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Visit to Tokyo

Discussion in 'Japan' started by aardvark250, 16 May 2016.

  1. Nikola Chavkosk

    Nikola Chavkosk Well-Known Member

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    Also don't forget to take interesting photos and then post them here to see how zoo enclosures in Japan are looking!
     
  2. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Of course!
     
  3. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    I visit Yokohama sea paradise this day.See some very good species such as isopod and Commerson dolphin,and a whale shark when watching the show!I'm sorry that no species list because I am not familiar with fish and I can't see all fishes but I will try to list special species.
     
  4. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Today I visit tama zoo.Tama zoo is awesome and I see three of the four highlight,the Tasmanian devils,large insectarium,and the tunnel mole and shrew house.I didn't see them using the tunnel because I'm late,but I did see them digging.i just miss the king cheetah.Species list and a detailed review will be post after I back home.
     
  5. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Today I went to kamogawa sea world,a and see the world only captive flying fish.Also in the highlights are ocean sunfish,orca(in a very small tank) and a walrus with very long tusk.Also,they have five species if cetacean and like eight species of pinniped
     
  6. devilfish

    devilfish Well-Known Member

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    Thanks for posting these little updates aardvark! I'm looking forward to the full reports! Just a couple of quick questions about Sea Paradise:
    Where did you see the Commerson's dolphins? (perhaps they were Pacific white-sided dolphins?)
    Did you see the tiger shark?

    Have a pleasant journey home!
     
  7. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    They are commerson dolphin and I see them in the cylinder tank(I think they hold sunfish before?)in the 'dolphin fantasy'.Where do you see the tiger shark?I think I miss it.Also,the goblin shark you see is dead after like 17days
     
  8. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Anyway,today I visit my final destination.Ueno zoo.This zoo is full of animals I never see before,like aye-aye,dourocoli,pangolin and of course,aardvark.This zoo is sad though,with little space for the animals.I also miss the Japanese bird section and the bear section because I time is limited.
     
  9. devilfish

    devilfish Well-Known Member

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    Fantastic - I guess they're new then. Not the best exhibit for them though; how many were displayed? I think that might be the tank which previously held sunfish but when I visited it hosted an assortment of sharks, rays and thin shoals of fish.

    Apparently my goblin shark was dead within four days. I struggle to believe even that given how close to death it looked when I saw it (within an hour of going on display).

    The tiger shark was in the huge shark aquarium tank on the third floor (next biggest sharks in there were hammerheads). It would be a great shame if it didn't survive.
     
    Last edited: 21 Aug 2016
  10. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Yes,the commerson dolphin were in at June.there are 1.1of them.And I saw the tiger shark in the aquarium.
     
  11. devilfish

    devilfish Well-Known Member

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    Great! I'm glad he's still going strong! :)
     
  12. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Actually no tiger shark.What I think I saw is a sand tiger shark(Just found out they are two different thing)
     
  13. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Yokohama sea paradise species list
    *Note that this is not a full species list.
    Entering the aqua museum
    Yellow tang (Zebrasoma flavescens)
    Zone 1:Animals that returned to the sea[/COLOR]
    Southern rockhopper penguin(Eudyptes chrysocome)
    Grey seal (Halichoerus grypus)
    Sea otter (Enhydra lutris)

    Zone 2:popular arctic sea creature
    Polar bear(Ursus maritimus)
    Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus)
    King penguin(Aptenodytes patagonicus)
    Gentoo penguin(Pygoscelis papua)
    Magellanic penguin(Spheniscus magellanicus)
    Adelie penguin(Pygoscelis adeliae)

    Zone 3:A cloud of fish swimming in schools
    Sand tiger shark(Carcharias taurus)
    Japanese butterfly ray(Gymnura japonica)
    Japanese eagle ray(Myliobatis tobijei )
    Japanese pilchard (Sardinops sagax melanostictus)
    Pitted stingray(Dasyatis matsubarai)

    Zone 4 :The world of sea life
    Japanese spider crab(Macrocheira kaempferi)
    Japanese sea nettle(Chrysaora melanaster)
    Whitespotted conger(Conger myriaster)
    Longspine black urchin(Diadema setosum)
    Urchin clingfish(Diademichthys lineatus)
    Spotfin jawfish(Opistognathus robinsi)
    Balloon lumpfish(Eumicrotremus pacificus)
    Purple flying gurnard(Dactyloptena orientalis)
    Common octopus(Octopus vulgaris)
    Golden cuttlefish(Sepia esculenta)
    Flamboyant cuttlefish(Metasepia pfefferi)
    Japanese angelshark(Squatina japonica)
    Japanese wobbegong(Orectolobus japonicus)

