San Antonio Zoo
The San Antonio Zoo is an Association of Zoos and Aquariums-accredited zoo in Midtown San Antonio, Texas, United States. It is located in the city's Brackenridge Park. The 35-acre (14 ha) zoo has a collection of over 3,500 animals representing 750 species. The zoo's annual attendance exceeds 1,000,000. It also runs non-animal attractions, such as the 2 ft (610 mm) narrow gauge San Antonio Zoo Eagle train ride, which first opened in 1956 and utilizes three Chance Rides C.P. Huntington locomotives.[4]
Date opened | May 13, 1914 |
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Location | 3903 N. St. Mary's Street San Antonio, Texas, United States |
Coordinates | 29.4648°N 98.4719°W |
Land area | 57 acres (23 ha)[1] |
No. of animals | 3,500+ |
No. of species | 750 |
Annual visitors | 1.1 million+[1] |
Memberships | AZA,[2] ZAA[3] |
Public transit access | Viva Trolley #11 |
Website | www |
The Richard Friedrich Aquarium was opened in 1948.[5] It was the only aquarium in the city until SeaWorld San Antonio was opened in 1988.
History
What is now known as the San Antonio Zoo began in 1914 when Colonel George Washington Brackenridge, one of the city's leading citizens, placed bison, deer, monkeys, African lions, and bears on land he had deeded to the city. The land became Brackenridge Park and Golf Course.
The San Antonio Zoo opened two of the first cageless exhibits in the United States in November 1929 that offered visitors views of the animals not available in caged exhibits. The Richard Friedrich Aquarium was dedicated in 1948, and the Hixon Bird House, funded through the efforts of Colonel Frederick C. Hixon, opened in 1966.
The San Antonio Zoo housed the first herd of addra gazelle in captivity in 1969 and continues to be active in the breeding program for this critically endangered species. Due to the former hoofstock quarantine point in San Antonio, the San Antonio Zoo has historically had a wide variety of hoofstock species.
The zoo is involved in breeding a number of endangered species including black rhino, leopard, golden lion tamarin, dama gazelle, Attwater's prairie chicken (housed and bred off-exhibit), black mangabey, African lion, black-footed ferret, Komodo dragon, Andean condor, and Caribbean flamingos.
The zoo opened Phase II of Africa Live in 2010. Phase I, which opened in 2007, brought a new exhibit for hippos with underwater viewing area and one for new Nile crocodiles as well as many other smaller animals. Phase II contains Angolan colobus monkeys, okapi, African hunting dogs, rock hyrax, and various species of birds contained in the second largest aviary in the world. On June 18, 2013, a two-headed turtle, along with three one-headed turtles hatched. The two-headed turtle was later named Thelma and Louise after the 1991 film. Thelma and Louise later died on July 29, 2014, from unknown causes.
Exhibits
Africa Live!
Africa Live! is the San Antonio Zoo's newest exhibit. Consisting of three phases, Africa Live! gives guests a chance to experience Lake Tanganyika and Lake Malawi. Guests can observe the hippopotamus, Nile crocodile, and African cichlids through underwater viewing windows. Also found in Africa Live! are Angola colobus, okapi, African wild dog, rock hyrax, Wolf's mona monkey, and various species of birds.
Phase III of Africa Live will consist of new or remodeled exhibits for African elephants, zebra, giraffes, and rhinoceros. In November 2015, the zoo opened a remodeled Giraffe exhibit with a feeding station and other animals like zebras and ostriches will move in with them. In February 2019, the zoo opened a remodeled white rhino exhibit with two new females.
African Savanna
African Savanna takes visitors through a rocky, arid expanse, backed by natural limestone walls. African Plains hosts a number of animals including zebra, ostrich, topi, marabou stork, and various antelope. Visitors may now also feed the giraffes.
African Plains
Right across from the Savanna, visitors can observe the white rhinoceros and guineafowl. Continuing the walk uphill, the zoo displays cheetah, as well as smaller animals such as dik-dik, duiker, and a bateleur eagle.
Big Cat Valley/Rift Valley
Visitors head straight from the Plains to the Valley. As you head back down the hill, you'll come across several antelope species, warthogs, and the new lion habitat.
Outpost Amazonia
Amazonia houses the zoo's South American plants and animals. The zoo's main waterway makes up a large portion of Amazonia. The open flight deck allows guests to enter the exhibit and observe scarlet ibis, among other birds, the family of spider monkeys, giant anteaters, and purchase food to feed tilapia.
Several cats, including the jaguar and ocelot are located within Amazonia. The exhibit is also home to New World monkeys including tamarins, marmosets, capuchin monkeys, and sakis. Other animals include anaconda, armadillos, sloths, bats, and the Andean condor.
