Friday, August 12, 2011

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The Zoo is currently (2008) undergoing a renovation project aimed at replacing cages with enclosures which recreate animals' natural environments, giving a better lifestyle to the animals, and a more realistic experience to visitors.[16][17] In 2005 the "African Bird Safari"[18] and "Meet The Monkeys"[19] walkthroughs opened and in 2006 "Into Africa"[20] and "Butterfly Paradise"[21]exhibits opened, while in Easter 2007 the Duke of Edinburgh officially opened the new "Gorilla Kingdom"[22] and "Clore Rainforest Lookout" a walkthrough rainforest replacing the small mammals building.[23] During Easter 2008 the Bird House reopened as a tropical rainforest called the "Blackburn Pavilion".[24]

The Children's Zoo closed in September 2008, and was replaced by the "Animal Adventure" in April 2009.[25]


Group↓Number of species↓Number of animals↓
Mammals77310
Birds113548
Reptiles77309
Amphibians23197
Fish2135458
Invertebrates2528272
Total75515104

[edit]African Bird Safari

The African Bird Safari opened in Easter 2005 as a redevelopment of the Stork and Ostrich House, replacing three out-of-date enclosures.[18]It is built around a walk-through design 51 metres (167 ft) long and 10 metres (33 ft) high,[18] incorporating a bridge over a stream and high trees.[26]

Species on display include Abdim's stork, superb starlings, Madagascar teals, Von der Decken's hornbills, lilac-breasted roller and blue-bellied roller.[2][18][27]

[edit]Animal Adventure

A new exhibit to ZSL London Zoo which on opening featured animals such as aardvarks, prairie dogs, red pandas, coatis, yellow mongooses, meerkats and porcupines. This is on the site of the former Children's Zoo and includes much of the structure of this earlier facility. Red pandas have since been removed from the collection.

[edit]Aquarium

Aquarium
A copperband butterflyfish in the coral reef hall

There has been an aquarium at the Zoo since 1853 and was the first aquarium to be established in the world.[11] The word 'aquarium' also originates at London Zoo, beforehand the term for a fish enclosure was 'Aquatic Vivarium'.[11] The current aquarium was built in 1921 beneath the Mappin Terraces as the public demand to see the fish increased. In April 1924 King George V with his wifeQueen Mary opened the aquarium.

The exhibit is separated into three halls, each home to different types of fish:[28]

  1. The first hall contains species involved in various conservation projects, such as captive-breeding programmes and other ZSL-based initiatives. These include species such as rudd,European eels, pink sea fans, spiny starfish and seahorses.
  2. The second hall is a coral reef habitat with tropical species from across the globe, includingcopperband butterflyfish and clownfish.[2]
  3. The third hall contains Amazon fish including electric eels, glass knifefish, lungfish andstingray.

The aquarium also includes the Big Fish Tank which holds fish rescued from private homes that had insufficient equipment to look after the fish. This includes catfish, tucunare, tambaqui and pirapitinga.[29] The breeding room is also visible to the public.[28]

[edit]Blackburn Pavilion

The Blackburn Pavilion opened to the public on 21 March 2008 as a revamp of the old Bird House.[24] The Victorian building was originally built in 1883 as a Reptile House using funds raised from the sale of Jumbo the elephant to Barnum's Circus. The exhibit is named after the Blackburn family, who provided support to the Zoo during the early 1990s when the Zoo was faced with closure.[24]

Recreating both rainforest and cloud forest environments the pavilion holds more than 50 different species of bird including toucans, starlings,kookaburras, lovebirds, and hummingbirds. The exhibit also contains several species in danger of extinction, or are already extinct in the wild, such as the socorro dove.[24]

Outside the Pavilion is a remarkable clock, installed as part of the refurbishment, which gives an bird-themed display every half hour during the day.

