaching, and more. There are also grassy clearings in some of the exhibits. There are 1.2 Ocelots, 1.1 Jaguarundi, and 0.2 Margay in these exhibits. One of the exhibits has a mesh tunnel crossing over visitors’ heads connecting with another empty exhibit; one exhibit will always be empty. The ocelots and jaguarundis are unrelated, while the margays are siblings.

    The last exhibit in this complex, which is on the left path, is a large one. This path continues a short distance before coming to a stone overlook between sections of the ruined city walls. This view is 20 feet above the exhibit and overlooks the 30,000 foot large exhibit, with a large moat also separating guests from the cats in addition to a wooden fence hidden underneath the viewing platform. The enclosure is large and grassier, but still has large kapok, fig, palm, cacao, and other trees in the center for the cats to climb. Large rocks and fallen trees dot the grassy exhibit to provide resting structures, and a waterfall feeds the large 5 foot deep pool at the front of the exhibit. It is not mesh covered, and the boundaries are cleverly disguised wooden posts hidden by vegetation and hills. This is the other exhibit for the zoo’s jaguars.

    There is actually another portion of the exhibit behind guests when looking at this, and consists of a 10,000 square foot paddock. This is the jaguar’s main swimming paddock, with a 20 square foot, 6 foot deep pool fed by numerous waterfalls and creeks in the exhibit. Meant to simulate a partially flooded forest, some artificial and real trees grow out of the water, and logs and branches overlook the netted exhibit. The 10 foot long glass window looks into the pool and allows guests to view the jaguars swimming. There is a mesh enclosed tunnel connecting the two enclosures over visitors heads, with logs acting as the ramps for jaguars to get up and cross over. This bridge has a mock stone floor and is covered with vines.

    The indoor quarters for the jaguars are off-show, but the indoor quarters for the rest of the species can be seen later in the indoor complex.

    This concludes Ruins of the Yaguara. Guests can walk back down the stone stairs or ramp to get to the main plaza and then would take the left path to access the rest of Amazonian Trek.



    Forest Browsers
    Guests come to the final two outdoor exhibits in this part of the complex; the rest of the enclosures are now primarily indoors.

    It consists of a raised wooden boardwalk spanning a pit-like valley 100 feet in diameter, with the posts for the bridge forming a wooden fence of sorts underneath the exhibit. The sides of the pit are not tall, only around 5 or 6 feet, but are too steep and vertical for any of the animals to climb and too high for them to jump over. The sides of the bridges look drastically different as well. Signs on the bridge along the wooden handrails tell of the role each species plays in its environment, the threats they face from humans (chiefly deforestation for both as well as hunting and some diseases from domestic animals), and their behavior and ecology. Both habitats are around 10,000 square feet.

    The habitat on the left is a fairly dense rainforest type habitat, with ferns and bromeliads making up ground cover. Fig, coffee, palms, and cacao trees make up the understory and canopy of the exhibit. A small creek runs through the exhibit and empties into a 10 square foot pond. There are fallen trees in the exhibit as well, in addition to a salt lick. The animals residing in this enclosure consist of 0.2 Amazonian Brown Brocket and 0.2 Red Brocket.

    The other side of the enclosure is much more open, with the same tree species as in the other side; however, they are protected at the roots. The enclosure has a sandy, clay-like soil covered with leaf litter, with patches of rich dark brown soil as well. The bromeliads and brush are also protected at the roots from digging behavior. Logs and rocks dot the exhibit’s floor, though there is no water feature in this exhibit (the animals still of course have troughs with water, there is just no water feature like a pond or creek). The residents of this enclosure are 1.7 White-Lipped Peccaries.

    Both species have off-exhibit indoor shelters, and actually share the same space, with a thin soil substrate over metal to protect against damage, though there are patches of rich soil they can root around in. Wooden posts separate paddocks and create isolation pens for calving or aggressive individuals. The small brockets can squeeze through most of the gaps of the wooden posts and access different pens, except for the isolation pens. This allows the brockets to escape animals when they would like to. These species also have access to the indoor quarters of Amazonian Trek.

    Guests continue on the wooden boardwalk and the path curves around a bit to the left, before guests come to the indoor part of Amazonian Trek.



    INDOOR COMPLEX AND ASSOCIATED PADDOCKS
    Main Lobby
    Guests come to a massive sprawling concrete building with a mock rock exterior, making it look like part of the ruins from earlier. Moss covers the outside and vines drape down from above. The building is around 3 stories tall and is an impressive sight from outside. There is a large pond on either side of the entrance, so guests cross over on a wooden boardwalk bridge.

    A set of glass doors leads into the exhibit, then another pair of doors, and guests enter the lobby. It is dimly lit, with lights high above and the light inside exhibits being the only sources of illumination. It is 3 stories tall and around 35,000 square feet in total size. It is essentially one massive intersection in shape, with guests entering from what would be the south path. The left and right paths in the intersection are dead ends, while the path ahead leads to the rest of the complex.

    Guests walk down a small ramp to the ground level of the complex, but they can also choose to take an elevated metal pathway on their left or right, which also has a carpeted ramp up to it. These paths rise from the ground level about 30 feet into the air. They have metal railings with glass panes in between the metal posts to make up to enclose the path. This path winds around the entire lobby and views all of the exhibits. From the ground guests see the life of the forest floor and lower understory, and from the walkways they see the animals of the canopy.

    There is really only one main type of exhibit in the lobby that is repeated throughout, but each is slightly different and also contains different species. These consist of around 45 to 60 foot tall, 900 square foot glass-fronted indoor exhibits with glass skylights allowing for natural plant growth. There are 10 of these exhibits in total. These exhibits each have a centerpiece, usually in the form of a kapok or small Brazil nut tree, though in one case it is a massive mossy log covered with vines. These exhibits are also exposed to a natural watering system designed to mimic tropical rain showers; these are about every 90 minutes, and last for around 5 minutes, during which sprinklers on the ceiling of the enclosures are turned on and douse the enclosures. Natural thunder sounds as well as the sound of rain hitting leaves is played into the lobby when these occur.

    The lobby is mainly for mammals and birds, though each dead end path has a circular enclosure 4 feet in diameter home to invertebrates.

    Starting on the left hand side, there is one exhibit along the left wall as guests face it, two directly ahead on one wall, and one on the right wall, in addition to the large vivarium in the middle of the path. Lastly, there is one along the straightaway to the forward path as well. There are large, circular gray stone planters as well, two around 6 feet from the vivarium. The planters have bromeliads, ferns, and orchids in them. There are also four wooden benches, located right next to the planters, with two facing the left and two facing the right. This pattern is repeated on the right hand side.

    This is the mammal side of the lobby, so the enclosures are all mainly for mammals. Starting from the left and first exhibit, here are the animals. The first one has a lvery large, mossy, vine-covered log, plantains, coffee trees, and cacao trees in addition to palms. A small creek empties into a rocky pond at the base of the exhibit, and there are various logs for climbing. Ropes and branches also dot the exhibit’s upper layers. This is home to the zoo’s 1.0 Tayra and 1.0 South American Coati (again, the zoo has another animal ambassador male). The ropes and branches are to make sure the animals can make full use of available space. The second is fairly similar, with a thick canopy making the exhibit dimmer and more shadowy. There is a similar rocky streambed, logs and rocks, and fairly dense brush. This exhibit is rotational, and can be home to 1.2 Ocelots (only one animal on exhibit), 1.1 Jaguarundis (only one animal on exhibit), or 0.2 Margays (these are exhibited together). These are the same individuals as are kept in Ruins of the Yaguara. The third exhibit on this side is for primates; in this case, tamarins and marmosets. This has some vines and ropes for monkeys to climb and has a small Brazil nut tree as its centerpiece. It also has scrubby dense undergrowth. 1.9 Common Marmosets, 1.5 Pied Tamarins, and 1.6 Golden Lion Tamarins, and 0.2 Lowland Paca are the residents of this mixed-species exhibit. The cat exhibit borders this one and has large glass windows allowing for a predatory prey setup, where the cats can see into the monkey enclosure. The last exhibit on this side, on the right, is for 1.5 Goeldi’s Marmosets, 1.9 Emperor Tamarins, and 1.5 Golden-Headed Lion Tamarins. This exhibit has similar ropes and vines as the other monkey exhibit to provide climbing structures. The original plan was to have Cotton-Top Tamarins and possibly Pygmy Marmosets here, but Cotton-Top Tamarins are found a bit outside the Amazon, and Pygmy Marmosets would be too small to be visible in this kind of exhibit. The center exhibit in the middle of path has a soil substrate, with mock tree trunks, logs, a few stones, and ferns for ground cover. This is home to 0.1 Brazilian Red-and-White Tarantula. The last exhibit located on the path to the rest of the complex, has a kapok tree, palms, bromeliads, vines, coffee, and cacao trees, and lots of brush. It is home to 1.6 Black-Capped Squirrel Monkeys, 1.1 Brazilian Three-Banded Armadillos, 1.1 Hoffmann’s Two-Toed Sloth, and 1.1 Green Iguanas. The exhibit is a bit dimmer thanks to a thick canopy and understory, so is fairly dense. There is rich soil on the ground for the animals to dig in.

