Whipsnade Zoo

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ZSL Whipsnade Zoo

Main entrance to Whipsnade Zoo
Date opened 1931
Location Whipsnade, near Dunstable, England
Coordinates 51°50′59″N 000°32′39″W / 51.84972°N 0.54417°W / 51.84972; -0.54417 (ZSL Whipsnade Zoo)Coordinates: 51°50′59″N 000°32′39″W / 51.84972°N 0.54417°W / 51.84972; -0.54417 (ZSL Whipsnade Zoo)
Land area 600 acres (2.4 km2)[1]
Number of animals 2,741 (2012)[2]
Number of species 193 (2012)[2]
Memberships BIAZA,[3] EAZA,[4] WAZA[5]
Major exhibits Lions of the Serengeti, In with the Lemurs
Website www.zsl.org/zsl-whipsnade-zoo

ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, formerly known as Whipsnade Wild Animal Park, is a zoo and safari park located at Whipsnade, near Dunstable in Bedfordshire, England. It is one of two zoos (the other being ZSL London Zoo in Regent's Park, London) that are owned by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), a charity devoted to the worldwide conservation of animals and their habitats.

Description

Whipsnade hill figure seen from Ivinghoe Beacon

The park covers 600 acres (2.4 km2), and can be located from miles to the north and from the air because of the Whipsnade White Lion, a large hill figure carved into the side of the Dunstable Downs (part of the Chiltern Hills) below the White Rhino enclosure.

Due to its size, inside the park, visitors may walk, use the zoo's bus service, or drive their own cars between the various animal enclosures, or through an 'Asian' area where some animals are allowed to roam free. There is also a narrow gauge train service, the 2 ft 6 in (762 mm) Great Whipsnade Railway, also known as the "Jumbo Express".

ZSL Whipsnade Zoo is one of Europe's largest wildlife conservation parks. It is home to 2,955 animals, many of which are endangered in the wild. The majority of the animals are kept within sizeable enclosures; others, such as peacocks, South American maras, and Australian wallabies, roam freely around the park.

History

Eurasian brown bear at the zoo
Early years

The Zoological Society of London was founded in 1826 by Sir Stamford Raffles with the aim of promoting the worldwide conservation of animals and their habitats. To this end ZSL London Zoo in Regents Park, London was established.

Almost 100 years later, Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell (ZSL Secretary 1903-1935) was inspired by a visit to the Bronx Zoological Park to create a park in Britain as a conservation centre.[6]

Hall Farm, a derelict farm on the Dunstable Downs, 30 mi (48 km) to the north of London was purchased by the Zoological Society of London in 1926 for £480 12s 10d. The site was fenced, roads built and trees planted.

The first animals arrived at the park in 1928, including two Lady Amherst's pheasants, a golden pheasant, and five red junglefowl. Others soon followed including muntjac, llama, wombats and skunks.

Whipsnade Park Zoo opened on Sunday 23 May 1931. It was the first open zoo in Europe to be easily accessible to the visiting public. It was an immediate success and received over 38,000 visitors on the following Monday. The brown bear enclosure is a surviving feature from the earliest days of the zoo.[7]

The collection of animals was boosted in 1932 by the purchase of a collection from a defunct travelling menagerie and some of the larger animals walked to the zoo from Dunstable station.

The distinctive white lion hill figure was completed in 1933.

World War II

During the Second World War the zoo acted as a refuge for animals evacuated from the Regents Park London Zoo. The celebrity giant pandas Ming, Sung and Tang were among these animals but were soon returned to London to boost morale in the capital. During 1940, 41 bombs fell on the park with little damage to the zoo structure; a 3 year old giraffe named Boxer, which had been born at the zoo, was frightened to death by the explosions. Some of the ponds in the park are the remains of bomb craters from this period.

Recent developments

In 1996, a new elephant house and paddock was opened to replace the architecturally outstanding but cramped original elephant house designed by Lubetkin and Tecton in 1935. The old house remains at the zoo as a Grade II listed building and its associated enclosure contains the zoo's lemurs.

