Marwell Wildlife
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Address |
Colden Common, Winchester, Hampshire, S021 1JH
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Telephone |
01962 777407 |
How to
Find it: |
Six miles south-east of Winchester with easy access from M3 and M27 |
Open: |
Open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (4 p.m. in winter) |
Prices: |
Please refer to web site
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Area: |
Ha Acres 100 |
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No of Species |
No of Animals |
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Star
Rating |
Mammals |
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Conservation |
** * * |
Birds |
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Enclosures |
** * |
Reptiles |
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Education |
** * |
Amphibians |
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Recreation |
** * |
Fish |
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Research |
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Total |
0 |
0 |
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Click here for a Link to the Zoo’s own Web Pages
Write a
review of this zoo This critique last updated:
Apr 2009
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Official Description Marwell is a world class zoo which plays a vital role in the international effort to conserve endangered species. Education is at the forefront and the zoo has its own education service and Conservation Education Centre. The zoo (100 acres) has a setting of great natural beauty with large paddocks and enclosures for its animals. There are over 200 species of rare animals. Notable species include: Siberian Tigers, Snow Leopards, Rhino, Meerkat, Hippo and Zebra. Marwell is dedicated to the conservation of endangered species and has had significant success with Siberian Tigers, Dama Gazelle, Nyala, Somali Wild Ass, White Rhino, Cheetah, Przewalski’s Horses, Scimitar-horned Oryx, Grevy’s Zebra among many others. Marwell now has a presence in Africa in the shape of the Marwell Zimbabwe Trust and runs a field station at Dambari which specialises in the breeding and study of duiker and black rhino. Enjoy the World of Lemurs, Encounter Village, Tropical World, Penguin World with underwater views of Humboldt Penguins and new enclosure for Fossa. Opened this year by HRH The Princess Royal is Into Africa, a new complex for giraffe, primates, gazelles and hyrax. Marwell has its own Zoological Society with over 9,000 members and a junior branch called the Oryx Club. There are road and rail trains, special events, Creature Close-ups, family restaurant, gift shops and adventure playgrounds. Marwell provides a fascinating and enjoyable day out for all ages.
Visitor Reviews Review by Dan Thorne, August 2005 I recently visited Marwell zoo, and i was very impressed. They have a huge range of hoofed animals, including zebra, oryx, giraffe, okapi and many species of antelope all in large enclosures without bars. They have animals sharing large open fields like the rhinos and kudus share an enclosure, and seem to get along happily! Big cats are represented well at Marwell, you can see Tigers, cheetahs, leopards and smaller big cats like the serval, ocelots and sand cats. Best of all though are the snow leopards, they have just been moved into a new enclosure called roof of the world, which has a waterfall and rocky outcrop and is a brilliant home for them. They have loads of primates as well. They have very rare golden lion tamarins and many other types of tamarins. They have lots of monkeys like the black and white colobus monkeys, diana monkeys, white faced saki monkeys, macaques and siamangs. Don't miss lemur world, where you walk through glass tunnels, with ring tailed lemurs on one side and ruffed lemurs on the other, they also have mouse lemurs which you can see in the nocturnal house. They have many types of birds and reptiles as well. The restaurant was reasonably priced and had many options of what to eat, also the gift shop was well stocked with souvenirs. I think Marwell has to be one of the best zoos in England and well worth the visit. Review posted by Andrew Waddington, Sept 2000 Being 100 acres in size, I would expect something special from Marwell, and visitors certainly shouldn't be dissapointed. Whether you're a zoo fan looking for rare species, or looking for a great family day out, Marwell is THE place to visit! This is certainly a zoo which takes conservation seriously, and it shows. The animal collection is large and diverse, with something for every animal lover to get excited about. Big cats are always popular, and you can see Siberian tigers, Persians leopards and cheetahs, as well as an impressive black jaguar. Probably best of all are the Snow leopards, housed in an enclosure with an attractive rocky backdrop. They have bred here many times in the past. Close by are the Golden lion tamarins, kept on an island where they look beautiful. There is a group of rhinos, and a good childrens farm, Encounter Village, where camel rides are often on offer! Red pandas here have two separate enclosures, both with a large tree which the adorable little pandas take full advantage of, meaning that trying to spot them can be half the fun! Plenty of space is given over to herd animals, including zebras, oryx and okapis. Be sure not to miss the World of Lemurs, where these lovable animals are seen from a glass tunnel. Look out for the dwarf lemurs here, an animal rarely seen in zoos. Next door another strange animal from Madagascar can be seen: the fossa, which is something like a cross between a puma and a giant weasel! A very recent developement is the giraffe house, which has been rebuilt to house other, smaller African animals as well as the giraffes. Finally, the impressive Penguin World really has to be seen to be believed, its HUGE! Treetops Restaurant, and the well stocked gift shop are well worth a look, and there is a railway, and a free road train to enjoy too. But be warned……this is a big zoo, and some will find the walk round tiring. So, if you've never been to Marwell, I suggest you go. If you have, well, there's bound to be something new to see………! Andrew Waddington.