    The other side is for the birds, chiefly macaws, amazons, toucans/aracaris, and birds that could not be put into the main aviary for fear of either hybridization or aggression. There are 5 exhibits on this side as well, one on the right as guests enter, two on the back wall, one on the left, and one on the way to the rest of the complex. These all have a kapok or small Brazil nut tree as their centerpiece, with accompanying coffee, cacao, palm, fig, and plantain trees making up the understory. Ferns and shrubbery coat the forest floor, while bromeliads and vines dot the tree trunks. The forest floor is often pretty dense, but has open patches of soil where food is placed to tempt the residents out. All of these exhibits have part of the back wall that is actually a clay lick, nearly vertical with some small jutting roots and rocks for the birds to perch on as they consume the clay. The plants in these exhibits are often reinforced and protected, and were left to grow for longer because they need to stand up to the sometimes destructive nature of macaws. The first exhibit on the right has a somewhat red theme, and is home to 1.1 Scarlet Macaws, 1.2 Green-Billed Toucans, 1.1 Red-Browed Amazons, 1.1 Ivory-Billed Aracaris, and 1.2 Red-Billed Curassows. The second exhibit, the first one on the back wall, has a blue theme: it is planted with macadamia trees and moriche palms in addition to the other flora. 1.1 Blue-and-Yellow Macaws, 1.1 Channel-Billed Toucans, and 1.2 Blue-Billed Curassows are the species kept within. The third, bordering the first on the same wall, has a yellow and green theme, and is larger at around 970 feet and 60 feet tall, and contains 1.1 Military Macaws, 1.2 Yellow-Throated Toucans, 1.1 Golden Conures, 1.2 Black Curassows, 1.1 Saffron Toucanets, and 1.1 Yellow-Naped Amazons. The fourth drops the color theme and essentially has a mix of bird species; 1.1 Red-and-Green Macaws, 1.3 Variegated Tinamous, 1.2 Keel-Billed Toucans, 1.1 Curl-Crested Aracaris, and 1.2 Wattled Curassows. The last exhibit of this style, on the way to the rest of the complex, is home to 1.1 Chestnut-Fronted Macaws, 1.1 Toco Toucans, 1.2 Black-Necked Aracaris, and 1.1 Red-Footed Tortoises. Lastly, the center vivarium on the right hand side is a bit taller, around 7 feet tall, with the inhabitant having access to 4 feet of that. It has various branches, bromeliads, ferns, and mock tree trunks, simulating an understory, with mock vines hanging down as well. It is home to 0.1 Pinktoe Tarantula. This concludes the lobby.

    Guests can continue straight ahead or take a path to their left; on the walkway, this leads to a flight of stairs and ramp down to ground level, and circumvents the Greenhouse for those not wanting to go in. This path still has large glass windows looking into the Greenhouse, though.



    The Greenhouse
    So named because of the humid temperature, abundant plant life, and glass roof, the Greenhouse is made up of essentially 3 separate zones, each displaying a different type of animal.

    Guests can enter the Greenhouse from both ground level of the lobby as well as the elevated walkways, which lead out onto the different levels of the Greenhouse. However, once inside, guests can still walk down or up a flight of stairs with an accompanying ramp to get to the level they are not on. On both levels, visitors enter through two pairs of glass doors, also with hanging chains to make sure animals stay within the aviary. Guests first enter the largest of the three parts of the Greenhouse, the Birdhouse. The Greenhouse is around 2 hectares in size, with the Birdhouse taking up around 110,000 square feet of that. The exhibit towers over visitors’ heads at 170 feet in height.

    The ground path is a wooden boardwalk path winding through the thick jungle. It is enclosed with wooden posts, which animals can pass between to cross the path, but people cannot go outside these because they are too close together. The path crosses over a wide river running through the Greenhouse. There is also a wooden handrail along the path, which has informational boards and signs. Some feeders are located next to the path to encourage birds to approach the path. There are certain areas where large logs run over the path, above visitors heads, allowing terrestrial animals to get from side to side. Boulders, mossy logs, and some salt licks dot the forest floor, with thick tree trunks, ferns, and small palms making up the forest floor. Logs and rocks cross over the streams to allow animals to cross.

    The treetop path consists of a mix of wooden boardwalks and rope bridges. These connect large, 15 foot diameter wooden observation posts, some of which are covered with thatch roofing, some of which are not. These have informational boards listing all the species in the exhibit, so that guests can have reference boards for every species. All bridges have handrails made of wood or rope. Guests can look out over the vast aviary from a bird’s eye view. Certain observation decks have spaces in the middle with trees coming up through them.

    The aviary is planted with cacao, fig, palm, Brazil nut, kapok, coffee, and rubber trees, with thick vines and bromeliads coating the trees. These provide foraging, perching, nesting, and hiding structures for the birds.

    There are mammals in this exhibit that don’t present any threat to the birds. They consist of 3.3 Linnaeus’s Two-Toed Sloths, 3.4 Brown-Throated Sloths, 3.3 Silky Anteaters, 3.3 Southern Tamanduas, 3.8 Pacarana, 3.6 Red Brocket, and 3.10 Lowland Pacas.

    Because there are heron species in the exhibit, not just any fish could be put in the rivers of the exhibit. They had to be non-predatory to avoid feeding on ducklings and waterfowl, likely bottom-feeding, large enough not to be viewed as prey by birds but small enough to easily navigate the aviary’s waterway, and a certain group of fish fit these requirements perfectly. The inhabitants of the river are freshwater stingrays; all are female, and the species are Ocellate River Rays, Xingu River Rays, and Tiger River Rays.

    The birds in the Birdhouse are varied, and there is an exceptional number of species (63 to be precise). For congeneric species, usually just males are in the exhibit. The exact numbers of species will be near impossible to say, so I’ll just provide a list of species here for now.

    Blue-Headed Parrot
    Cobalt-Winged Parakeet
    Ochre-Marked Parakeet
    Helmeted Curassow
    Great Curassow
    Blue-Throated Piping Guan
    Spix’s Guan
    Undulated Tinamou
    Great Tinamou
    Horned Screamer
    Grey-Winged Trumpeter
    Wattled Jacana
    White-Faced Whistling Duck
    Fulvous Whistling Duck
    Black-Bellied Whistling Duck
    Ringed Teal
    Puna Teal
    Brazilian Teal

    Sunbittern
    Scarlet Ibis
    Roseate Spoonbill
    Rufescent Tiger-Heron
    Boat-Billed Heron
    Agami Heron
    Croaking Ground Dove
    Peruvian Pigeon
    Ladder-Tailed Nightjar
    Speckled Chachalaca
    Blue-Crowned Motmot
    Troupial
    White-Tailed Trogon
    Blue-Crowned Trogon
    Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock
    Yellow-Rumped Cacique
    Crested Oropendola
    Crimson-Crested Woodpecker
    Black-Headed Berryeater
    Plush-Crested Jay
    Violaceous Euphonia
    Golden Grosbeak
    Red Pileated Finch
    Capuchinbird
    Bananaquit
    Rufous-Collared Sparrow
    Red-Crested Cardinal
    Red-Capped Cardinal
    Silver-Beaked Tanager
    Blue-Grey Tanager
    Paradise Tanager
    Turquoise Tanager
    Blue-Necked Tanager
    Opal-Rumped Tanager
    Green Honeycreeper
    Purple Honeycreeper
    Spangled Cotinga
    Salvadori’s Antwren
    Sword-Billed Hummingbird
    Swallow-Tailed Hummingbird
    Long-Billed Starthroat
    Sapphire-Spangled Emerald
    Black-Throated Mango
    Violatea Hummingbird
    Rufous-Tailed Jacamar



    Guests come to the next section of the Greenhouse, which is around 47,000 square feet. They enter through a set of large glass double doors with hanging chains again, and emerge into the mammal area of the Greenhouse, called the Lodge. Guests cannot stay on the ground from this point on, so a wooden ramp and staircase lead into the canopy once again.

    This area serves as the indoor quarters for most of the non-predatory mammals, and is not the full-time of home of any species, though in general at least a handful of animals will be in this part of the complex at any given time.

    The Lodge consists of around 7 medium-sized islands, each from 200 to 400 feet in size depending on the species. The islands vary, with some being grassy with some palms or fig trees, others having brush and tall kapok trees with ropes and vines for climbing, and others yet being covered in dense vegetation nearly all around. The water in the exhibit has a muddy bottom with waterweeds and logs, and is around 5 feet at its deepest and 4 feet as an average. Reeds line the waterways and there are muddy banks on most of the islands. Some species kept in the exhibit can swim, so have access to multiple islands; ropes connect certain islands as well, allowing animals more space. This exhibit is a bit lower, around 130 feet in height.