[edit]B.U.G.S

B.U.G.S (Biodiversity Underpinning Global Survival), formerly Web of Life, aims to educate the public on biodiversity itself.[30] Displaying over 140 species, including leaf-cutter ants, Mexican redknee tarantulas, flamboyant flower beetles, anteaters and Malaysian giant stick insects.[30][31] Since 98% of all known animal life are invertebrates the majority of the species on display are also invertebrates.[30]

The building is environmentally friendly, constructed from materials requiring little energy to produce, and generating its heating from visitors' and animals' body heat.[30]

B.U.G.S is also home to ZSLs Invertebrate Conservation Unit, a facility for the breeding of invertebrates.[30]

[edit]Butterfly Paradise

An atlas moth in Butterfly Paradise

The Butterfly Paradise exhibit, launched in May 2006, holds butterfly and moth species from several major regions, including Africa, Southeast Asia, and Central & South America.[21] The species of both fauna and flora have been selected to complement each, with the plants having to provide nectar and breeding areas for the animals.[32]

Species on display include clipper butterfly, great eggfly butterfly, zebra longwing and postman butterfly.[2]

Like much of the Zoo the exhibit aims to educate the public on conservation projects, such as species recovery programmes, habitat protection initiatives and climate change issues.[21]Alongside the free-flying exhibit there is a pupae breeding room allowing the public to see the development of new butterflies.[33]

Animal Adventure Previously the Ambika Paul Children’s Zoo was based on two sections, the Pet Care Centre and the Paddock. Both provide a hands-on experience aimed at children.[34] At the ZSL AGM in June 2008, it was announced that the Children's Zoo would close in September 2008 to be replaced by an 'Animal Adventure' which was opened by the Society's president on the 2 April 2009. Animal exhibits include Red Pandas, yellow Mongoose, Prairie Dogs, Aardvarks, and an enlarged Coati enclosure.[35]

[edit]Clore Rainforest Lookout

The Clore Rainforest Lookout was opened by Dame Vivien Duffield in May 2007.[22][36] The Lookout replaces the Charles Clore Pavilion for Mammals, which was built in 1967, with the aid of the Clore Duffield Foundation.[37]

The exhibit recreates the South American rainforest and provides canopy and forest floor levels for the public to wander through.[37] Species on display include two-toed sloths, a Southern tamandua, agoutis, silvery marmosets, golden-headed lion tamarins, Goeldi’s monkeys,Geoffroy’s marmosets, pottos, pygmy slow loris, slender loris, emperor tamarins and gentle lemurs.[2][37]

Nightzone, a darkened section, provides an insight into nocturnal rainforest life. This area includes Rodrigues fruit bats, long-nosed potoroos,emperor scorpions and Malagasy giant jumping rats. Recently, London Zoo got a pair of slender lorises who have had their first baby. The happy trio can now be seen in the Nightzone near the back of the part with the Rodrigues fruit bat.[38]

[edit]Giants of the Galapagos

New exhibit to ZSL London Zoo with the Galapagos Tortoise. Dirk, Dolly and Dolores

[edit]Gorilla Kingdom

The late Bobby, a western lowland gorilla, on the island

Gorilla Kingdom is a 6,000-square-metre (65,000 sq ft) exhibit which opened in Easter 2007.[39] It is a 5.3-million pound development that took 18 months to build,[40] was officially opened by HRH Duke of Edinburgh on 29 March 2007, and opened to the public on 30 March 2007.[22]

It replaces old monkey enclosures with a giant moated island and indoor gym that is home to a group of western lowland gorillas.[41] There are currently five gorillas in the enclosure:Kesho, a 12-year-old male, Zaire, a 36-year-old female, Effie, a 14-year-old female and Mjukuu, a 12-year-old female who gave birth on October 26th 2010 to an as yet unnamed healthy male, the first gorilla birth at the zoo since 1988, (given a temporary name 'Tiny')[42] brought in from Chessington.[43][44]The area also holds black-and-white colobus monkeys.[22]

The exhibit is also home to white-naped mangabeys[disambiguation needed], Nile Monitors, a variety of bird species and Diana monkey.[45]

The exhibit was inspired by a conservation project that is managed by ZSL in Gabon.[46][47] It has been planted with plants and herbs that the gorillas can eat while the island itself represents a natural forest clearing in the Central African rainforest.