GoodZoos.com Reviews The village of Colden Commmon, seven miles from Winchester, is the sort of place that bareely merits inclusion in the map books, but when you find your way there to Marwell Zoological Park you will be very well rewarded. Here is what writer Anthony Smith wrote about Marwell in his book 'Animals on View': “Marwell is a tonic. It can restore faith in those who are wondering whether animals should ever be kept captive for ur satisfaction. It shows that conservation need not be just a platitude … but a guideline for policy and endeavour.” To those who know Marwell Zoo, it is indeed a tonic; and yet it is one of Britain's newest zoos. Like so many of the best conservation zoos, it owesits existence to a man of vision, an animal lover who came from outside the zoo community without too much luggage ofpreconceived ideas. John Knowles was a successful poultry breeder, and when he started Marwell Zoo, brough with him a valuable insight into animal genetics. He was a stoic and determined man, with a passion for the greatopportunity presented to mankind through an understanding of genetics: to manage small populations of endangered animals, away from the depredations thatother humans are wreaking upon the remaining wilderness. His animal keepers will tell you how, when he started the zoo in 1972, he used to drive a Rolls Royce. But this was speedily sold to pay fro the zoo's foundation group of Grevy's zebra. 'Zoos are a wonderful way to lose money,' he has said. And yet no one who ever met him could ever imagine him doing anything else. Perhaps this is one reason why the zoo and its work became so quickly well known within the international community of zoos. In March 1978 the ownership of Marwell in its entirety was passed to a registered charity, the Marwell Preservation Trust. 'As a pilosophical point', Knowlse once said, 'I do not feel comfortable with the concept of an individual owning an endangered species. Knowles greatest passion were a small group of antelope – the hippotraginae – betterknown as oryx. This group includes some of the rarest and most endangered animals on earth: the Arabian oryx (once extinct in the wild), the gemsbok, the beisa oryx, the addax, and the animal that is still the symbol of Marwell Zoo – the scimitar-horned oryx. This is a striking ivory white animal with sandstone-red flanks 'and magnificent long sweeping horns. Not long after the herd was established at Marwell, itbecame clearthat the wild population was in grave danger. The small population in Chad was threatened by the civil war, and no other individuals had been spotted for some years. Marwell was perhaps the first zoo to identify the threat, and was swift to act. The herd they established in the 1970s bred so well that their descendants have now been sent to other zoos in Britain, Australia, and New Zealand and have also been introduced into the wild in a specially gazetted reserve in Tunisia. Marwell Zoo occupies a wide swathe of rolling pastureland surrounded by dense woodland, and the zoo seems in places like a large clearing in the woods. The walk around the zoo is not at all demanding, covering a winding figure