    Zone 5:Beautiful "Flowers of the sea"
    Pitted stonefish(Erosa erosa)
    Warty frogfish(Antennarius maculatus)
    Painted frogfish(Antennarius pictus)
    Devil stinger(Inimicus japonicus)
    Spotted garden eel(Heteroconger hassi)
    Orange-barred garden eel(Gorgasia preclara)
    Electric eel(Electrophorus electricus)
    Archerfish(Toxotes)
    Shrimpfish(Aeoliscus strigatus)
    Ribbon eel(Rhinomuraena quaesita)
    Unknown sea cucumber(Synapta maculata??)
    Unknown knifefish?
    Giant isopod(Bathynomus)

    Zone 6:Origin of the Sea/River Life
    Green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas)
    Zebra shark(Stegostoma fasciatum)
    Horn-nosed boxfish(Ostracion rhinorhynchos)
    Alligator gar(Atractosteus spatula)
    Spotted gar(Lepisosteus oculatus)
    Longnose gar(Lepisosteus osseus)
    Capybara(Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris)
    Ruddy shelduck(Tadorna ferruginea)
    Mandarin duck (Aix galericulata)
    Red bellied piranha (Pygocentrus nattereri)
    Giant catfish(Pangasianodon gigas)
    Red tailed catfish(Phractocephalus hemioliopterus)
    Indian star tortoise(Geochelone elegans)

    Zone 7: Deep-seatrium
    Inshore hagfish(Eptatretus burgeri)
    Manetail snake eel(Ophichthus urolophus)
    Chambered nautilus(Nautilus pompilius)
    Giant isopod(Bathynomus giganteus)
    Oriental crocodilefish(Peristedion orientale)
    Rough snailfish(Careproctus trachysoma)
    Botan shrimp(Pandalus nipponensis)
    Spider crab(Pugettia kagoshimensis)
    Japanese short-nose spurdog(Squalus brevirostris)
    (Paramola japonica)

    Marine mammal show
    Beluga whale(Delphinapterus leucas)
    Walrus(Odobenus rosmarus)
    Bottlenose dolphin(Tursiops truncatus)
    Pacific white sided dolphin(Lagenorhynchus obliquidens)
    False killer whale(Pseudorca crassidens)
    Magellanic penguin( Spheniscus magellanicus)
    California sea lion(Zalophus californianus)
    Whale shark(Rhincodon typus)

    Dolphin fantasy
    Commerson's dolphin(Cephalorhynchus commersonii)
    Bottlenose dolphin(Tursiops truncatus)

    Fureal lagoon
    Short-finned pilot whale(Globicephala macrorhynchus)
    beluga whale(Delphinapterus leucas)
    bottlenose dolphin(Tursiops truncatus)
    african penguin(Spheniscus demersus)
    walrus(Odobenus rosmarus)
    spotted seal (Phoca largha)
    California sea lion(Zalophus californianus)
     
  14. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Tama Zoo species list
    *Not all species I saw,but all species the zoo list

    MAMMALS
    Gray wolf
    Przewalski's wild horse
    Domestic horse
    Chamois
    Golden takin
    Styan's red panda
    Snow leopard
    Pere david's deer
    Japanese serow
    Orangutan
    Whit-handed gibbon
    Amur tiger
    Masked palm civet
    Asian elephant
    Mouflon
    Himalayan tahr
    Whit fronted wallaby
    Wallaroo
    Tasmanian devil
    Sugar glider
    Common brush tail possum
    Woylie
    Koala
    Red kangaroo
    Reindeer
    Indian rhino
    Raccoon dog
    Chimpanzee
    Reticulated giraffe
    Scimitar-horned oryx
    Grevy's zebra
    African elephant
    Cheetah
    Serval
    African lion
    Japanese macaque
    Japanese giant flying squirrel
    Scarlet macaw
    Blue and yellow macaw
    Eurasian badger
    Oriental short clawed otter
    Ezo least shrew
    Japanese mole
    Long clawed shrew
    Japanese pipistrelle
    Small japanese field mouse
    Large japanese field mouse
    Smith's red-backed vole
    Harvest mouse
    Japanese weasel
    Japanese hare
    Guinea pig
    Goat
    Malayan tapir
    Japanese sika deer
    Japanese wild boar