    A muddy and scrubby island with trees protected at the roots is home to the zoo’s White-Lipped Peccaries. Another densely forested one is home to the Amazonian Brown Brockets and Red Brockets. Another with many ropes, branches, and a kapok tree is often home to 1.10 Peruvian Spider Monkeys, which is connected to a smaller grassy island with ropes. Another similar exhibit with a Brazil nut tree has 1.12 Red-Faced Spider Monkeys as its inhabitants, who also can access a smaller island. Several animals capable of swimming can access all the islands. These consist of the zoo’s South American Tapirs (including the male, who is often found here), the Giant Otters, the Neotropical River Otters, and the Capybaras. The spider monkeys are rotated outside sometimes into the spider monkey habitat in the larger monkey row.

    Guests then come to the last part of the Greenhouse, the Treetops. This is home to the zoo’s Amazon raptor and vulture collection. Guests once again enter through double glass doors with hanging chains, into another around 47,000 square foot exhibit with 170 feet of height. Kapok, coffee, fig, Brazil nut, palm, coffee, and rubber trees provide nesting and perching structures. The raptors in here, as well as the King Vultures, are animal ambassadors, so congeneric hawk-eagles are rotated in. Rope and wooden bridges connect thatched roof observation decks, on which keeper talks take place discussing the raptors of the Amazon and South America as a whole, and the dangers they face from farming and deforestation.

    A large river runs through the exhibit, emptying into various ponds. Boulders and logs dot the ground. There are also open patches of bare ground with leaf litter, though as these are raptors they will hardly ever go to the ground. The zoo’s 0.1 Ornate Hawk Eagle and 1.0 Black Hawk Eagle are rotated into this exhibit, while 1.3 Greater Yellow-Headed Vultures, 1.1 Crested Eagles, 1.1 White-Necked Hawks, and 1.1 King Vultures are full-time residents (though all of these are again ambassadors, so are taken out of the enclosure fairly frequently).

    This concludes the Greenhouse.



    The Waterways
    The Waterways is a large, roughly 35,000 square foot exhibit complex dedicated to life of the Amazon and Orinoco Rivers and their various tributaries. It is fairly dimly lit, mostly illuminated by the light inside the aquariums as well as ones high up above visitors’ heads. It consists of 2 large aquariums and several other medium-sized to small ones, mostly home to fish or semi-aquatic reptiles.

    It is a rectangular hall and fairly simple in layout, with the two larges tanks dominating most of the left and right walls. The tanks then end and several other tanks can be seen set into the walls. There are display centers in the middle of the path, essentially splitting it into left and right sides. Wooden benches and planters with orchids and bromeliads are also present. There are several exhibits in the middle of path, including two 9 foot tall 4 to 6 foot diameter circular tanks and one large 30 square foot exhibit. The exhibit is entered from the left end, and the rest of the complex is accessed from the right end.

    The left side will be discussed first. The large tank is around 2 million gallons, made visible thanks to the three, 15 foot long and 10 foot tall glass panes that run its length, only having underwater viewing. This tank has a muddy substrate with some dead mossy logs, mock tree trunks, and rocks, though in general the water column is decently open. The pool is around 15 feet deep in most areas. It is well planted, having water lettuce, water lilies, water hyacinths, bladderworts, hornworts, waterweeds, grasses, and moss as its flora. It has some shallow mud banks and logs near the shore for some animals to haul out on, with heat lamps at those locations as well. It is the main large fish tank and is also home to some non-gilled residents. The main focus of this tank is the 1.1 Amazonian Manatees that call it home. The zoo is hoping to breed these animals to better understand their reproduction and increase the population of this unique species. This tank also has a few other semiaquatic residents: 2.3 Arrau Turtles, 1.2 Twist-Necked Turtles, and 2.2 Smooth-Fronted Caimans (large individuals) also call the exhibit home. The fish in this exhibit are all generally large to very large: the exact numbers are not given, but suffice it to say for the larger fish less than 5 animals are present and for the slightly smaller ones there are usually less than 30 animals, though with some of the cichlids, dollars, and piranhas this can be more like 60 animals. The large fish in the tank consist of Arapaimas, Tambaqui, Red-Tailed Catfish, Silver Arowanas, Piraibas, Tiger Shovel-Nosed Catfish, Redbelly Pacu, Peacock Bass, Tiger River Stingrays, and Atlantic Tarpons. The tank gets fed regularly, but it is still undeniable that once in a while, a caiman or larger fish might snack on a small fish. However, because there are so many in the tank and they can reproduce, the population sustains itself through these small, occasional dips. Small fish include Orinoco Sailfin Plecostomus, Oscars, Chocolate Cichlids, Turquoise Severums, Flag-Tailed Prochilodus, Disk Tetras, Red-Bellied Piranhas, Largescale Foureyes, Red Hook Silver Dollars, Silver Dollars, Blue/Brown Discus, and Banded Leporinus. There are 3 other medium-sized tanks set into the walls for other Amazonian residents. The first is a 200 gallon tank with Amazon sword plants and Brazilian waterweed over a pebble bottom, with some driftwood and rocks in the tank as well. It is home to schools of Freshwater Angelfish, Ram Cichlids, Lemon Tetras, Emperor Tetras, Head-and-Taillight Tetras, Leopard Cories, a Jumbie Teta, and some Apistogramma nijsseni. The second tank is rather similar, around 220 gallons, and is another community tank for Green Discus, Marbled Hatchetfish, Sterba Cories, Ember Tetras, Rummy-Nose Tetras, Cardinal Tetras, and Neon Tetras. The last enclosure in this row is a large, 300 gallon tank for a small group of Black Spot Piranhas and some Crenicichla strigata (pike cichlids). This last mix is the most experimental; the fish are similar in size, but there could be some aggression. If this were to be the case the pike cichlids would be removed with the piranhas being kept.

    The other side is geared towards reptiles and mammals more than fish. There is another large tank, 3 million gallons, this one also having two thirty foot long viewing windows, which are 15 feet tall. The water extends to 10 feet as guests see it, so 5 feet of the viewing is above water, though in reality the pool is 15 feet deep and guests can look down when right up against the glass to see the additional 5 feet. The main focuses of this tank are the unrelated 0.2 Amazon River Dolphins though there is also a family of 1.3 Neotropical River Otters, a mother and her young, within the enclosure. The otters can have access to the Lodge when the Giant Otters are not using it. A school of Peacock Bass also inhabit the tank. The interactions between the dolphins and otters would make this exhibit a definite highlight for guests. The water column is mostly clear, with waterweeds, logs, and rocks on the muddy substrate. A fishing boat also lies on the bottom of the exhibit, and signs talk about the relationship between otters and fishermen and the sometimes negative interactions between them. Some sticks lie on the bottom for dolphins to ideally play with, as well as some palm fruit and Brazil nuts. Various toys made of natural materials are placed into the exhibit regularly for enrichment. The other enclosures in this line are all for reptiles and one amphibian, and are larger than the fish tanks in general. The first is a 30 square foot mixed species exhibit for various reptiles associating with the water. There is a 5 foot deep pool bordering the glass viewing window for this exhibit, which itself is about 20 square feet. The other 10 square feet are terrestrial space, consisting of a mud bank and an upper layer with ferns, bromeliads, orchids, and small palms, both real and fake, on mossy soil with leaf litter. Some logs and branches jut out over the pool while others with real and fake trees and vines cross over on the land area under the heat lamps. This exhibit is home to 0.1 or 1.0 Northern Caiman Lizards (they rotate through), 1.2 Plumed Basilisks, and a school of False Black Tetras. The second exhibit in the lineup is a 25 square foot exhibit with a muddy bank and some bromeliads and ferns, but is mostly a 20 square foot pool ranging from 5 to 3 feet in depth, with a muddy bottom, some logs, waterweeds, branches, rocks, and a wooden fishing pole. The water in here is moved very slowly, and represents a stagnant stream or channel in the rainforest. This exhibit has some dead leaves as well, on the shore and in the water. It is home to 1.0 Yellow-Spotted River Turtle and 1.1 Mata Matas. The last exhibit in the row is 30 square feet and fairly densely planed, with trees hanging out over the water, ferns, bromeliads, vines, moss, and small palms. Some rocks and logs also dot the exhibit, which has a 20 square foot pool about 5 feet deep. There is a slow current in the exhibit, simulating a backwater. The resident is either 1.0 or 0.1 Yellow Anaconda, rotated in and out.

