Hello Again,
Today was yet another eventful today, I spent the day at the zoo and I moved ! I spent many hours exploring the grounds of the park and seeing the most amazing exhibits and wonderful animals and I feel exceptionally privileged to have had the opportunity even to have visited it, let alone to be able to get involved and work here. I've had a request for more pictures so brace yourself for what is about to follow!
First up, the birds...I'll label what I can but to be honest some of them I just don't remember.
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Euphonia |
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Red-Tailed Laughingthrush |
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Turaco |
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Meller's Duck |
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Sunda Wrinkled Hornbill |
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Red Breasted Goose - these are evil btw...beware! |
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Northern Bald Ibis |
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Echo Parakeet |
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White-Naped Crane |
From there we'll go to the bats. Durrell has set up a really fantastic bat tunnel from recycled materials with a separate bat "hospital" where those which can't fly or are recovering from injury can be separated from the dominant males and don't have so far to fall etc. They have around 40 Livingstone Fruit Bats and around 15 or so Rodrigues Fruit Bats, both of which are highly endangered. They're absolutely adorable and are basically like teddy bears with wings :)
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The Bat Cave |
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Rodrigues Bats are smaller and brown |
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Livingstone Bats are large and black
Now onto...Macacques. But to get there we go past this really pretty lookout where you can see back down into where the stream ( see previous post) pools to form a reed bed for the Flamingoes. |
So these are Sulawesi Black Crested Macacques and when I got there they were inside enjoying their lunch...
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Baby Monkey... |
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seeing him try and climb up there was actually the cutest thing ever...
Macacques lead onto Eva the Maned Wolf. I was super excited to see her as it was quite hot when I was there and I didn't expect her to be out but there she was...
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Next stop...the woods ! In the centre of the park is a large open woodland where the Silvery Gibbons and the Emperor Tamarins can live a relatively free range existence. They still have dens they can come back to in the night or if it's cold but for the most part they live the closest thing to a "wild" life that I can imagine in a zoo.
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If you go down to the woods today... |
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Emperor Tamarin |
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Can you spot the tamarin...
Continuing on our journey we get to the Gorillas !!!! |
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Badongo the Silverback and successor to Ya Kwanza |
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It's very tiring being a Gorilla... |
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Gorillas typically live in harems, in this case there are 4 females and one silverback |
This will seem random but then we cut through the Discovery Desert and we have meercats ( see previous post) and this is a baby Giant Galapagos Tortoise. It's about the same size at the moment as a regular tortoise but in about 150 years or so it'll grow to about 4ft large !
Nearing the end now we get to the Madagascar section. As some of you may know the Durrell trust, and indeed the Durrell family, have been heavily involved in work in Madagascar for the past 30 years or so and have many in situ conservation programs there as well as many animals at the zoo itself. Gerald Durrell became almost infatuated with the country and as such the Kirindy Forest (Madagascar) section of the zoo is quite large. Here we have Alaotran Gentle Lemurs, Ring-tailed Lemurs, Aye-Aye's, Ruffed Lemurs, Madagascan Jumping Rats, Madagascan Pochard ducks, Red-Fronted Brown Lemurs and more...
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Alaotran Gentle Lemur |
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Ring-tailed Lemurs |
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AyeAye !! Apologies for the shot but they'e nocturnal and there's no flash so it was dead hard trying to get this...if you don't know much about the Aye Aye I would recommend looking it up or even youtube-ing Stephen Fry's documentary with them as they're fascinating creatures with a very bad rep! They're about the size of a cat with a large brush tail like a foxes (see above) teddy bear ears and large, round eyes. Their main feature are their fingers which are very long and bony, particularly the middle digit, and they use them for digging out nectar and fruit etc. this means that they walk on the heels of their palms as otherwise their long fingers would get in the way. |
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The mysterious shadow of the Aye-Aye, I just put this in because it really shows of the body shape of the animal - very large ears and a large tail - actually they're a bit like the demented cousin of a Vulpix ( which for the uninitiated is a Pokemon) |
Last but certainly not least we get to some of my favourites, Wolfie and Barbara, the Andean bears. They're very old, very slow and very sweet and I just adore them :)
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Wolfgang, the male, is in good condition - largely due to the fact that he steals most of Barbie's food - and is quite large. |
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Barbara - top right - is much smaller than Wolfie and her fur is a bit scrappy - but given how old she is she's doing pretty well. |
So that's the end of the tour for now but do bear in mind ( heh heh) that this is only about half of the animals at the zoo ( you're probably noticing a dearth of reptiles/amphibians!) and I simply did not have the chance or the time to see and photograph everything today. So as far as the zoo is concerned I'll leave it there for now but stay tuned for more details of the migration :)
xx
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