    BIRDS
    Oriental white stork
    Emu
    Bar headed goose
    Golden eagle
    Common kestrel
    White tail sea eagle
    Snowu owl
    Barn owl
    Ural owl
    Scope owl
    Short ear owl
    Magpie goose
    Tawny frogmouth
    Turkey vulture
    Bateleur
    Stellar sea eagle
    Red crown crane
    White napped crane
    Black stork
    Cape teal
    Red billed pintail
    Pelican
    Ostrich
    Flamingo
    Chukar partridge
    Himalayan monal
    Palawan peacock pheasant
    Edward's pheasant
    Siberian white crane
    Little grebe
    Common shelduck
    Black-faced spoonbill
    Black-headed ibis
    Spot-billed duck
    Lapwing
    Oriental reed walbler
    Ruff
    Black-tailed godwit
    Dunlin
    Common kingfisher
    Pied avocet
    Cattle egret
    Mandarain duck
    Indian peafowl
    Black stork
    Black-necked crane
    Oriental white stork
    Siberian white crane
    Red crown crane
    Purple heron


    Reptiles
    Takydromus dorsalis
    Scincella boettgeri
    Burrowing ratsnake
    Japanese ratsnake


    Invertebrates(I'm being lazy so this is not full species list,but rather 80-90%)

    Giant water bug
    Diving beetle
    Leaf cutter ant
    Orchid mantis
    White spotted giant reduviid bug
    Meal worm
    Hercules beetle
    Flower beetle
    Bell crickets
    Two spotted cricket
    Megacrania alpheus
    Pachyrhynchus infernalis
    Phaulula daitoensis
    Riukiaria sp.
    Liocheles australasiae
    typopeltis crucifer
    Dolomedes yawatai
    Citrus swallowtail
    Tree nymph
    Great orange tip
    Blue glassy tiger
    Large mantis
    Migratory locust
    Ishigaki forest grasshopper
    Rice grasshopper
    Sipyloidea sipylus
    Lots of species of butterfly that I don't know
    Mexican leg fire
    Emperor scorpion
    Longlegged centipede
    Kamado cricket
    Conocephalus japonicus
    Meadow Katydid
    Rice cone-headed katydid
    Sesuji-tsuyumushi katydid
    Taiwan great katydid
    Ant lion
    Greenhouse camel cricket
    Panesthia angustipennis spadica
    Japanese rhinoceros beetle
    Burrower bug
    Anotogaster sieboldii
    Pyrocoelia atripennis


    Amphibians

    Japanese fire-bellied newt
    Montane brown frog
    Mountain brown frog

    Fish

    Japanese crucian carp
    Tamoroko
    Japanese barbel
    Japanese dace
    Pale chub
     
  15. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    About ueno zoo ,my parents only give me three hours to visit because they said,"Everybody said three hours is enough".They don't know that zoochatters is different from others,seriously,with aardvarks,armadillos,pangolin,ayeaye,fossa,echidna,slow loris,tarsier,shoebill,okapi,maned wolf....three hours is definitely not enough.Anyway,I have enough time to go to west garden and a little part of east garden.Fine.
     
  16. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Ueno Zoo species list
    *I just list where I went because I have not visit the whole zoo
    *Not what animals I see,but what the sign list

    Eastern gray kangaroo
    Red river hog
    Maned wolf
    Stellar's sea eagle
    Aardvark

    Cotton top tamarin
    Small japanese field mouse
    Large japanese field mouse
    Common marmoset
    Prevost's squirrel
    Japanese vole
    Striped grass mouse
    Cairo spiny mouse
    Pale jerbil
    Fat tailed jerbil
    Japanese dormouse
    Woodland dormouse
    Naked mole rat
    Dwarf mongoose
    Meerkat
    Pallas's cat
    Asian particoloured bat
    House musk shrew
    Southern three-banded armadillo
    Ryukyu flying fox
    North american porcupine
    Night monkey
    Six-banded armadillo
    Japanese giant flying squirrel
    Japanese dwarf flying squirrel
    Chinchilla
    Short-beak echidna
    Kinkajou
    Brush tail rat kangaroo
    Seba's short tail bat
    Four toed hedgehog
    Harvest mouse
    Pygmy's slow loris
    Spectral tarsier
    Lesser bushbabies
    Jackass penguin
    Greater flamingo

