Mogo Wildlife Park
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2019) |
Mogo Wildlife Park | |
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35°47′43″S 150°09′33″E / 35.7954°S 150.1592°E | |
Date opened | 17 November 1991 |
Location | Mogo, New South Wales, Australia |
Land area | 13.11 ha (32.4 acres) zoo site; entire property 26.88 ha (66.4 acres) |
No. of animals | 220+ |
No. of species | 30+ |
Website | mogowildlifepark |
Mogo Wildlife Park (formerly Mogo Zoo) is a small privately owned zoo in Mogo, on the south coast of New South Wales, Australia.
Description
Mogo is a member of the Zoo and Aquarium Association and has had success in breeding programs for endangered species, including the cotton-top tamarin, black-and-white ruffed lemur, red panda, and Sumatran tiger. The zoo has one of Australia's largest collections of primates.[1] Unlike most small Australian zoos, Mogo Wildlife Park focuses on exotic species.
Mogo Wildlife Park exhibits a large African savanna, and a series of islands for primate species. The zoo took over care from some unwanted animals from other collections.[2] During the 1990s, the zoo kept an endangered kea parrot, the only individual held in any Australian zoo at the time or since,[3] and was also the home of the last Siberian tiger in Australasia (Kuldur, who died in June 1997 aged seventeen). Snow leopards were a long term species at the park (beginning in October 1995) and the park was the first zoo in New South Wales to birth this species when on 20 October 1999 a female cub Sheva and male cub Bhutan were born to parents Lena and Mangar, who had another pair of cubs born at the park on 12 October 2003 (female Tenzin the last Snow leopard at the park who lived for 19 years, and male Khumbu).
In November 2019, Featherdale Wildlife Park bought Mogo Zoo from former owner Sally Padey, and took over full ownership and operations from the end of that month.[4]
Current species at the park
- African lion (including three white-coated)
- Asian small-clawed otter
- Binturong
- Black-and-white ruffed lemur
- Bolivian squirrel monkey
- Brown capuchin monkey
- Caracal
- Cheetah
- Cotton-top tamarin
- Dromedary camel
- Eastern grey kangaroo
- Egyptian goose
- Emperor tamarin
- Fallow deer
- Giraffe
- Golden lion tamarin
- Meerkat
- Palyoora
- Plains zebra
- Pygmy marmoset
- Quokka
- Radiated tortoise
- Red panda
- Ring-tailed lemur
- Serval
- Siamang
- Silvery gibbon
- Southern white rhinoceros
- Spotted hyena
- Sumatran tiger
- Wandering whistling duck
- Western lowland gorilla
The park also keep Asian water buffalo herds which can be sighted in paddock directly north of the zoo grounds viewable on the inland side driving Tomakin Road in the direction towards Princes Highway and Mogo village shops. Orangutan duo Jantan and Willow, originally from Taronga Zoo, whom are of mixed origin of both the Bornean orangutan and the Sumatran orangutan species, are currently not housed in the general public viewing area of the zoo. White-handed gibbons (a female pair) are also housed off display.
References
- ^ Smee, Ben (31 December 2019). "'We've lost our beautiful town': Mogo residents flee as bushfire rages up NSW south coast". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 31 December 2019 – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ "Mogo Zoo". Archived from the original on 1 July 2007. Retrieved 1 October 2007.
- ^ "Comparative Tabulation Report Nestor notabilis imported 1991". www.trade.cites.org. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
- ^ Campbell, Ian. ""They will honour my legacy and do it proud" – Sally Padey, Mogo Zoo". About Regional. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
External links