    There are 3 exhibits in the middle of the room as well as one that looks like an exhibit but does not hold any species. The middle of the hall has a 30 square foot exhibit with wooden railings looking into a pit of sorts, with guests standing about 8 feet above where the animals are. Mock and real tree trunks, ferns, bromeliads, palms, shrubs, logs, and heated rocks dot the surface of the water, which itself is around 5 feet deep. This exhibit is home to 1.1 Cuvier’s Dwarf Caimans. There is a small waterfall into the exhibit creating the sound of rushing water, and also generating a current in the exhibit. Located next to this exhibit is a similar pit, simulating the forest floor of the Amazon, with roots, mock trees, shrubbery, ferns, rocks, logs and other things. Every 15 minutes or so, this exhibit is steadily flooded with water to show visitors how the rainforest becomes the flooded forest for several months, then empties again. This occurs throughout the day, with the water being recycled over and over again. It can be compared to San Diego Zoo’s Elephant Odyssey “tar” pit in terms of how it functions. The two other exhibits in the middle are the circular aquariums. One is on either side of these two pit-like exhibits. The one closer to visitors as they enter is a tiny bit larger, around 6 feet in diameter and 9 feet in height, with the animal having access to 5 of that 9 feet. The aquarium within has a large log, some branches, Amazon sword plants, Brazilian waterweed, pebbles, water plants and grasses and a submerged mock tree trunk with a root system. This exhibit is home to 1.0 Electric Eel. Informational boards talk about how much voltage electric eels can send out and why they do so in different scenarios; to sense their surroundings, to shock and kill prey, and to deter predators mostly. The other tank is still 9 feet tall but around 4½ feet in diameter. Planted with Amazon swords and Brazilian waterweed in addition o various aquatic grasses, and with some logs and mock root systems, the aquarium has plenty of hiding space as well as open water for swimming. This is a community tank for tetras, and varying numbers of the following species reside within: Emperor Tetras, Neon Tetras, Black Neon Tetras, Cardinal Tetras, Black Phantom Tetras, X-Ray Tetras, Glowlight Tetras, Coffee Bean Tetras, Lemon Tetras, Head-and-Taillight Tetras, and Rummy-Nose Tetras. Although not a tetra, this exhibit also has Amazon Puffers. Various signs in the entire hall tell about the dangers of overfishing, dams, deforestation, and overharvesting for the pet trade and the damage this causes to the Amazon ecosystem.

    Exiting this large room, guests come to a long dimly lit hall, illuminated thanks to the lights in the enclosures on each side. On each side of this 30 foot long hall is a large, glass-fronted, 40 square foot exhibit, with a 30 square foot pool in each and 10 feet of land area. These exhibits have muddy banks with some bromeliads, ferns, and small palms. Logs and flat rocks also dot the bank of the pool. Larger palms and small coffee, cacao, and rubber trees make up the larger flora. The clear pools have a muddy substrate with artificial tree trunks and roots in them for hiding places, and are also planted with waterweeds, water lettuce, and some water lilies. Heat lamps are disguised among the plants on the muddy banks as well. The exhibit on the left is home to 0.3 Spectacled Caimans, while the right is home to 0.2 Black Caimans (a male is also rotated on exhibit for these animals, and they do have occasional access to each other as they are hoped to breed). There is a fishing pole and some broken oars in the Spectacled Caiman exhibit and an overturned boat in the Black Caiman exhibit. Informational boards in front and on the sides of the exhibits tell about the dangers caimans and crocodiles in general face: hunting for their hide and meat and habitat destruction. The signs also tell about the ecological importance of caimans, and how when the Black Caiman is extirpated in areas, the Spectacled Caiman fills its role, but prey populations still skyrocket and in turn cause more damage. This makes it more difficult for the Black Caiman to try and regain footing in these areas. They also say what guests can do, such as never buying authentic caiman or crocodile skin items and supporting groups protecting the Amazon Rainforest. The caimans also have access to outdoor pools that can be seen elsewhere in the South American zone.

    The last room is home to a few more fish species as well as some amphibians. It consists of a 60 square foot room with small to larger than average vivariums and aquariums set into the walls. There are a total of four 300+ gallon aquariums. The room has a curved right wall, which all of the exhibits are located on, and is essentially a transition between The Waterways and the next area in the indoor complex, but still has its own animals. The first aquarium is 300 gallons of slightly acidic water, is dimly lit, and simulates the flooded forest. With a muddy substrate, it is covered in leaf litter, and has artificial tree trunks as well. Some logs and branches, also with dead leaves on them, dot the floor of the tank, which has a patch of aquatic grass and some waterweeds. This tank is home to 0.2 Amazon Leaffish. The second enclosure in the line is very similar and is the same size, with many dead leaves, a large log, a muddy bottom, and artificial roots and tree stumps. This is home to 1.1 Common Surinam Toads. The third is a large, 500 gallon aquarium with a small muddy bank with moss and some palms, but is mostly a large pool with waterweeds, water lettuce, lilies, logs, and flat rocks over a muddy bottom. It is home to 1.1 Twist-Necked Turtles. The last in this row has tree stumps, a bed of aquatic grass, many waterweeds, some branches and twigs, water lettuce, bladderworts, and other aquatic plants, and is 400 gallons. It exhibits 1.0 large Cayenne Caecilian. Guests walk out of this room into the next part of the complex.

    This concludes The Waterways.



    Forest of Darkness
    This exhibit showcases the nocturnal animals of the Amazon Rainforest, as well as many of the smaller reptiles and amphibians found in the rainforest. Guests exit the caiman hall and come to another large, dimly-lit lobby, not quite as large as the main entrance hall. It is around 25,000 square feet in size, and unlike the lobby with its two levels, this hall is around 30 feet in height and does not have an elevated walkway of any sort.

    It is a very large rectangular hall, with two large exhibits on the right hand side, and a large number of medium-sized exhibits on the left hand side, as well as three larger than average circular exhibits bisecting the hall. There are also two exhibits against the wall guests enter from.

    On the left side are glass-fronted enclosures set into the walls, primarily for amphibians and reptiles. There are 4 medium-sized exhibits around 25 square feet in size, and five smaller, 5 to 10 square foot exhibits as well. The larger exhibits will be discussed first. The first in the line as guests enter is a dimly-lit exhibit with ferns, bromeliads, and various green shrubbery, both artificial and real. Logs and some heated rocks dot the forest floor, which is covered with leaf litter. There are artificial kapok and Brazil nut tree roots and trunks in the exhibit as well as small palms. This exhibit is home to 0.2 South American Bushmasters. The next exhibit is slightly larger at 30 square feet and is taller, at 8 feet from ground to top. This exhibit has a floor of leaf litter over soil, with flat-topped heated rocks, hollow and solid logs, artificial tree trunks, small palms, ferns and ground palms, a small coffee tree, and a 10 square foot pool. A rock feature at the back feeds the pool with a small cascading stream and waterfall; the snake can also get up onto these rocks thanks to some ledges. This exhibit is home to 1.0 Boa Constrictor. The third exhibit is similar to the first, with leaf litter substrate, but has small Amazonian trees for climbing, some branches laid across the exhibit with real and artificial leaves, more bromeliads, a few more tree trunks, and some temple ruins on the right of the exhibit. This is home to 0.2 Common Lanceheads. The last large exhibit in the row is similar to the boa constrictor exhibit, with some large rocks at the back of the exhibit, and also has some temple bricks like in the previous exhibit. There is a soil substrate, logs, heated rocks, a 10 square foot pool fed by a waterfall, palms, and various shrubs. This enclosure is home to 1.0 Rainbow Boa. The smaller exhibits hold different snake species. The first two are almost exactly the same in layout; mostly vertical 10 square foot vivariums with bromeliads, ferns, palms, branches, vines, and very lush vegetation. There is leaf litter at the base of the exhibit, but the ground will hardly ever be used by these species. The first contains 0.2 Emerald Tree Boas and the next 1.1 Amazon Tree Boas. The third is similar, but has many more bromeliads and brightly colored orchids. This is home to 1.0 Eyelash Viper. The fourth is less vertical than those before it and more horizontal, consisting of a 5 square foot 12 inch deep pool with waterweeds and pebbles, and a muddy bank with thick dense vegetation of palms and ferns. This is home to 1.2 Aquatic Coral Snakes. The fifth and last exhibit is forested with mock tree trunks, logs, and branches in thick rich soil with leaf litter, but is more horizontal, and is small at 5 square feet. It is home to 1.0 Surinam Horned Frog. Signs talk about the dangers of deforestation and the pet trade on these snake species and many animals found in tropical regions. All of these exhibits are exposed to a regular shower each hour that lasts for around 4 minutes, created by sprinklers on the ceilings of the enclosures.

    There are three large vivariums in the middle of the room housing different species. One of these is home to a specific kind of animal: namely, poison dart frogs. At 10 feet tall and 6 feet in diameter, planted with all sorts of ferns, palms, bromeliads, and lush vegetation, it is immediately noticeable upon entering the hall, and is the first in the row of these vivariums. It has standing water inside the bromeliads for breeding purposes. There is rich, dark soil as the substrate with small logs and pebbles. Some branches cross the exhibit as well, allowing frogs to access any point within it. This exhibit is home to a myriad of poison dart frogs: the Splashback, Green-and-Black, Yellow-Banded, Maranon, Dyeing, Spot-Legged, Reticulated, Anthony’s, Three-Striped, and Blessed Poison Dart Frog species are present in the exhibit. However, while not a poison dart frog, the exhibit is also home to a small group of White-Leaf Frogs. The second of these vivariums is behind the poison frog exhibit, about 5 feet from it. This enclosure is of similar size, but 5 feet in diameter and 9 feet tall. It too is circular. It has a rich soil substrate with leaf litter covering it and small ferns and palms. Some flat rocks, logs, and branches dot the floor of the exhibit. This exhibit is home to 1.0 Goliath Birdeaters. The last in this row is again for frogs but not for poison frogs; instead, it is home to treefrogs. It has many bromeliads, vines, orchids, and palms and is very dense and lush, with a rich soil substrate with leaf litter. Branches cross the exhibit again to allow climbing for the inhabitants. Small groups of Giant Broad-Headed Treefrogs, Giant Monkey Frogs, and White-Leaf Frogs call this exhibit home.