eight. Anyone who expects a traditional zoo with the usual compulsory collection of species may be disappointed by Marwell. There are no elephants here, no penguins, no sealions; for this is a zoo that specialiases in keeping rare and endangered species, and there is just not room enough -or money enough – to keep anything just because it happens to be popular. Many of Marwell's animals may seem unfamiliar at first: the kulan (or Turkmenian wild ass), Malayan tapirs, Przewalski's horses, okapi, sitatunga, barasingha, vicugna and pudu. These are not animals we learn about at nursery school, they do not advertise petrol, and they rarely (if ever) feature in anyone's list of favourite animals. Yet they are beautiful, rare, and precious creatures – and here at Marwell you will see them in plenty. While many zoos, especially older ones, pride themselves on their buildings, Marwell curiously seems to have few buildings to speak of. Of course there are buildings – but they are all neat, wooden, unobtrusive, and functional. There are no grandiose architectural designs here, very little brick or concrete, very few iron railings or bars. This is a zoo of wire fences, open fields, and wooden stables. The idea is a challenging one, and i does seem to illustrate something fundamental about this zoo. While other zoos are planning grand new buildings – Marwell is planning its animal management programme. The one building that does dominate the park is Marwell Hall, a Tudor mansion that sits at the centre of the estate looking down across the scimitar horned oryx herd, the showpiece of the zoo. The gardens of the hall are now home to a variety of smaller animals. Most estate zoos are pleasant places to walk around. After all, the reason they became country estates in the firstplace was because they were beautiful places to live. Marwell is no exception. The landscape is green and tranquil, and the animals seem somehow to belong here. Perhaps that is a side effect of the low profile buildings – the zoo doesn't look as if it has been engineered to look after its occupants. The scale is always human, comfortable, non threatening. And there always seems to be something new around every corner. Itis hard to avoid the feeling at Marwell thatthis zoo represents exactly what all zoos should be , need to be, if all our platitudes about conserving wildlife are ever to be anything more than hot air. It proves that conservation zoos need not be dull, they can be exciting, attractive, entertaining places. Marwell, like Jersey, like Howletts and PortLympne, represents a whole rethinking of European zoos. Its influence will last for a very long time Please note: The Star ratings can only be awarded by a Good Zoo Guide Official Visit. You can request one by email to [email protected]
Species List COMMON NAME SCIENTIFIC NAME EEP GROUP 01.01.04 ARRIVED BORN NEO-NATAL DEATH DEATH DEPARTED GROUP 31.12.04 INVERTEBRATES African Land Snail Achatina marginata Colony Colony Honey Bee Apis mellifera 2 hives 2 hives 0.0.0 Leaf Cutting Ant Atta cephalotes Colony Colony ↓ Macleays Spectre Stick Insect Extatosoma tiaratum 0.0.31 19 0.0.12 Thorny Stick Insect Eurycanthus horridum Colony 0.0.35 Giant Cockroach Cromphadorina portentosa Colony Colony ↓ Imperial Scorpion Pandinus imperator 0.1.1 13 1.1.13 Goliath Bird-eating Spider Theraphosa leblondi 0.1.0 1 0.0.0 Red-kneed Tarantula Brachypelma smithii 0.1.0 0.1.0