    Hartmann's mountain zebra
    Barbary sheep
    Pygmy hippo
    Hippo
    Eastern black rhino
    Okapi
    Shoebill
    Reticulated giraffe

    Ring tail lemur
    Black and white ruffed lemur
    Fossa
    Madagascar crested ibis
    Aye-aye
    Lesser hedgehog tenrec
    Madagascar hissing cockroach
    Grey gentle lemur
    Greater hedgehog tenrec
    Radiated tortoise

    Japanese giant salamander
    Saltwater crocodile
    Australian lungfish
    West african mud turtle
    Northern caiman lizard
    Chinese crocodile lizard
    West african dwarf crocodile
    Fly river turtle
    Asian arowana
    North australian snake necked turtle
    Yellow head monitor
    Rococo toad
    False tomato frog
    Green tree frog
    Bell's horned frog
    Oriental fire bellied frog
    Budgett's frog
    Mossy bug eyed frog
    Long-nosed horned frog
    Golden mantella
    Dyeing poison frog
    Spanish ribbed newt
    Mexico salamander
    Greater siren
    Three toed amphiuma
    Malayan gharial
    Sri lanka black turtle
    Malayan box turtle
    Emerald tree boa
    Galapagos tortoise
    Leaf nosed snake
    Leopard gecko
    Gila monster
    Beaded lizard
    Madagascar day gecko
    Tokay gecko
    California kingsnake
    Corn snake
    European glass lizard
    Tropical girdled lizard
    South american red footed tortoise
    South american yellow footed tortoise
    Green iguana
    Green anaconda
    Central beaded dragon
    Prehensile tailed skink
    Pacific boa
    Tokyo salamander
    Tohoku salamander
    Japanese black salamander
    Japanese clawed salamander
    Tokyo daruma pond frog
    Japanese fire-bellied newt
    Wrinkled frog
    Japanese brown frog
    Montane brown frog
    Kajika frog
    Forest green tree frog
    Eastern japanese common toad
    Schlegel's green tree frog
    Japanese tree frog
    Japanese mamushi
    Burrowing ratsnake
    Japanese keelback
    Japanese four-lined snake
    Japanese ratsnake
    Eastern japanese five-lined skink
    Japanese gecko
    Japanese grass lizard
    American bull frog
    Chinese softshell turtle
    Japanese pond turtle
    Reeve's pond turtle
    Okinawa tree lizard
    Yellow margined box turtle

    Red panda

    Polar bear
    Snowy owl
    Common seal
    Svalbard rock ptarmigan
    California sea lion

    Emu

    Japanese macaque

    Wattled crane
    Hamerkop
    Southern screamer
    Secretary bird
    Waltrop ibis
    Black neck crane

    Lesser mouse deer
    Chinese pangolin
    Leopard cat
    Leschenault rosette

    Great blue turaco
    Indian scope owl
    Brown hawk owl
    Toco toucan
    Japanese quail
    Citron created cockatoos
    Southern tamandua
    White spoonbill
    Blacksmith plover
    Ruddy kingfisher
    Ruff
    Common kingfisher
    Palaearctic oystercatcher
    Egyptian plover
    Striated heron
    Bald ibis
    Brown headed thrush
    Great slaty woodpecker
    Violet-backed starling
    Guinea turaco
    Greater blue-eared glossy starling
    Bearded barbet
    Spur-winged plover
    Violet turaco
    Elegant crested tinamou
    Golden breasted starling
    Bali mynah
    Blue-throated piping guan
    Crested wood partridge
    Red throated parrot finch
    Common waxbill
    Blue and white flycatcher
    Long tailed paradise whydah
    Nicobar pigeon
    Zebra finch
    Double-barred finch
    Star finch
    Triton cockatoo

    Asiatic lion
    Sumatran tiger
    White handed gibbon
    Western lowland gorilla
    Edward's pheasant
     
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  17. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Yokohama hakkeijima sea paradise is a big attraction although their mammals’ exhibit is fairly small. There are a lot of creature that are new for me. As a result, I spend a full five hours in the aquarium.