    The right side of the hall is dedicated to animals of the Amazonian night; namely, nocturnal mammals and birds. The first exhibit is a mixed-species exhibit for various species. It is around 80 square feet and viewed from a series of 15 foot tall, 20 foot long windows. The exhibit has both and real and artificial trees (real species include palms, coffee, rubber, and cacao trees as well as palms), ground palms and ferns, soil substrate covered with leaf litter that allows digging, branches and ropes crossing the exhibit, a small shallow stream, and some large logs, with tubes in them that can be filled with food. This is home to 1.3 Azara’s Night Monkeys, 1.2 Six-Banded Armadillos, 0.2 Brazilian Three-Banded Armadillos, 1.2 Hoffmann’s Two-Toed Sloths, 1.2 Brazilian Porcupines, 1.2 Kinkajous, and 0.3 Lowland Pacas. An exhibit with a glass wall next to it is planted similarly and is around 60 square feet, with no ropes, and is home to 1.0 Spectacled Owls.

    There are two exhibits actually located on the wall guests came in from as well, one on either side of the large open entryway. The one on the left as guests enter is decently large, at 10 square feet, and is 8 feet tall. It has a centerpiece of a rotting, fallen tree, with some branches strewn about on the floor of the exhibit, which is covered with leaves. There is also viewing into the area below this vivarium, which is a system of tunnels. There are some mounds of earth, palms, and ferns for cover, and patches of open earth. This is exhibit is home to a colony of Bullet Ants. The exhibit on the right as guests enter is even larger, consisting of two separate but connected vivariums. Each vivarium is around 10 square feet and 8 feet tall, which, when combined, and including the connection between the vivariums, makes the entire exhibit around 25 square feet. They both have soil substrates covered with leaf litter and mounds of earth. They also have logs and branches on the forest floors, and a system of branches covered with leaves towards the top of the exhibit. Vines and moss coat these real branches, which come from various Amazonian trees. Ramps up to these branches are in the form of artificial tree trunks, allowing the ants access to these. One side of the enclosure is home to the rubbish dump, while the other is home to the nest. The exhibits are connected so ants can leave materials in the rubbish dump; a set of 3 glass tubes, one on the ground level of the vivarium, one at the top, and one at the middle, connect them. This exhibit is home to a colony of Leafcutter Ants, likely an Atta species (possibly Atta cephalotes). Also in this exhibit is a small group of Central American Cave Cockroaches, which would not be looked on as prey by the ants, and would eat a different diet of fruits and vegetables, so would not prey on the ants either.

    Guests then walk out through a set of double doors and find themselves immersed in the Amazon after dark. The ceiling has a mural of stars and the moon, and cicada and animal sounds are played in through hidden speakers. This room is around 300 square feet in size and 30 feet in height, with guests walking on a curving wooden boardwalk with wooden handrails through it. There are several small gaps in the wooden fencing that animals can get through but guests cannot. Small lamps and lanterns on the fence illuminate the path at several intervals, but are spaced out. This exhibit also has a large but fairly shallow stream running through it, with a couple small waterfalls and pools. This is stocked with small prey fish, like guppies, bettas, goldfish, and so on. The exhibit is planted with palms, coffee, rubber, and cacao trees, with dense brush as well. Guests can see 1.2 Southern Tamanduas, 1.2 Silky Anteaters, 1.1 Brown-Throated Three-Toed Sloths, 1.3 Gray Short-Tailed Opossums, 1.2 Yapoks, 1.3 Pacaranas, a large group of roughly around 10.10 Greater Bulldog Bats, a group of 8.15 Greater Spear-Nosed Bats, and an even larger group of somewhere around 0.0.30 Seba’s Short-Tailed Bats. This exhibit may also be home to a pair of 1.1 Amazonian Pygmy Owls, but this mix is very experimental and the bats may be in danger; if the owls did prey on the bats, they would be removed. Informational boards talk about deforestation and the different threats these different species face as well. There is a break in the wooden fencing instead replaced by a glass panel looking into the river so guests can see the yapoks and bulldog bats in action. Guests come to another set of double doors and hanging chains, and enter the last area in the indoor complex.


    Story of the Amazon
    The last “exhibit” in the complex holds no animals, and serves as both a grim reminder of the damage that has been and continues to be done to the Amazon as well as a call to action to guests. It is around 900 square feet, and is bordered on one wall with glass doors leading to the outside again. The centerpiece is a large raised diorama of sorts, consisting of broken, felled, and charred trees. Axes and chainsaws lay on the forest floor, with scorch marks on every tree. This serves to both remind guests of deforestation as well as the forest fires the Amazon has experienced in recent years. The sounds of crackling flames are played in through speakers, as are the sounds of chainsaws and trees falling.

    Signs talk about what we as guests can even do to help the Amazon and our forests in general; support ecotourism and groups against deforestation, don’t cast aside flammable objects or litter (especially do not drop cigarettes or lighters, and be careful with fireworks), research things you buy in case you are wondering if they are sustainably sourced, and more.

    On the other side of this burned, ruined diorama, though, is a thriving forest ecosystem with model plants such as orchids and bromeliads and more. A river runs through the diorama and empties into a large pool. Sounds of rain falling, birds chirping, and frogs calling are played through speakers.

    The idea is that yes, humans have a huge impact on our global ecosystem, yes, the Amazon is in danger, and if we do nothing it will be destroyed; however, the message is also that if we choose to unite for the common good of our planet, and prioritize its needs rather than focusing on our division, and teach children about this, then we can make the planet a better place for generations to come.

    With that, guests exit through the glass doors and conclude their journey through Amazonian Trek.



    ANIMAL LIST (in order of appearance)
    Mammals (57): Black-Bearded Saki, White-Faced Saki, Red-Rumped Agouti, Brown Woolly Monkey, Red Acouchi, Venezuelan Red Howler, Red Uakari, White-Bellied Spider Monkey, Northern Amazon Red Squirrel, Azara’s Agouti, Tufted Capuchin, White-Fronted Capuchin, Guianan Squirrel Monkey, Red-Backed Bearded Saki, Red-Bellied Titi, Green Acouchi, South American Tapir, Capybara, Giant Otter, Red Brocket, Jaguar, Tayra, South American Coati, Ocelot, Jaguarundi, Margay, Amazonian Brown Brocket, White-Lipped Peccary, Common Marmoset, Pied Tamarin, Golden Lion Tamarin, Lowland Paca, Goeldi’s Marmoset, Emperor Tamarin, Golden-Headed Lion Tamarin, Black-Capped Squirrel Monkey, Brazilian Three-Banded Armadillo, Hoffmann’s Two-Toed Sloth, Linnaeus’s Two-Toed Sloth, Brown-Throated Sloth, Silky Anteater, Southern Tamandua, Pacarana, Peruvian Spider Monkey, Red-Faced Spider Monkey, Amazonian Manatee, Amazon River Dolphin, Neotropical River Otter, Azara’s Night Monkey, Six-Banded Armadillo, Brazilian Porcupine, Kinkajou, Gray Short-Tailed Opossum, Yapok, Greater Bulldog Bat, Greater Spear-Nosed Bat, Seba’s Short-Tailed Bat

    Birds (95): Double-Toothed Kite, Harpy Eagle, Scarlet Macaw, Green-Billed Toucan, Red-Browed Amazon, Ivory-Billed Aracari, Red-Billed Curassow, Blue-and-Yellow Macaw, Channel-Billed Toucan, Blue-Billed Curassow, Military Macaw, Yellow-Throated Toucan, Golden Conure, Black Curassow, Saffron Toucanet, Yellow-Naped Amazon, Red-and-Green Macaw, Variegated Tinamou, Keel-Billed Toucan, Curl-Crested Aracari, Wattled Curassow, Chestnut-Fronted Macaw, Toco Toucan, Black-Necked Aracari, Blue-Headed Parrot, Cobalt-Winged Parakeet, Ochre-Marked Parakeet, Helmeted Curassow, Great Curassow, Blue-Throated Piping Guan, Spix’s Guan, Undulated Tinamou, Great Tinamou, Horned Screamer, Grey-Winged Trumpeter, Wattled Jacana, White-Faced Whistling Duck, Fulvous Whistling Duck, Black-Bellied Whistling Duck, Ringed Teal, Puna Teal, Brazilian Teal, Sunbittern, Scarlet Ibis, Roseate Spoonbill, Rufescent Tiger-Heron, Boat-Billed Heron, Agami Heron, Croaking Ground Dove, Peruvian Pigeon, Ladder-Tailed Nightjar, Speckled Chachalaca, Blue-Crowned Motmot, Troupial, White-Tailed Trogon, Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock, Yellow-Rumped Cacique, Crested Oropendola, Crimson-Crested Woodpecker, Black-Headed Berryeater, Plush-Crested Jay, Violaceous Euphonia, Golden Grosbeak, Red Pileated Finch, Capuchinbird, Bananquit, Rufous-Collared Sparrow, Red-Crested Cardinal, Red-Capped Cardinal, Silver-Beaked Tanager, Blue-Grey Tanager, Paradise Tanager, Turquoise Tanager, Blue-Necked Tanager, Opal-Rumped Tanager, Green Honeycreeper, Purple Honeycreeper, Spangled Cotinga, Salvadori’s Antwren, Sword-Billed Hummingbird, Swallow-Tailed Hummingbird, Long-Billed Starthroat, Sapphire-Spangled Emerald, Black-Throated Mango, Violatea Hummingbird, Rufous-Tailed Jacamar, Ornate Hawk Eagle, Black Hawk Eagle, White-Necked Hawk, Crested Eagle, Greater Yellow-Headed Vulture, King Vulture, Spectacled Owl, Amazonian Pygmy Owl