TOTAL Invertebrates: 63 + 3 colonies TOTAL Invertebrate species: 7 0.3.32 13 20 1.1.60
VERTEBRATES FISH Tinfoil Barb Barbodes schwanenfeldii 0.0.6 1 0.0.5 Pink-tailed Shark Leptobarbus hoevenii 0.0.2 0.0.2 Silver Hatchetfish Thoracocharax stellatus 0.0.2 0.0.2 Cardinal Tetra Paracheirodon axelrodi 0.0.21 6 0.0.15 Pacu Myleus pacu 0.0.4 0.0.4 Red Piranha Pygocentrus nattereri 0.0.17 0.0.17 Giraffe-nosed catfish Auchenoglanis occidentalis 0.0.1 0.0.1 Redtail Catfish Phractocephalus hemioliopterus 0.0.3 0.0.3 Panda Catfish Corydoras panda 0.0.2 0.0.2 Schwartz's Catfish Corydoras schwartzi 0.0.2 2 0.0.0 Plecostomus Hypostomus 0.0.4 0.0.4 Green Terror Cichlid Aequidens rivulatus 1.1.0 2 0.0.0 Cockatoo Dwarf Cichlid Apistogramma cacatuoides 1.0.0 1 0.0.0 Tiger Oscar Astronotus ocellatus 0.0.1 0.0.1 Giant Gourami Osphronemus goramy 0.0.1 0.0.1
TOTAL Fish: 57 TOTAL Fish species: 12 2.1.66 12 0.0.57
AMPHIBIANS Anura Green-and-black Poison Dart Frog Dendrobates auratus 0.0.20 11 0.0.31 Blue Poison Dart Frog Dendrobates azureus 0.0.7 2 0.0.5 Yellow-banded Poison Dart Frog Dendrobates leucomelas 0.0.15 5 0.0.10 Dyeing Poison Arrow Frog Dendrobates tinctorius 0.0.1 1 0.0.0 Red-eyed Tree Frog Agalychnis callidryas 0.0.0 3 1 0.0.2 Betsileo Mantella Mantella betsileo 0.0.2 2 0.0.0 Green-backed Golden Frog Mantella expectata 1.2.0 1 1.1.0 African Clawed Frog Xenopus laevis 4.5.0 1 4.4.0 TOTAL Amphibians: 58 TOTAL Amphibian species: 7 5.7.44 3 11 12 5.5.48
REPTILES Testudines South American Red-footed Tortoise Geochelone carbonaria 1.1.0 9 2 1.1.7 Northern Leopard Tortoise Geochelone pardalis babcocki 3.3.0 3.3.0 Asia Minor Spur-thighed Tortoise Testudo graeca ibera 7.3.2 4 0.0.8 Hermann's Tortoise Testudo hermanni 7.14.49 28 7.13.22 Crocodylia West African Dwarf Crocodile Osteolaemus tetraspis tetraspis 1.0.0 1 0.0.0 Squamata Inland Bearded Dragon Pogona vitticeps 4.0.0 2 2.0.0 Sahara Spiny-tailed Lizard Uromastyx geyri 4.4.0 4 0.0.4 Spiny-tailed Lizard Uromastyx ornata 0.0.2 1 0.0.1 Chameleon Chamaeleo 0.0.5 5 0.0.0 Flapneck Chameleon Chamaeleo dilepis 0.0.0 4 3 0.1.0 Leopard Gecko Eublepharus macularius 0.11.0 1 0.10.0 Flat-tailed Day Gecko Phelsuma laticauda 1.0.0 1 0.0.0 Madagascar Giant Day Gecko Phelsuma madagascariensis grandis 1.1.0 1 1.0.0 Guichenot's Giant Gecko Rhacodactylus ciliatus 0.0.0 5 4 0.1.0 Green Anole Anolis carolinensis 0.0.0 5 1 0.0.4 Monitor Lizard Varanus gouldii 1.1.0 1.1.0 Boa Constrictor Boa constrictor 1.1.0 27 25 1.1.2 Red-tailed Boa Boa constrictor ortoni 1.0.0 0.1.0* Brazilian Rainbow Boa Epicrates cenchria cenchria 0.2.0 1 0.1.0 Carpet Python Morelia spilota 1.0.0 1.0.0 Green Tree Python Morelia viridis 0.1.0 0.1.0 Royal Python Python regius 0.0.9 1 5 6 0.1.8 Cornsnake Elaphe guttata guttata 7.3.0 2 6.2.0 Bullsnake Pituophis catenifer sayi 0.2.0 0.2.0 TOTAL Reptiles: 118 TOTAL Reptile species: 21 40.47.67 24 32 67 25 23.39.56
