Safari park
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A safari park is a zoo-like commercial tourist attraction where visitors can drive in their own vehicles and observe the wildlife, rather than viewing animals in cages or small enclosures. The main attraction is large animals from Sub-Saharan Africa such as giraffes, lions, rhinoceros, elephants, zebras and antelopes.
A safari park, while larger than a zoo, is usually a very small area compared to game reserves in Africa. For example, African Lion Safari near Cambridge, Ontario, Canada is 750 acres, or 3 square kilometers. For comparison, Lake Nakuru in the Rift Valley, is 168 square kilometers, and a typical large game reserve is Tsavo East, also in Kenya, which encompasses 11,747 square kilometers.
Safari parks often have other associated tourist attractions: golf courses, carnival rides, miniature trains, and gift shops.
The first drive-through safari park outside of Africa opened in 1966 at Longleat in Wiltshire, England. The former Windsor Safari Park was located in Berkshire, England, but closed in 1992 and has since been made into a Legoland.
[edit] See also
- Knowsley Safari Park
- Longleat Safari Park
- Woburn Safari Park
- West Midlands Safari Park
- Blair Drummond Safari Park
- African Lion Safari
- Wildlife Safari
- SimSafari: a computer came simulating the management of a safari park
Zoo • Public aquarium • Aviary • Menagerie • Tourist attraction
List of zoos • List of aquaria • List of zoo associations
Animals in captivity • Environmental enrichment • Endangered species • Conservation biology • Biodiversity • Endangered species • Extinction • Ex-situ conservation • In-situ conservation • Wildlife conservation • Zoology