    Reptiles (21): Green Iguana, Red-Footed Tortoise, Arrau Turtle, Twist-Necked Turtle Smooth-Fronted Caiman, Northern Caiman Lizard, Plumed Basilisk, Yellow-Spotted River Turtle, Mata Mata, Yellow Anaconda, Cuvier’s Dwarf Caiman, Spectacled Caiman, Black Caiman, South American Bushmaster, Boa Constrictor, Common Lancehead, Rainbow Boa, Emerald Tree Boa, Amazon Tree Boa, Eyelash Viper, Aquatic Coral Snake

    Amphibians (16): Common Surinam Toad, Cayenne Caecilian, Surinam Horned Frog, Splashback Poison Frog, Green-and-Black Poison Frog, Yellow-Banded Poison Frog, Maranon Poison Frog, Dyeing Poison Frog, Spot-Legged Poison Frog, Reticulated Poison Frog, Anthony’s Poison Frog, Three-Striped Poison Frog, Blessed Poison frog, White-Leaf Frog, Giant Broad-Headed Treefrog, Giant Monkey Frog

    Fish (50): Ocellate River Ray, Xingu River Ray, Tiger River Ray, Arapaima, Silver Arowana, Tambaqui, Redbelly Pacu, Piraiba, Red-Tailed Catfish, Tiger Shovel-Nosed Catfish, Peacock Bass, Atlantic Tarpon, Orinoco Sailfin Plecostomus, Oscar, Chocolate Cichlid, Turquoise Severum, Flag-Tailed Prochilodus, Disk Tetra, Red-Bellied Piranha, Largescale Foureye, Red Hook Silver Dollar, Silver Dollar, Banded Leporinus, Blue Discus, Freshwater Angelfish, Ram Cichlid, Lemon Tetra, Emperor Tetra, Head-and-Taillight Tetra, Leopard Cory, Jumbie Teta, Apistogramma nijsseni, Green Discus, Marbled Hatchetfish, Sterba Cory, Ember Tetra, Rummy-Nose Tetra, Cardinal Tetra, Neon Tetra, Blackspot Piranha, Crenicichla strigata, Electric Eel, Black Neon Tetra, Black Phantom Tetra, X-Ray Tetra, Glowlight Tetra, Coffee Bean Tetra, Amazon Puffer, False Black Tetra, Amazon Leaffish

    Invertebrates (6): Brazilian Red-and-White Tarantula, Pinktoe Tarantula, Goliath Birdeater, Bullet Ant, Leafcutter Ant, Central American Cave Cockroach


    # of Mammals: 57
    # of Birds: 95
    # of Reptiles: 21
    # of Amphibians: 16
    # of Fish: 50
    # of Invertebrates: 6


    Total Number of Species: 245


    This concludes the most diverse, and hopefully largest, complex in the South American zone. Next time we journey with the fictional EZ (Expedition Zenith) Climbing Co. to the slopes of South America's greatest mountain range in World of the Andes.

    - Crotalus
     
  10. amur leopard

    amur leopard Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    23 Feb 2019
    Posts:
    4,162
    Location:
    London
    What a massive project! It is absolutely fantastic! I would visit any day!

    Only problem I could find having read it quickly was I wouldn't, even if I was an adult male jaguar,
    like to be mixed with a family group of 8 giant otters, least of all if I was a brocket deer or young capybara :D
     
  11. Crotalus

    Crotalus Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    11 Jun 2019
    Posts:
    276
    Location:
    USA
    They can be a bit rowdy can't they...in that case, have a smaller group of Caybaras and move them to Forest Browsers with the brockets. The brockets would also be removed from this exhibit and given to other institutions, as there are other animals of the same species elsewhere in the complex. I would say subtract the number of otters, but I know they're also a social species...maybe have 1.6 instead. The tapirs I think can handle the otters, so I wouldn't move them. And scale down the exhibit to 35,000 square feet.
     
  12. pichu

    pichu Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    9 Mar 2022
    Posts:
    226
    Location:
    massachusetts
    7 otters? that one huge enclosure!
     
  13. Mr.Ivory

    Mr.Ivory Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    7 May 2021
    Posts:
    1,125
    Location:
    Chicago, Illinois
    Tsavo: Land of Legends and Red Super Tuskers

    The complex begins with a large Kojpe exhibit for a pack of 4.6 African Wild Dogs (Lycaon pictus). The pack consists of a breeding pair Kiume and Mila, and their 3.5 pups Moyo, Dogo, Chungu, Maya, Shani, Kiara, Chakavu, and Hanja. The pack rotates two enclosures with a small clan of 1.3 Spotted Hyena (Crocuta crocuta) consisting of mated pair Ed, Asante, and their 0.2 pups Shenzi, and Tamu. This habitat is roughly 500 sq meters and is filled with tall grasses, trees, and a few rocky outcroppings.

    The next enclosure covers 2 acres and is home to the zoo's pride of 4.7 African lions (Panthera Leo). The pride consists of 1.2 adults Askari, and sisters Zingela and Sarafina, Zingela’s cubs Dunia, Yiara, Chenza, and Hamu, and Sarafina’s cubs Mtoto, Nadra, Jira, and Ziva. Features of this exhibit include large Kopjes, grassy slopes, trees scattered around, and well-done rockwork. The exhibit also creates a panoramic view with a nearby mixed-species savannah. This is followed by a much smaller sandy enclosure for 0.2 pair of Caracal (Caracal caracal). The sisters Amara and Nia were both born at the zoo two years ago and have stayed to be part of the zoo’s Animal Ambassador program. Once passing by these two habitats, the path loops around, giving guests a closer look at the zoo’s African Wild dogs and Spotted Hyenas. Guests are welcomed to an indoor area where guests can get up close to numerous mammal, bird, and reptile species. The primary and largest exhibit in the Kopje building is a walkthrough aviary for
    • 0.6 Violet-backed starling (Cinnyricinclus leucogaster)
    • 10.10 Taveta Golden Weaver (Ploceus castaneiceps)
    • 2.4 Rock Hyrax (Procavia capensis)
    • 2.1 Klipspringer (Oreotragus oreotragus)
    • 1.2 Four-banded Sandgrouse (Pterocles quadricinctus)
    • 2.5 Common bulbul (Pycnonotus barbatus)
    • 1.1 Southern Red Bishop (Euplectes orix)
    • 0.9 Speckled mousebird (Colius striatus)
    • 1.1 White-bellied go-away-bird (Crinifer leucogaster)
    • 1.1 African Olive Pigeon (Columba arquatrix)
    • 0.4 Golden-breasted Starling (Lamprotornis regius)
    • 1.1 Eastern Paradise Whydah (Vidua paradisaea)
    • 1.1 Red-billed hornbill (Tockus erythrorhynchus)
    • 0.11 Crested guineafowl (Guttera pucherani)
    The surrounding exhibits are home to a group of 4.5 Common dwarf mongooses (Helogale parvula), which share their exhibit with a breeding pair of African crested porcupine (Hystrix cristata), they rotate their exhibit with a group of 1.3 Aardvark (Orycteropus afer). Male Ajabu, and females Dwa, Ongaziwa, and Kipekee. The next exhibit is home to elderly pair non-breeding pair of Bat-eared Fox (Otocyon megalotis). And they share their exhibit with a breeding pair of Common Warthogs (Phacochoerus africanus), and a small group of 2.4 Banded mongoose (Mungos mungo). though the foxes rarely interact with the much more dominant Warthogs. This enclosure is also very sandy and dry but also has some burrows and dens for the foxes to hide and rest when they feel like it. This is followed by a smaller more grassy habitat for a breeding pair of Kirk's Dik-Dik (Madoqua kirkii) Babu and Malka and their daughter Kadogo. A rocky wall filled with small glass viewing areas, and tunnels are home to two large groups of Naked mole-rat (Heterocephalus glaber). The zoo has great breeding success with the group numbering 50+ members strong.