BIRDS Struthioniformes Ostrich Struthio camelus 3.1.0 7 3 3 2 1 1.3.4 Rheiformes Greater Rhea Rhea americana 2.6.0* 3 1 2.5.3 Sphenisciformes Humboldt Penguin Spheniscus humboldti 7.7.9 4 7 4 1 9.20.0 Ciconiiformes Little Egret Egretta garzetta 0.0.3 3 3.0.3 Black-crowned Night Heron Nycticorax nycticorax 5.1.1 5.1.1 Hamerkop Scopus umbretta 0.2.0 1 1.2.0 Marabou Stork Leptoptilos crumeniferus 1.0.0 1.0.0 Waldrapp Ibis Geronticus eremita 2.4.2 1 1 1.4.3 Sacred Ibis Threskiornis aethiopicus 3.3.1 1 3.3.2 African Spoonbill Platalea alba 1.2.0 1 1.1.0 American Flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber 9.8.5 9.8.5 Anseriformes Greylag Goose Anser anser 0.0.43 2 0.0.41 Black Swan Cygnus atratus 4.1.0 2 1 2.0.0 Fulvous Whistling Duck Dendrocygna bicolor 10.3.0* 5 11.7.0 White-faced Whistling Duck Dendrocygna viduata 1.2.0 1.2.0 Mandarin Duck Aix galericulata 2.1.0 10 8.1.4 North American Wood Duck Aix sponsa 0.0.0 11 2 2.0.7 Bahama Pintail Anas bahamensis bahamensis 0.0.0 20 0.0.20 Madagascar Teal Anas bernieri 3.1.0 9 8 2 1.1.1 Laysan Teal Anas platyrhynchos laysanensis 0.0.0 4 0.0.4 Ringed Teal Callonetta leucophrys 1.0.0 6 1 6.0.0 Greater Magellan Goose Chloephaga picta leucoptera 1.0.1 1 2.1.0 Red-crested Pochard Netta rufina 1.5.0 5 1 5.5.0 European Eider Somateria mollissima mollissima 7.4.0 5 2 1 1 5.7.0 Falconiformes Secretary Bird Sagittarius serpentarius 1.1.0 1.1.0 Galliformes Mexican Wild Turkey Meleagris gallopavo gallopavo 2.0.0 2.0.0 Chinese Painted Quail Excalfactoria chinensis 0.0.44 2 0.0.42 Grey Junglefowl Gallus sonneratii 2.2.0 2 4 5 2.3.0 Helmeted Guineafowl Numida meleagris 0.0.45 58 1 38 0.0.64 Gruiformes Stanley Crane Anthropoides paradisea 1.2.0 1.2.0 Demoiselle Crane Anthropoides virgo 1.2.0 1 2 1 2.2.1 Sarus Crane Grus antigone 2.2.0 2.2.0 Red-Crowned Crane Grus japonensis 1.2.0 1 1.1.0 East African Crowned Crane Balearica regulorum gibbericeps 4.2.0 3 1 5.3.0 Psittaciformes Black-cheeked Lovebird Agapornis nigrigenis 0.0.61 18 6 2 3 36 0.0.44 Peach-faced Lovebird Agapornis roseicollis 0.0.18 7 0.0.25 Blue-crowned Conure Aratinga acuticaudata 2.0.0 5 4.2.1 Red-masked Conure Aratinga erythrogenys 1.1.0 1 2 0.1.0 Sun Conure Aratinga solstitialis 4.4.0 1 1 1 3 3.1.0 Slender-billed Conure Enicognathus leptorhynchus 1.6.2 3 1 1 2.6.2 Strigiformes White-faced Scops Owl Otus leucotis 1.1.0 1 0.1.0 Spectacled Owl Pulsatrix perspicillata 2.0.0 1 1 1.1.0 Great Grey Owl Strix nebulosa lapponica 1.1.0 1 1 1.1.0 Ural Owl Strix uralensis 1.1.0 1.1.0 Coraciiformes Laughing Kookaburra Dacelo novaeguineae 1.1.0 3 2.3.0 Blue-bellied Roller Coracias cyanogaster 0.0.0 2 1 1.0.0 African Ground Hornbill Bucorvus leadbeateri 0.0.0 1 0.1.0 TOTAL Birds: 490 TOTAL Bird species: 47 6 91.79.235 105 120 22 34 84 110.103.277