In the early 2000s the zoo added new exhibits including Lions of the Serengeti in 2005, a walk-through lemur enclosure in 2007 (officially opened on 28 March 2007 by Dominic Byrne from The Chris Moyles Show on Radio 1, who is a regular visitor to the park), the Rhinos of Nepal exhibit in February 2007, Cheetah Rock on Easter 2008, a sloth bear exhibit in May 2008, and Wild Wild Whipsnade in May 2009. In July 2008, the Cafe on the Lake was reopened after remodelling, with its name changed to the Wild Bite Cafe.

In May 2009, William Windsor (known as Billy), a goat mascot of the British Army's Royal Welsh regiment, retired to the Zoo after eight years' distinguished service performing ceremonial duties.[8]

Exhibits

A ring-tailed lemur.

Passage through Asia

Passage through Asia is a large paddock with no boundaries between visitors and the animals. Visitors can only access the area by driving through it in their own cars or riding on the Jumbo Express train. The paddock houses herds of Bactrian camels, hog deer, yak, chital and Père David's deer.

Lions of the Serengeti

Opened in 2005, Lions of the Serengeti is home to a pride of African lions. They include a male named Spike, two females named Mashaka-Lia and Kachanga, three younger males named Kato, Toto and Neo, and a younger female named Kia. The four younger lions are the offspring of Spike and Mashaka-Lia, and were born in April 2006.[9]

Sea lion Splash

A sea lion performing in Sea Lion Splash.

Sea Lion Splash is a daily demonstration in which the zoo's three trained California sea lions (two females named Bailey and Lyra, and a male named Dom) perform tricks and stunts in their pool (referred to as the 'Splash Zone'). The group also includes an older female named Salt, who no longer performs in the demonstration.[10]

Elephant herd

Five elephants walking in a row across a field. Each elephant is holding the tail of the one in front with its trunk. The second and fourth are young while the others are adults. They are being escorted by several handlers.
Elephants being led around ZSL Whipsnade Zoo

Whipsnade Zoo keeps a herd of nine Asian elephants. Their paddock is seven acres, and features three pools, mud wallows and dust baths. One of the female elephants, named Karishma, and her pregnancy with her first calf George, featured heavily in the first series of the ITV documentary programme The Zoo, which follows the daily lives of the staff at both Whipsnade and London Zoo.

Rhinos of Nepal

Opened in February 2008, Rhinos of Nepal houses a group of greater one-horned rhinoceros. The building aims to be environmentally friendly, using rain water captured on the roof to fill the pools, heating the pools with solar energy and featuring barriers that are made from recycled wooden railway sleepers instead of metal bars.

Birds of the World

A daily educational show in which keepers present various bird species demonstrating their natural abilities to an audience of visitors. Birds used in the show include blue and yellow macaws, European eagle owl, Harris hawks, toco toucan, bald eagle, and hyacinth macaws.

Discovery Centre

An indoor exhibit that houses several different types of smaller, exotic animals. These include Pygmy marmosets, leafcutter ants, praying mantises, Lake Malawi cichlids, salmon-pink bird-eating spiders, locusts, Burmese pythons, plumed basilisks, West African dwarf crocodiles, Yemen chameleons, green tree pythons, and poison dart frogs.

Cheetah Rock

A cheetah at Cheetah Rock.

Opened in 2008, this exhibit is home to a group of cheetahs, and features displays that inform visitors about ZSL's cheetah conservation project in Tanzania.

Children's Farm

An area aimed primarily at children and housing domesticated livestock such as turkeys, llamas, alpacas, cows, silkie chickens, horses, donkeys, and goats, most of which are free-roaming. The Children's Farm is also home to a female Bennett's wallaby named Pip, who was abandoned by her mother and hand-reared by keepers.

Wild Wild Whipsnade

Wild Wild Whipsnade was opened in 2010. This exhibit is home to several species of animal that lived in the wild in Britain hundreds of years ago. These include European brown bears, wolverines, European lynx, reindeer, wild boar, grey wolves, moose, and European bison.