    After passing the Dik Dik habitat, visitors are directed into a large, 5,000-square-foot naturalistic aviary, featuring a unique collection of species found in these arid sections of Africa. Most notably, a large flock of a bee-eater species the 3.3 White-Fronted Bee-eater (Merops bullockoides), Two automatically timed feeders, hidden in the rocks, will release flying insects into this dome every half hour, providing visitors with a unique experience to witness the incredible feeding displays of these birds. The aviary can house a flock of bee-eater of approximately 12-18 birds. Other than the bee-eaters, other unique species of birds residing in the dome are a flock of 4.7 African Silverbill (Euodice cantans), and 1.1 White-headed Buffalo Weaver (Dinemellia dinemelli).

    The next three habitats are aviaries. The first of these habitats is a 1,000-square-foot netted habitat for a breeding pair of Lappet-faced Vultures (Torgos tracheliotos). Signage at this habitat will discuss the importance of these birds and other scavengers to the world's ecosystems and the challenges affecting them. After the vultures, visitors can pass a second aviary, roughly 100 sq meters, home to a family of 1.2 African Fish Eagles (Haliaeetus vocifer), a breeding pair, and their 0.1 chick. The final habitat to be featured in the dome snuggled right between the African Fish Eagle aviary and the entrance to the entire dome is home to a pair of 1.1 Secretary Birds (Sagittarius serpentarius). The aviary is roughly 75 sq meters, and both the eagle and secretary bird aviaries are about 10 meters high with a few small trees and rocks scattered around the enclosures.

    Past these exhibits, there is a 550 sq meter section of the building for a decent number of reptile species, which is home to the following species Features include well-planted terrariums fitted with pools, logs, and more based on the needs of each individual species.
    • 4.2 Pancake Tortoise (Malacochersus tornieri)
    • 5.2 Meller’s Chameleon (Trioceros melleri)
    • 1.1 African Spurred Tortoise (Centrochelys sulcata)
    • 1.3 Leopard Tortoise (Stigmochelys pardalis)
    • 1.1 African Rock Python (Python sebae)
    • 0.1 Mozambique Spitting Cobra (Naja mossambica)
    • 3.3 Savannah Monitor (Varanus exanthematicus)
    • 0.1 Black-throated Monitor (Varanus albigularis microstictus)
    Upon exiting the building the first habitat to the right is a 350 sq meter habitat with rocky terrain and grassy slopes and is home to a breeding troop of 4.8 Hamadryas baboon (Papio hamadryas). The indoor area for the baboons which is behind the outdoor yard and is connected to the Kopje building measures about 250 sq meters and is not viewable to the public. The next habitat guests will see, if they continue moving in a circle, will be directly to the left of the baboon habitat and is home to a breeding pair of 1.1 Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus), and their 2.1 offspring. Guests are also informed about the zoo’s fantastic breeding program for the Cheetahs with over 120 born since the zoo’s opening. This habitat is roughly 900 sq meters and is filled with tall vegetation, trees, and a few rocky slopes.

    Once guests walk past the Cheetah habitat guests will see a large 25-acre mixed-species savannah for the zoo’s breeding herd of 3.7 African elephants (Loxodonta africana). The herd consists of 40-year-old Asali, her daughters 17-year-old Amani, 14-year-old Zuri, 11-year-old Kimana who is pregnant with her first calf and due this summer, her 7-year-old son Kito, and her 3-year-old daughter Malika and she is due for another calf this summer, Amani’s two calves her 5-year-old daughter Furaha, and 1-year-old son Jabali, and Zuri’s 1-year-old daughter Upendo. And the zoo’s 29-year-old breeding bull Tembo sire of Kito, Furaha, Malika, Jabali, and Upendo.

    The elephants share their 25-acre habitat with a breeding herd of 4.10 Masai Giraffe (Giraffa tippelskirchi), 4.12 Cape Buffalo (Syncerus caffer caffer) the herd consists of 1.8 adults and their numerous calves of various ages and genders, they also share their exhibit with 0.10 Vulturine guineafowl (Acryllium vulturinum), 2.5 Common Impala (Aepyceros melampus melampus), this herd consists of 2.5 adults and 1.2 calves that were born these past two months.

    A group of 0.6 South African ostrich (Struthio camelus), also reside in this pasture, and a second species of antelope represented in this enclosure that is actively breeding is a herd of 2.5 Greater Kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros). Features of the 25-acre habitat include undulating hills and mud banks, large pools for swimming, waterfalls, and termite mounds. Multiple shade structures are in the Habitat and in the elephant-holding yards. The swimming pools allow elephants to fully submerge in 150,000 gallons of water. A 25-ft structure, designed to resemble a Baobab tree, forms part of the exhibit barrier that separates elephants from guests. The Baobab tree serves as an enrichment area where elephants forage in tree hollows and reach for hay feeders hanging from branches above. A water cannon allows keepers to provide additional cooling during hot summers. Mud wallows and sand piles are located habitat as well.

    Following the path to the left guests are led to a viewing deck overlooking a 12-acre savannah for a breeding herd of 1.5 Common eland (Taurotragus oryx) live in this savannah, 2.6 Eastern white-bearded wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus albojubatus), 5.12 Fringe-eared oryx (Oryx beisa callotis) including 1.8 adults and 4.4 calves that were born last year during the spring. This is followed by one of the smaller mixed species savannah a 2.5-acre savannah. A breeding herd of 1.6 Southern Gerenuk (Litocranius walleri walleri) was recently introduced to the other inhabitants of this enclosure after being moved from another part of the zoo.

    A small herd of young 0.3 Roan Antelope (Hippotragus equinus) was recently imported from the SDZSP to replace another hoofstock species that was moved into another section of the zoo. If all goes well, a breeding male will be imported soon. The savannah also houses two pairs of 2.2 East African Grey-crowned Cranes (Balearica regulorum gibbericeps), the only avian inhabitants of this pasture, and are pinioned and non-breeding. The cranes have a few safety areas scattered around the pasture which are only accessible to the cranes. This allows the cranes to escape and remain safe from any aggression from their ungulate neighbors.

    Following the path visitors reach the biggest savanna overlook- allowing an expansive look over the entire 2.5 -acre habitat, and hopefully, the animals utilizing it. On the other side of this overlook, however, is a pair of 3,000 square-foot netted habitats, home to large troops of 4.8 Patas Monkeys (Erythrocebus patas), and 5.7 Vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus pygerythrus). These savanna monkeys are very unique display animals, especially since the zoo can house a large breeding troop. This habitat features two viewing windows, making visitors extremely likely to see the animals, even if it is such a large habitat for them. On the other side of the patas monkeys, is another netted habitat of this area is home to a pair of 2.0 Serval (Leptailurus serval) brothers Haraka and Duma.

    Across from the servals, is a 1.8-acre grassy enclosure home to a small breeding herd of 3.5 Southern Lesser Kudu (Ammelaphus australis), it is also home to a breeding herd of 3.4 Common Waterbuck (Kobus ellipsiprymnus) the herd consists of 1.3 adults, and their 2.1 calves born earlier this summer.

    On the other side path guests are greeted by a 20,000 square foot walk-through aviary for the zoo's flock of 15.15 Lesser flamingo (Phoeniconaias minor), These flamingoes are fully flighted, and the aviary is designed in a way so that they can exhibit their flight behaviors. The zoo is very successful in breeding are flock with over 250 born since the breeding program began in 1997. The zoo's flock of thirty lesser flamingoes share this aviary with a number of other bird species that frequent water habitats, White-faced Whistling Ducks (Dendrocygna viduata), Hadada Ibis (Bostrychia hagedash), Hamerkop (Scopus umbretta), African Spoonbill (Platalea alba), and Yellow-billed Storks (Mycteria ibis).

    All of these birds will share this huge aviary, and with the exception of hamerkops, all species are kept in large flocks of 10+ birds. Most of the ground space in this aviary is flooded, to replicate the wetlands home these birds share, there is also some limited land areas as well enough for all the birds to choose to stay on land. Plenty of flying space and elevated nesting sites are also included, encouraging the birds to fly as they choose.

    Once guests walk past the aviary and continue walking forward in the path, they will come across another large 250 sq meter building home to the zoo’s breeding pair of 1.1 Eastern Black rhino (Diceros bicornis michaeli), 4-year old male Kifaru, and 3-year old female Kubwa. Though guests cannot look into the rhino house, just past it is the 1.5 acre outdoor area which is split into 2 different yards 1 for Kifaru and the other for Kubwa that are separated via a hydraulic gate. Guests can only view one of the yards from the pathway as the other is behind the first one and there are lots of trees and a shade structure towards the back of the front yard. This exhibit also has a small breeding herd of 1.3 Roosevelt's Sable antelope (Hippotragus niger roosevelti) that came from the B Bryan Preserve. A herd of 2.3 Thomson’s Gazelle (Eudorcas thomsonii) also lives in this enclosure including a pair of castrated males and a trio of young surplus females. The zoo has no plans to breed this species as the focus is on the Rhinos and Sable Antelope.