MAMMALS MARSUPIALIA Dasyuromorphia Kowari Dasycercus byrnei 3.4.0 2 2.3.0 Diprotodontia Western Grey Kangaroo Macropus fuliginosus 3.5.1 3 1 4.7.0 Parma Wallaby Macropus parma 6.12.0 5 3 6.16.0 Bennett's Wallaby Macropus rufogriseus rufogriseus 5.13.0 2 6 4.10.0 PLANCENTALIA Scandentia Northern Tree Shrew Tupaia belangeri 4.4.0 8 4 6 1.1.4 Burmese Tree Shrew Tupaia belangeri belangeri 5.3.0 1 4 3 0.1.1 Macroscelidea Short-eared Elephant Shrew Macroscelides proboscideus 2.2.0 1 2 2 4 0.1.0 Chiroptera Rodriguez Fruitbat Pteropus rodricensis 0.10.0 2 0.8.0 Seba's Short-tailed Bat Carollia perspicillata 0.0.20 2 0.0.18 Primates Coquerel's Mouse Lemur Microcebus coquereli 2.2.0 1 2.1.0 Alaotran Gentle Lemur Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis 2.1.0 2.1.0 Ring-tailed Lemur Lemur catta 3.8.0 4 5.10.0 Red Ruffed Lemur Varecia variegata rubra 10.1.1 10.2.0* Black-and-white Ruffed Lemur Varecia variegata variegata 3.2.0 1 3.2.1 Goeldi's Monkey Callimico goeldii 1.1.0 1 1 1.1.0 White-fronted Marmoset Callithrix geoffroyi 2.1.0 1 2 1.1.0 Pygmy Marmoset Callithrix pygmaea 1.1.0 2 2.2.0 Golden-headed Tamarin Leontopithecus chrysomelas 2.2.2 2 1 2.3.2 Golden Lion Tamarin Leontopithecus rosalia 1.3.0 2 1.5.0 Red-mantled Tamarin Saguinus fuscicollis illigeri 1.0.0 1.0.0 Emperor Tamarin Saguinus imperator subgrisescens 6.8.4 4 1 4 6.11.0 Cotton-top Tamarin Saguinus oedipus 2.2.2 2 3.3.2 Grey-legged Douroucouli Aotus lemurinus griseimembra 1.1.0 1 1 1 2.1.0 Common Squirrel Monkey Saimiri sciureus 0.0.0 3 1.2.0 Bolivian Squirrel Monkey Saimiri boliviensis boliviensis 0.0.0 1 1 2 0.0.0 White-faced Saki Pithecia pithecia 2.2.0 2.2.0 Diana Monkey Cercopithecus diana diana 1.1.0 2 1 1 1.1.0 Sulawesi Crested Macaque Macaca nigra 6.9.0 6 1.8.0 Western Black-and-white Colobus Colobus polykomos polykomos 1.2.0 1 1.3.0 Siamang Gibbon Hylobates syndactylus 3.3.0 3.3.0 Rodentia Pallas (Red-bellied) Squirrel Callosciurus erythraeus 2.6.0 4 2.2.0 Prevost's Squirrel Callosciurus prevostii 2.2.0* 4 2 2.4.0 Siberian Chipmunk Tamias sibiricus 0.5.0 1 0.4.0 Steppe Lemming Lagurus lagurus 7.12.3 33 28 4.11.12 Mouse-like Hamster Calomyscus mystax 1.1.0 1.1.0 Roborovski's Dwarf Hamster Phodopus roborovskii 0.0.1 1 0.0.0 Pouched Mouse Saccostomus campestris 1.0.0 1 0.0.0 Pallid Gerbil Gerbillus perpallidus 4.4.0 3 3.2.0 Fat-tailed Duprasi Pachyuromys duprasi 1.1.0 2 0.0.0 Bushy-tailed Jird Sekeetamys calurus 1.1.0 1 1.0.0 Arabian Spiny Mouse Acomys cahirinus dimidiatus 1.5.0 2 1.3.0 Turkish Spiny Mouse Acomys cilicicus 0.1.0 1 0.0.0 Striped Grass Mouse Lemniscomys barbarus 2.1.2 4 2 4 2.2.3 African Swamp Rat Malacomys edwardsi 1.2.0 3 0.0.0 Eurasian Harvest Mouse Micromys minutus 5.2.2 8 2 0.0.0 Madagascar Giant Jumping Rat Hypogeomys antimena 4.5.0 4 2 1 5.4.1 Domestic Rat Rattus norvegicus 6.6.0 16 6 14.8.0 African Dormouse Graphiurus murinus 24.34.13 18 18 22.30.19 African Crested Porcupine Hystrix africaeaustralis # 2.2.0 5 2 3.2.2 Crested Porcupine Hystrix cristata 0.1.0 0.1.0 Cavy Cavia aperea 1.7.0 7 2 5 3.4.1 Guinea Pig Cavia porcellus 0.0.37 19 1 0.17.0 Mara Dolichotis patagonum 6.11.3 20 13 9 3.13.2 Capybara Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris 1.1.0 1 4 1 3.3.0 Agouti Dasyprocta punctata 2.1.0 1 1.1.0 Degu Octodon degus 0.5.0 2 2.5.0 Carnivora Bat-eared Fox Otocyon megalotis 2.2.0 2 1 2.3.0 Red Panda Ailurus fulgens fulgens 2.2.0 2.2.0 Ring-tailed Coati Nasua nasua 1.8.0 2 1 0.6.0 Domestic Ferret Mustela putorius furo 5.2.0 2 4.1.0 Fossa Cryptoprocta ferox 1.1.0 1.1.0 Cusimanse Crossarchus obscurus 1.1.0 1.1.0 Yellow Mongoose Cynictis penicillata 