Visitors to the exhibit learn about the plight of western lowland gorillas in the wild and conservation of rainforests, while being separated from the animals on the island by a moat or a floor to ceiling window.

Bongo Junior, a male silverback known as 'Bobby' to visitors, was found dead on the morning of 5 December 2008 by a keeper. He was one of the most popular animals at the Zoo.[48]

[edit]Into Africa

Into Africa opened on 1 April 2006,[49] and features a high level viewing platform to bring the public face-to-face with the giraffes.[20] Zebras were reintroduced to the Zoo after an 8-year absence, joining the Rothschild giraffe in the main enclosure.[50]

After a survey found that 95% of visitors preferred enclosures without bars the decision was made to use glass windows instead, to bring the public closer to the animals and gain a more intimate experience.[20]

African hunting dogs can be observed through periscopes and observation pods while other species include warthog, okapi and Chapman's zebras.[20][50] In 2009 red river hogs were removed from their enclosure.

[edit]Komodo Dragons

Raja, the male Komodo dragon

The Komodo Dragon enclosure, opened on 12 July 2004 by Sir David Attenborough,[51] mimics a dry river bed with a curving 20-metre (66 ft) glass wall.[52] There is one adult dragon, Raja, and two babies.[53] TheKomodo dragons were introduced as part of the European Conservation Breeding Programme.[51][54]

[edit]Mappin Terraces

When the Mappin Terraces opened in 1913,[55] it was the first time that members of the public could see animals in an arctic environment.[55][56] In the past it has been home to Polar bears, Ibex and other mountain creatures.

The Mappin Terraces is currently displaying an Australian outback display, home to wallabies and emus and the possibility of expansion in the future.[citation needed]

[edit]Meet The Monkeys

Meet The Monkeys is a 1,500-square-metre (16,000 sq ft) enclosure which was opened on 21 March 2005 by Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt, of The Mighty Boosh.[19][57] The exhibit is open, with no roof, and no boundaries between the public and animals.[58] Designed to recreate the Bolivian Rainforest, it holds black-capped squirrel monkeys which are part of the European Conservation Breeding Programme.[59]

The Zoos outer boundary had to be increased to accommodate the new enclosure, encroaching into Regent's Park to the south-east.[59][60]

[edit]Outback

A New London Zoo exhibit located near the Aquarium. It includes wallabies and emus.

[edit]Reptile House

The Reptile House opened in 1927 and was designed by Joan Beauchamp Procter and Sir Edward Guy Dawber.[55] Visitors may notice Reptiles and other animals carved by George Alexander[disambiguation needed] on the front of the building.[55]

It is currently home to various reptiles including lizards, tortoises, crocodiles and snakes, adjacent to the house is the Komodo Dragon house (see above).

[edit]Round House

Designed by Lubetkin - The Round House opened in 1933, it was first built to accommodate a pair of gorillas, since it has been home toorangutans, macaques, binturong, koalas and a breeding colony of chimpanzees.

The Round House features a unique mechanism which allows the enclosure to rotate to allow the visitors to either view the inside or outside enclosure, for example if the gorillas were outside the guests would view them from the inside quarters vice versa. Since apes left the building the device has not been used for several years.

In 2002 a pair of aye ayes moved into the inside area from Jersey Zoo on breeding loan and since the outside area has been used to hold a male group of ring-tailed lemurs.

[edit]Snowdon Aviary

The Snowdon Aviary

The Snowdon Aviary was designed by Antony Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of Snowdon, Cedric Priceand Frank Newby, and built in 1964.[55] Arnold Burton was the engineer.