    Guests will then come across a 2-acre exhibit for a large pod of 2.6 River Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius). The hippos share their habitat with schools of Emperor Cichlid (Aulonocara nyassae), Red Empress Cichlids (Protomelas taeniolatus), and Johanni Cichlid (Pseudotropheus johannii). As well as a breeding herd of 2.9 East African Sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekii spekii), the herd consists of 1.5 breeding adults and 1.4 calves born during the spring as well as flocks of 2.4 African Comb Duck (Sarkidiornis melanotos), 0.9 Marbled Duck (Marmaronetta angustirostris), 1.4 Maccoa Duck (Oxyura maccoa), and a breeding pair of Egyptian Geese (Alopochen aegyptiaca) that have yet to produce chicks. This habitat features two large pools in addition to a spacious grassy paddock. The waterfowl and Sitatunga are also areas to escape if needed.

    Noticeably absent from this hippo exhibit is the presence of underwater viewing, instead opting to display hippos at ground level. Once past the hippo viewing areas, the path continues onto a bridge over one of the hippo pools, allowing visitors to view these animals from above when they are swimming.
     
    Last edited: 17 May 2023
  14. Great Argus

    Great Argus Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    The hornbills would harass and potentially kill the smaller passerines. Presuming the second Klipspringer male is a juvenile?

    Really large aviary for just those three species.

    Are these all in the same exhibit?

    Are these in one exhibit as well? Why so many?

    That's not how breeding Cheetahs works... you won't have a fantastic breeding program housing a pair together.

    Similar deal to the Cheetahs - you'd need 10 out of 15 pairs with a successful chick every year to hit the stated ratio - that's quite high, particularly as there is some indication Lesser breeds best with more males present than females.

    This seems small for 8 hippos and 11 Sitatunga - though maybe that's a visualization issue.
     
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  15. Gibbonsagainstgravity

    Gibbonsagainstgravity Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    Location:
    New York
    Zoological conservation society:

    The zoo is very large, multiple hundred acres. Most of it will be realistic, possibly with some exceptions. It is located somewhere on the east coast of the US. P.S: I am not so good at measuring large areas, so for most of the exhibits, I will not be adding the size.

    Australia trail:
    According to the original plan, the Australia aviary was to be the first thing that guests see when they enter. However, the zoo went with something different: the monotreme house. It has just two species, but still offers a great experience. Once you enter the building, you will come across two exhibits, one on each side. Both are nocturnal enclosures for two Platypuses. Obviously, very rare outside of Australia. Before you leave please look at the exhibit that many people walk right past, for here you can find a single Short beaked echidna. It has access to two dens, one of which is viewable for guests.
    Soon after you leave the monotreme house, you’ll come across the Australian aviary. It is half desert, half forest. Here you can find the following birds:

    150 Budgerigar
    2 Kea
    26 Eastern rosellas
    41 Rainbow lorikeets
    12 Sulphur crested cockatoos

    Next to the aviary are three smaller exhibits for a pair of Palm cockatoos, 2 Tawny frogmouths, and of course, a Laughing kookaburra. You have now reached a restaurant with restrooms. It looks over a 3 acre desert for 7 Dingoes.
    Next is another building, with yet more nocturnal exhibits. Here you can find:

    3 Feathertail gliders
    2 Sugar gliders
    1 Greater glider
    1 Southern hairy nosed wombat

    There is also a Tasmanian devil, which has indoor and outdoor access.
    Next, there are two outdoor enclosures for a Doria’s tree kangaroo, and two Matshie’s tree kangaroos. They also have non viewable indoor exhibits. Near them is a large, nearly 2 acre rainforest for a single Southern cassowary.
    Near them is a large, outdoor forest for 6 Koalas, 9 Parma wallabies, and 3 Red necked wallabies.
    Next are two indoor enclosures for 2 Musky rat kangaroos, and 1 Brush tailed bettong.
    As you cross a bridge, make sure to look down, because on the right are 3 Saltwater crocodiles, while on the left are 4 Quokkas.
    As the path continues, you will see a very rocky exhibit, for 12 Yellow footed rock wallabies, and recently, the zoo added 3 Brush tailed rock wallabies.
    As the trail comes to an end, on your left is an outdoor exhibit for a Common wombat. Last, but not least there is a 12 acre plain for three Emus, 11 Western grey kangaroos, and 6 Red kangaroos. This concludes the first section of my zoo!

    I am planning on getting back to it tomorrow!
    SPOILER: (next area: The Amazon!)
     
    Last edited: 29 Aug 2023
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  16. Gibbonsagainstgravity

    Gibbonsagainstgravity Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    OK, it’s time for the next exhibit! This part of the zoo is about 16 acres. Here it is!

    The Amazon:
    As the first part of the exhibit begins, the visitors are immediately welcomed into the building, under a 40 foot roof, with REAL TREES surrounding you, as well as multiple streams, and the following free flying bird species:

    2 Sunbittern
    15 Southern Lapwing
    11 Hyacinth macaws
    23 Scarlet macaws
    27 Military macaws
    25 Monk parakeets
    2 Hawk headed parrots
    33 Crimson topaz
    49 Ruby topaz
    22 Sword billed hummingbirds
    4 Giant hummingbirds
    41 Emerald toucanets
    2 Andean cock of the rock


    There is also a separate aviary for 2 Toco toucans.
    There are four floors, each giving you a different perspective of the rainforest: The canopy, the understory, the forest floor, and the riverbed. Some animals have access to one level, others multiple.
    The trail begins on the Forest floor. This part loops you around a giant pool, about 1 ft deep at its lowest, and 12 ft at its deepest. Here, you can find a group of 13 Arapaima, 12 Black pacu fish, and 3 Spectacled caiman.
    On the left is a very tall exhibit, which once held the zoo’s Ocelot (which now can be seen in the carnivore house), but now is home to a Margay (and, yes they do have outdoor access). Next to them is a lush, even taller enclosure for the zoos 2 Black howlers, and 3 Red howlers. Both exhibits are glass fronted, however, they can be viewed from above in the canopy without glass in the way. The howlers also have an outdoor enclosure.
    The next exhibit that you will see is the largest so far, and it is home to 12 Bearded sakis, 11 Brown capuchins, 5 White throated capuchins, 16 Common squirrel monkeys, a single Black Spider monkey, and 3 Lowland pacas. Next, the path takes you into a cave, where your only source of light is many terrariums lining the walls. There, you can find the following animals:

    1 Golden tegu
    1 Common boa constrictor
    1 Green iguana
    1 Green anaconda
    1 Emerald tree boa
    3 Surinam toads


    After the path takes you back out of the darkness of the cave, the path circles around a second pond with 23 Red bellied Piranhas.
    Right across from them is another tall exhibit, this one with more ground space than the last three, and it is home to a Jaguarundi (no surprise, it also has outdoor access).
    Next to to this exhibit is another enclosure of this sort, home to a pair of Geoffroy’s cats. They also have access to two outdoor exhibits. Near them is a similar enclosure for two Crab eating raccoons. Connected to it is an outside enclosure.
    The next enclosure on the right is home to three Red Uakari, which also have outdoor enclosures as well. Next, the path goes into the nocturnal section, which brings visitors past 5 Kinkajous, 2 Tayra, and 2 Douroucouli. There are also 26 Golden poison frogs, and blue poison dart frogs found in a large tropical terrarium, and 2 Mexican red kneed tarantulas.
    As the path takes you back out into the light, you are welcomed by a new floor: the understory. Here, you can view the arboreal animals we saw earlier, from above. You also can see four new species: the zoo’s pair of Olingoes, and four Southern muriqui. Both have outdoor exhibits. This area also lets visitors see a Jaguar. It can go outdoors as well. Last, but not least, you can see an agile Oncilla (with outdoor access), if it isn’t hiding. The path then takes you up to the canopy. Here, you can view many exhibits from above, as well as over 2,000 Leaf cutter ants, a Silky anteater, and two Southern tamanduas (with outdoor access). Finally, the path takes you back down, to the riverbed, where you can view the caiman and fish underwater, as well as an Electric eel, a South American lungfish, and 56 Neon tetras.
    Here, you can also find a Cayenne Caecilian, as well as a large aquarium for Spotted River rays.

    Then, the path takes you back outside, where you can see all of the outdoor enclosures for the tamanduas, primates, and cats. There is a large pool for 4 Giant otter. Here, you can also see 13 Bush dogs, 1 Maned wolf, a pool with 9 Nutrias, another with 14 Capybaras and a South American tapir, and a small rainforest with 2 White nosed coati. There is also a small a aviary for a Red legged seriema. At last, there is a lush, large aviary for a pair of Harpy eagles.

    And that concludes the rather large second exhibit of the Zoological conservation society! I will be posting the next one soon!
     
    Last edited: 31 Aug 2023
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  17. Haliaeetus

    Haliaeetus Well-Known Member

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    It's strange to have such large groups of Toucans.
    Conversely a colony of 1000 ants sounds very small.
     
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  18. Van Beal

    Van Beal Well-Known Member

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    Seems excessively large for a pack of the size you suggest, though that may just be me.
     
  19. Great Argus

    Great Argus Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Are numbers just being pulled out of a hat here? Some of these numbers are pretty large even for the size of the place. Also what is an Elegant Toucanet?
     
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  20. Gibbonsagainstgravity

    Gibbonsagainstgravity Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    Yes, the numbers are pretty random. And, oops sorry, I meant emerald toucanet, your right.