2.1.0 2 2 1 2.4.0 Dwarf Mongoose Helogale parvula 3.3.0 1 3.2.0 Slender-tailed Meerkat Suricata suricatta 5.3.0 2 16 16 1 2 4.3.0 Cheetah Acinonyx jubatus 1.2.0 2 3 1.1.0 Caracal Lynx Caracal caracal caracal 1.1.0 1.1.0 Arabian Sand Cat Felis margarita harrisoni 4.0.0 4.0.0 Ocelot Leopardus pardalis 1.1.0 1 1.2.0 Serval Leptailurus serval 3.1.0 3.1.0 Jaguar Panthera onca 2.1.0 3 0.0.0 Amur Leopard Panthera pardus orientalis 1.0.0 1 1 1.1.1 Persian Leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor 0.1.0 0.1.0 Amur Tiger Panthera tigris altaica 2.1.0 4 5.2.0 Snow Leopard Uncia uncia 1.2.0 1.2.0 Hyracoidea Rock Hyrax Procavia capensis 4.4.0 1 2 2.5.0 Perissodactyla Somali Wild Ass Equus asinus somalicus # 5.2.0 2 2 5.2.0 Chapman's Zebra Equus burchellii chapmanni 3.5.0 1 2 1 5.5.0 Exmoor Pony Equus caballus caballus exmoor 0.2.0 0.2.0 Przewalski's Wild Horse Equus caballus przewalskii # 4.5.0 3 1.5.0 Grevy's Zebra Equus grevyi 3.14.0 1 4 6 2.14.0 Hartmann's Mountain Zebra Equus zebra hartmannae 1.5.0 2 0.4.0 Malayan Tapir Tapirus indicus 1.2.0 1 1.1.0 Southern White Rhinoceros Ceratotherium simum simum 2.2.0 2.2.0 Artiodactyla Babirusa Babyrousa babyrussa 1.1.0 1 2.1.0 Warthog Phacochoerus africanus 1.3.0 3 3 1.3.0 Collared Peccary Pecari tajacu 4.14.0 13 13 3 4.11.0 Pygmy Hippopotamus Hexaprotodon liberiensis 1.2.0 1.2.0 Bactrian Camel Camelus bactrianus 1.2.0 1 1.1.0 Llama Lama glama 1.2.0 1 1.3.0 Vicugna Vicugna vicugna 0.2.0 1 1.2.0 Lesser Malayan Mouse Deer Tragulus javanicus 2.0.0 2 0.0.0 Giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis 2.9.0 2.9.0 Okapi Okapia johnstoni 4.2.0 2 1 1 2 3.3.0 Reeves Muntjac Muntiacus reevesi 0.9.0 1 8 0.0.0 Chilean Pudu Pudu pudu 2.2.0 2 1 3.2.0 Reindeer Rangifer tarandus 1.0.0 1 0.0.0 Dama Gazelle Gazella dama ruficollis 1.21.0 1 4 1.18.0 Saharawi Dorcas Gazelle Gazella dorcas neglecta 4.14.0 7 1 9.15.0 Dwarf Zebu Bos taurus indicus 0.3.0 0.3.0 Ankole Cow Bos taurus taurus ankole 0.9.0 1 0.8.0 Lowland Anoa Bubalus depressicornis 1.1.0 1.1.0 Dwarf Forest Buffalo Syncerus caffer nanus 1.8.0 5 2 1 2 1.8.0 Nyala Tragelaphus angasii 4.14.0 1 10 5 4 2 2.16.0 Bongo Tragelaphus eurycerus 1.10.0 2 1 2.10.0 Sitatunga Tragelaphus spekii 2.7.0 11 7 1 3.9.0 Greater Kudu Tragelaphus strepsiceros 5.14.0 12 10 5.16.0 Mishmi Takin Budorcas taxicolor taxicolor 0.0.0 2 1.1.0 West African Pygmy Goat Capra hircus hircus west_africa_pygmy 0.7.0 0.7.0 Golden Guernsey Goat Capra hircus hircus golden_guernsey 2.0.0 2.0.0 Sheep Ovis aries 0.1.0 0.1.0 Greyface Dartmoor Sheep Ovis aries aries greyface_dartmoor 2.3.0 4 1 4.4.0 Addax Addax nasomaculatus 6.8.0 4 1 1 5 2.9.0 Roan Antelope Hippotragus equinus 4.21.0 4 3 5 6.15.0 Sable Antelope Hippotragus niger 2.9.0 1 8 6 1 3.9.0 Scimitar-horned Oryx Oryx dammah 2.20.0 11 6 3 2 2.20.0 Gemsbok Oryx gazella gazella 2.11.0 6 2 2 1 3.11.0 Arabian Oryx Oryx leucoryx 0.5.0 1 0.4.0 Common Waterbuck Kobus ellipsiprymnus 4.17.0 10 5 6 4.16.0 TOTAL Mammals: 870 TOTAL Mammal species: 107 54 276.544.91 64 274 97 186 98 263.538.69
# Taxonomic name changed * re-sexed ^ free-ranging European breeding programme
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