    Yokohama hakkeijima sea paradise is divided into four parts, Aqua museum, Dolphin Fantasy, Umi Farm, and Fureal Lagoon. As the time is not enough, I didn’t visit Umi Farm because there seems like not have animal exhibit. Just fishing and taking a boat ride. (Am I wrong,devilfish?)

    First building was the”Aqua museum” with eight different zones. After passing the Welcoming pool with yellow tang and orange spotted goby digging sand, we entered the first zone, Animals that returned to the sea. Three exhibits are here for southern rockhopper penguin, gray seal, and sea otter. The mammals’ exhibit is on the small side but they are very active because it is feeding time. I see the sea otter holding a fish in his hand and then eat it.

    Next zone is call Popular arctic sea creatures with polar bear, walruses, and penguins (They geography is very well).As usual, their mammals’ exhibit is on the small side too. The penguin exhibit is housing king, Gentoo, magellanic, and adelie and their exhibit is OK.

    The third zone, A cloud of fish swimming in schools, is a large tank which holds a bunch of Japanese sardine (at least thousands of them),sand tiger shark, and some types of ray. There is then an escalator tube that goes through the exhibit and takes us to the third floor.

    The fourth zone, the world of sea life started with a pool with crabs and mudskipper. After the Japanese spider crab tank, lots of jellyfish tanks was on the wall. Also on the wall, is lots of species that can be seen in the species list. Also there is a tank with red light holding moray eel. I miss the shark tank is also probably in here(jealous at devilfish).

    Then we enter the fifth zone, beautiful flowers of the sea. ”Nemo” and “Dory” are in here too. But for me, the highlights here are the stonefish and frogfish. In here, you can also look down to the mammals’ exhibit. As we walk towards the sunlight, a bunch of tank where the sign said weird fish. The electric eel tank is barren, a tank with nothing except an electric eel and water. Also there is archer fish, razorfish, and other weird fishy, one is still unidentified.

    Sunlight is here when we enter the sixth zone, named the seashore, river and marsh creatures. First tank is a clear tank that house green sea turtle and a bunch of fish. Then I exit the zone to see the show and the deep sea creature. The show is impressive, with beluga, pacific white side dolphin, bottlenose dolphin, walrus, false killer whale, California sea lion, magellanic penguin. Also swimming in the show tank is the main highlights, the whale shark. It is swimming anti clockwise near the surface.

    After the show, I went to seventh zone to see some deep sea creature. No goblin shark nor frilled shark ( but a model of them) I did see my first giant isopod. Also lots of deep sea creature on my species list. The exhibit is very cold that I need to wipe the glass to see them.
    Returning to the sixth zone, is a fairly tropical area holding river animals. Piranha, catfish and capybara are here. Then we exit the Aqua museum and went to the Fureal lagoon.

    Fureal lagoon is a place that you can get very close to the animals. Three tank holding beluga, short finned pilot whale, and bottlenose dolphin is the first we can touch. Sadly the animals didn’t swim close enough to touch but a touch one before so it is OK. The enclosure is small, though. Then we entered the friendly circle, which keeper will take an animals out(either sea lion or penguin) and we can touch them. This time was a penguin that is with feather. I touch it and it was featherish. Then is the flapper beach where you can see( but not touch) walrus, sea lion, spotted seal, and cape penguin. There is also a breathing hole type of thing that the seal swim up. At last is a place where you can touch sea star and sea cucumber.

    Seeing time is not enough, I skipped the Umi farm and go to Dolphin fantasy .Only two exhibit is there, one for bottlenose dolphin and one for commerson’s dolphin. The bottlenose dolphin tank is an arch-shaped pool that is a bit small for them. The commerson’s dolphin tank is a cylindrical tank that holds sunfish before. ( Commerson’s dolphin is rare in captivity, and only four aquarium have them, three are in Japan and these black and white dolphin are the panda of the sea)

    So that’s it, I go there in three o clock and leave at eight o clock. In conclusion, Yokohama hakkeijima sea paradise is a great aquarium, but the mammals enclosure there are a bit small.
     
  18. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Tama Zoo review part 1

    This review will be take into four or more parts.


    Sorry my last review being so bad. This review will be better.

    My next attraction is Tama Zoo. CGSwan did a great job on this zoo so check out his/her review.

    Tama Zoo is located on the countryside of Tokyo, with one and a half hour train from Tokyo center. I have read about this zoo, and thought that it will be very good. I even put it number one in Asian zoo in term of quality and quantity combined. (That’s why I don’t put zoorasia that high).