Over the years a variety of birds have been kept in the aviary from birds of prey to waterfowl. The current birds in the aviary include green peafowl, sacred ibis, little egrets, cattle egrets, night herons, waldrapp, ducks, pigeons and African grey-headed gulls.[61]

[edit]Zoo World

Built around the Casson Pavilion, originally the old Elephant and Rhino House,[62] Zoo World is now home to bearded pigs, African Porcupines, bactrian camels and also provides a winter home for the pygmy hippos.[63] Previously this house was a temporary home to monkeys and birds while the Clore Rainforest Lookout and Blackburn Pavilion was built.

Inside the house displays inform visitors about the zoo and its various conservation programs.[62]

[edit]Others

There are many other animals that are not part of a specific exhibit, these include; gibbons, vultures, tigers, lions, servals, parrots, spider monkeys, penguins (Rockhoppers and Blackfooted), meerkats, otters, lemurs, aye-ayes and Malayan tapirs.

[edit]Future developments

Currently the old Parrot house (built 1869) is being demolished to make way for a new penguin pool; the new exhibit is due to open in the summer of 2011 and will have increased viewing area as well as 'underwater windows' to allow visitors to see the birds swimming.

In February 2011, ZSL London Zoo launched its new Tiger S.O.S programme in which it is hoped to raise funds to help save the Sumatran Tiger. The zoo will not only use these funds in extending its three signature projects in Indonesia but build a new Tiger Conservation HQ at the zoo, plus a new exhibit where the tigers can be seen.

These new developments are all part of the new master plan to create better accessibility, which involves relocating the main entrance to the east, adjacent to the Broad Walk in Regent's Park.[64]

[edit]Notable animals

The only photograph of a living quaggawas taken at London Zoo in 1870.

Throughout its history the Zoo has had many well-known residents. These may have been scientifically important individuals or simply beloved by the public.

The Zoo was home to the only living quagga ever to be photographed, before the species becameextinct in the wild due to hunting in southern Africa in about 1870. Another now extinct species the Zoo held was a number of thylacines, or marsupial wolves.[65]

The first hippopotamus to be seen in Europe since the Roman Empire, and the first in England since prehistoric times, arrived at London Zoo in May 1850 as a gift from the Ottoman Viceroy of Egypt in exchange for some greyhounds and deerhounds. The hippo was named Obaysch and led to a doubling of the Zoo's visitors that year.[66]

In 1865, Jumbo, the largest elephant known at the time, was transferred to the Zoo from Jardin des Plantes in Paris. His name, possibly from Jambo, swahili for hello, became an epithet for anything of large size, such as Boeing's 747 Jumbo jet. He unfortunately became aggressive in old age, and had to stop giving rides; he was sold toPhineas Barnum's circus, the Barnum & Bailey Circus, in 1882, where he was later crushed by a locomotive and killed.[67]

Winnipeg bear (or Winnie) was an American black bear given to the Zoo in 1914 by a Canadian Lieutenant, Harry Colebourn. A. A. Milnevisited with his son Christopher Robin, and the boy was so enamoured with the bear Milne wrote the famous series of books for him entitledWinnie-the-Pooh.[65] A 2004 film A Bear Named Winnie is based on the story of Winnie the bear, with Michael Fassbender playing Harry Colebourn.[68]

A bronze statue of Guy commemorates him in Barclay Court.

Guy, a western lowland gorilla, arrived at the Zoo on Guy Fawkes Night (hence the name) 1947 from Paris Zoo, and lived at the Zoo until his death in 1978. Over his 32-year life he became one of the Zoo's best-loved residents.[69] After years of trying to find a mate, in 1969 five-year-old Lomie arrived from Chessington Zoo. They were kept separated for a year to adjust to each other, until they were finally united. Although they got on well together they never produced any offspring.[69]In 1982 Guy was commemorated by a bronze statue, sculptured by William Timyn, in the Zoos Barclay Court.[69]

On 27 November 1949 Brumas became the first polar bear to be successfully bred at the Zoo, and immediately became a major attraction with the public. This led to the Zoo's annual attendance to rise to over 3 million in 1950 - a figure that has yet to be topped. Although a female, the press reported that she was a 'he' and this was not corrected at the time, leading the public to believe the bear was a male.[65] Eighteen years later, on 1 December 1967 the second polar bear bred at the Zoo, this time a male, was born. He was named Pipaluk (Inuit for little one) but, in 1985, had to leave the Zoo when the Mappin Terraces closed.