Other animals

Other species in the Zoo's collection that are not part of a themed exhibit include Oriental small-clawed otters, red pandas, gemsbok, sloth bears, meerkats, ostriches, reticulated giraffes, Southern white rhinoceros, onager, Przewalski's wild horses, common chimpanzees, Egrets, Caribbean flamingos, rockhopper penguins, Grevy's zebra, bongo, roan antelope, common hippopotamus, scimitar-horned oryx and ring-tailed lemurs.

Daily shows

Animal demonstrations and include 'Sea lion splash' and 'Birds of the world'.

A number of talks also take place daily throughout the summer season including lemur talks, giraffe browse and penguin feed.

Funding

The park and ZSL receive no government funding, and rely mainly on entrance fees, memberships, its 'Fellows' and 'Patrons' scheme and various corporate sponsorships. The park takes advantage of the Gift Aid charity donation scheme.

Filming at the zoo

Whipsnade was one of the sets for ITV's Primeval, where a ferocious predator from the future kills a lion and three people.

Whipsnade is also one of the locations featured in BBC's Super Vets.

Whipsnade featured in an episode of the popular CBBC programme Brum in 1991, titled "Safari Park".

Jamie Oliver and Sainsbury's have also used the zoo's background for a television advert.

The BBC's Merlin used parts of Whipsnade as a filming location for Season 1, and the famous lion landmark is featured in Behind The Scenes footage from the DVDs.

The zoo also served as one of the tasks for BBC Three's Young, Dumb and Living Off Mum.

Criticism

In 2002, a 20 year old elephant named Anna died three days after giving birth to a stillborn calf. There was an allegation that the elephant suffered painful and unnecessary surgery during the birth. The zoo asserted Anna's death was due to an infection related to the still birth and did not "die in agony".[11]

Chimpanzee escape

In September 2007, two former 'tea party' chimpanzees named Koko and Jonnie, moved from London Zoo to make way for The Gorilla Kingdom, escaped from their enclosure.[12] Koko followed one of the keepers back to the enclosure but Jonnie started heading towards public grounds. Jonnie was shot dead by the zoo's specially trained firearms squad for fears about public safety. The zoo has said that at no point were any members of the public in danger. When asked why they did not use a tranquillizer instead, ZSL spokeswoman Alice Henchley said "It's just standard procedure, if the animal cannot be quickly and safely recaptured it will be shot. We can't be sure with a tranquillizer".[13][14]

Notes

  1. "Corporate hospitality". zsl.org. ZSL. Retrieved 2008-03-19. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Animal Inventory". zsl.org. ZSL. 2012-01-01. Retrieved 2012-11-10. 
  3. "BIAZA Zoos and Aquariums". biaza.org.uk. BIAZA. Retrieved 24 April 2012. 
  4. "EAZA Member Zoos & Aquariums". eaza.net. EAZA. Retrieved 24 April 2012. 
  5. "Zoos and Aquariums of the World". waza.org. WAZA. Retrieved 24 April 2012. 
  6. L. Pendar, op. cit., page 15.
  7. Lookout Cafe History panels #1
  8. "Royal Welsh regimental goat retires". The British Army News. Retrieved 2009-05-21. 
  9. http://www.zsl.org/zsl-whipsnade-zoo/exhibits/lions-of-the-serengeti/meet-our-lions,642,AR.html
  10. http://www.zsl.org/zsl-whipsnade-zoo/exhibits/sealions/
  11. "Death at Whipsnade". Captive Animals' Protection Society (CAPS). November 2002. Retrieved 2007-10-01. 
  12. "Keepers shoot escaped chimpanzee". BBC News. 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-10-01. 
  13. Chimp Shot Dead After Zoo Escape in UK By Raphael G. Satter, Associated Press, October 1, 2007 , Retrieved October 2007
  14. "Whipsnade Zoo Shoots Chimp Dead". Captive Animals' Protection Society (CAPS). October 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-01. 

References

  • A set of panels outlining the history of the zoo is located in the Lookout Cafe in the park.

External links

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