Zoo Conservation Success Stories
Zoo conservation success stories often come in the form of birth announcements. Breeding in captivity can be challenging, especially when animals are transported to and from zoological societies to maintain biodiversity. This year, a rare armadillo was born in Minnesota; a giant panda had a cub at the San Diego Zoo; a collared lemur, tree kangaroo and an African lion were all born in the Bronx Zoo; a wombat was born in Brookfield, Illinois; a giraffe was born in Denver; vultures, an elephant and a gerenuk were born at Disney’s Animal Kingdom; Houston welcomed a giraffe, a porcupine and a rare sifaka; the Lincoln Park Zoo hatched a penguin; two rare snow cloud leopards were birthed at the Washington DC Zoological facility; Oregon got a new elephant baby; the San Francisco facility got a new gorilla and the Atlanta facility received a new panda; San Diego’s Wild Animal Park got a cheetah, an Indian rhino and three Sumatran tigers.
The AZA has many zoo conservation programs underway. In 2007, they announced some of their greatest success stories. For instance, the Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle nests are being protected along the Mexican Gulf Coast, with hundreds being added each year. Grevy’s zebras are being conserved in Kenya, thanks to the work of a Saint Louis Zoo. The Great White Shark is being preserved at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, where the animal exhibit hopes to change the public’s perception of these infamous trophy creatures. Butterfly monitoring in Florida, marmots at the Toronto Zoo and bald eagles in San Francisco are all successful programs underway.
Anne Warner, zoo conservation manager at the Oregon Zoo, said their $6.8 million “Predators of the Serengeti animal exhibit hopes to draw more attention to the plight of the cheetah, African lion and painted dog. She explains, “Visitors have to understand why it’s important to help — why support conservation?” At the artistic, innovative exhibit, guests will come nose-to-nose with lions, a caracal, African wild dogs and rock pythons that appear as though they’re lounging at a wildlife sanctuary, rather than a zoo. Careful landscaping, heated dens and waterfalls all make the animals’ realm more comfortable, as visitors are invited to imagine a world without these magnificent animals.
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