The Zoo's first giant panda, Chi Chi, arrived in 1958. Although originally destined for an American zoo, Washington had ceased all trade withcommunist China and so Chi Chi was refused entry to the United States. In the interests of conservation, ZSL had stated they would not encourage the collection of wild pandas. However, when it was pointed out that Chi Chi had already been collected, her purchase was approved, and she immediately become the star attraction at London Zoo. As the only giant panda in the west she was the inspiration ofPeter Scott's design for the World Wildlife Fund logo. In July 1972, Chi Chi died and was publicly mourned.[13] The Zoo's last giant panda was Ming Ming. She arrived in 1991 on a breeding loan from China. After unsuccessful breeding attempts with Berlin's Zoo giant panda Bao Bao it had been decided to return Ming Ming to China, leaving the London Zoo without a giant panda since the end of October 1994.

For four days in late August 2005, the Zoo ran an exhibit entitled the Human Zoo, which put eight humans on display in the Mappin Terraces. The idea behind the exhibit was the demonstrate the basic nature of man as an animal and examine the impact we have on the animal kingdom.[70][71]

Today the Zoo holds the only population of humming birds in the United Kingdom in the Blackburn Pavilion.[72]

[edit]Architecture

Penguin Pool, a Grade I listed building

Since its earliest days, the zoo has prided itself on appointing leading architects to design its buildings, today it holds two Grade I, and eight Grade II listed structures.[73]

The initial grounds were laid out in 1828 by Decimus Burton, the Zoo's first official architect from 1826 to 1841, made famous for his work on the Coliseum Theatre and Marble Arch.[13] Burton's work began with the Clock Tower in 1828 above what was then the llama house, which today is the first aid kiosk.[73] In 1830 the East Tunnel, which linked the north and south parts of the zoo together for the first time, was completed, which also acted as a bomb shelter during World War II.[55] Burton concluded his work in 1837 with the Giraffe House, which, due to its functional design, still remains in use as the Zoo's giraffe enclosure in the Into Africa exhibit.[55]

After Burton, Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell and John James Joass were appointed to design the Mappin Terraces. Completed in 1914, the Mappin Terraces imitates a mountain landscape to provide a naturalistic habitat for bears and other mountain wildlife. In 1933 the Round House, designed by Berthold Lubetkin's Tecton Architectural Group to house gorillas, was one of the first modernist style buildings to be built in Britain. The following year the Penguin Pool, also designed by Tecton, was opened; both are now grade I listed.[74]

The Snowdon Aviary, built in 1964 by Cedric Price, Lord Snowdon and Frank Newby, made pioneering use of aluminium and tension for support. A year later the Casson Pavilion, designed by Sir Hugh Casson and Neville Conder, was opened as an elephant and rhinoceros house.[55]

[edit]Filming

Harry Potter with a Burmese python in the Reptile House

Many films and television programmes have made use of London Zoo as a film set.[75]

In 2000,[76] the Burmese python scene from the 2001 film Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was filmed at the Zoo's Reptile House. In the film the inhabitant of the tank is a Burmese python, however in reality it is home to a black mamba. A plaque beside the enclosure commemorates the event.[77]

A couple of scenes were filmed here for the ITV series Primeval. The first was a confrontation between Helen Cutter and Claudia Brown in the old elephant house. The second was a brief scene that showed Abby Maitland with a Komodo Dragon. Although the fictional Wellington Zoo played a large role in the episode, most scenes were filmed at Whipsnade Zoo.[75]

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