    Anyway, here is where it starts. After grabbing the zoo map (you guys can grab here to follow my review, although the map is not new and something changes), I took the bus up to the hill and when I go down the bus, I arrive at the przewalski’s horse exhibit. This exhibit is a bit small for like 10 horses, but not too small that they don’t have space to run around. Also, the sign also said lots about they are once extinct in the wild then introduced, and the conservation effect. It is quite nice. The next exhibit is for two domestic horses which are mainly for riding. After that and some Mongolia houses, we reached the gray wolf exhibit. This exhibit is very good, with lots of foliage for them to hide, a big water pool, and you can see the horses on the other side. It is also quite large for three wolves (I don’t know if there are more) When the time I went there, they are sleeping in the shade which I’m quite lucky to see them. (In the bushes will be very hard to see) It is really a great first impression. Walking a little bit, we see a chamois. The exhibit is steep and it is built upon a mountain and in the bottom, a shelter. Only one chamois is in there, so the space needing is smaller and this exhibit fit. And then we arrive the takin exhibit. The takin themselves, are very big and there are six to seven individual there. The exhibit is quite small and don’t have much hill. Not the best exhibit. Then there is the highlight for everyone except me, red panda. Styan’s exactly. The exhibit is lush and green, providing many climbing opportunities. I didn’t see them outdoors, locked, but the indoors (half indoors) are great too. Snow leopard is up next. The exhibit back is some rock cliff that they can hide and climb up. I didn’t see the snow leopard though.
    Walking to the orangutan exhibit, I see the orangutan skywalk. I didn’t see they climb, they only open at 11:30, but I did see clip about them. The exhibit also has a lot of climbing facilities. Not much tree though but lots of grass. The white handed gibbon exhibit is full of trees and the cage itself provides more climbing opportunities. The amur tiger exhibit is divided into two parts, one for male and one for females, I guess? One of the exhibit is good, but the another are a meh.

    Walking past the amur tiger, I go on a staircase and see a special species.Stay tune,part 2 will be post later.
     
  19. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    All right guys, I'm back in business!The review will be post this week.Stay tune!
     
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  20. aardvark250

    aardvark250 Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Part 2


    Walking up the stairs, we arrive at the Australian section. The first exhibit is well, the special animal that tama zoo recently got. Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii). Their exhibit is quite large, with 1.1 specimens. The animals are inactive and are sleeping inside their small house. The exhibit is quite lush and green, and there is something for them to play with. Also three houses for them to shade and they can also go to their indoor exhibit (not open). As tassie are one of my reasons to go here, there is a bit of disappointment but seeing their great exhibit, it is true that this is one of my favorite exhibit in here.




    Climbing up a bit of slope, we reached the kookaburra exhibit. Nothing special, just two bird cage that you will find in ordinary zoo. Not big, not small, not full of plants but no so barren. The only special thing is that the view behind it is quite good. With nothing ahead, we went back down to the wallaby exhibit.

    Turning round the corner, I didn’t see the map-said yellow-footed rock-wallaby, but rather a mixed exhibit for white fronted wallaby(I supposed they mean parma wallaby(Macropus parma)?), magpie goose (Anseranas semipalmata) and wallaroo(Macropus robustus).

    Not similar to the tassie exhibit, the exhibit has very less grass, with a pond for magpie goose, and almost everywhere else is sand. The exhibit is also not large enough for many specimens as they didn’t have lots of space for jumping.Not a great exhibit indeed.

    Turning around the corner again, we arrived at the koala house. There are still some animals except koala(Phascolarctos cinereus) in the koala house, they are(in order of exhibit), Sugar glider(Petaurus breviceps), Tawny frogmouth(Podargus strigoides), common brush tail possum(Trichosurus vulpecula), and woylie(Bettongia ogilbyi). (Didn’t seen the last two),Their exhibit is fairly simple, quite the same as you see in a nocturnal house. Two small tree, sand and leaves in the ground, some string for climbing, and that’s it. For two sugar glider, that is ok but for a tawny frogmouth? Doesn’t seem too good.

    And then we entered the koala exhibit. A bunch of sticks sticking together, some leaves and four koalas in a concrete room. That’s basically it. It is feeding time so they are more active, moving and eating, climbing around instead of sleeping.


    And that’s it for the Australian zone.Hope you guys like it.
     
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