Cat Grotto
A cave-like area for visitors to walk through. It houses the zoo's smaller cats, such as a fishing cat, black-footed cats, clouded leopards, and a caracal. Also located here are a few mammals that look similar to cats: ringtail cat, fossa, and a northern treeshrew.
Bear Corner
Close to the entrance, this area has several grottos that house the zoo's two bear species: spectacled bear and American black bear
Cranes of the World
The zoo contains whooping cranes, blue cranes, Manchurian cranes, and the hooded crane. The exhibit is a lush environment constructed on the existing waterway that allows guests to be immersed in the cranes' habitat. It is an opportunity that is becoming increasingly rare in the wild.
Gibbon Forest
Spanning the quarry wall is the zoo's white-cheeked gibbon exhibit. With plenty of ropes to swing on, they stay high above, while below a family of Asian small-clawed otters play in the river. Nearby there are also exhibits for the Komodo dragon and a troop of François' langurs.
Hixon Bird House
A fully enclosed circular building, with glass-fronted enclosures displaying a wide variety of bird species from all over the world. In the middle of the rotunda is a small island planted with trees and shrubs, and containing a small pond. The free-flight birds stay here, and sometimes venture out into the open to explore.
Nature Spot
Designed for the kids, where they can explore and discover.
Richard Friedrich Aquarium
Opened in 1948, this charming building is home to an array of both fresh water and saltwater animals.
Amphibia
Formerly called Toadally, this building housing the zoo's amphibian collection, including frogs, toads, salamanders, and caecilians.
Species
Mammals
- Addax
- Addra gazelle
- African crested porcupine
- African lion
- African bush elephant (coming soon)
- African pygmy goat
- African wild dog
- Asian elephant
- Bat-eared fox
- Black howler monkey
- Black-and-white ruffed lemur
- Black-footed cat
- Black-handed spider monkey
- Black-tailed prairie dog
- Blue duiker
- Babirusa
- Black mangabey
- Bush dog
- Capybara
- Cheetah
- Coati
- Colobus monkey
- Common squirrel monkey
- Common warthog
- Common zebra
- Cotton-headed tamarin
- Fishing cat
- Fossa
- Francois' langur
- Geoffroy's marmoset
- Giant anteater
- Giraffe
- Goeldi's monkey
- Golden lion tamarin
- Golden-bellied mangabey
- Golden-headed tamarin
- Goodfellow's tree-kangaroo
- Hippopotamus
- Jaguar
- Kinkajou
- Kirk's dik-dik
- Malayan tapir
- Lemur
- Linne's two-toed sloth
Leopard
- Naked mole-rat
- Nine-banded armadillo
- North American black bear
- Northern tamandua
- Northern tree shrew
- Nubian ibex
- Ocelot
- Okapi
- Oriental small-clawed otter
- Pale-headed saki
- Parma wallaby
- Pied tamarin
- Prevost's squirrel
- Red kangaroo
- Red river hog
- Red ruffed lemur
- Reeves' muntjac
- Ringtail cat
- Short-tailed fruit bat
- South American tapir
- Southern white rhinoceros
- Spectacled bear
- Speke's gazelle
- Spotted hyena
- Sumatran tiger
- Topi
- Vietnamese pot-bellied pig
- White-cheeked gibbon
- White-throated capuchin
- Wolf's guenon
- Yellow-backed duiker
- Yellow-footed rock-wallaby
Birds
- American common goldeneye
- American flamingo
- American white pelican
- Andean tinamou
- Antillean euphonia
- Attwater's prairie chicken
- Australian shelduck
- Australian wood duck
- Bahama pintail duck
- Bali/Rothschild's mynah
- Bananaquit
- Banded rail
- Bar-headed goose
- Bartlett's dove
- Bateleur eagle
- Black and white mannikin
- Black swan
- Black-billed whistling duck
- Black-necked stork
- Black-necked swan
- Black-throated laughingthrush
- Blue ground dove
- Blue ground pigeon
- Blue-billed teal
- Blue-bellied kingfisher
- Blue-bellied roller
- Blue-grey tanager
- Blue-winged goose
- Boat-billed heron
- Brazilian teal
- Bruce's green pigeon
- Buff-crested bustard
- Bush stone curlew
- Cattle egret
- Chestnut teal
- Chilean flamingo
- Chiloe wigeon
- Chinese hwamei
- Cinnamon teal
- Cockatiel
- Common barn owl
- Common crowned pigeon
- Common shama thrush
- Congo peacock
- Coscoroba swan
- Crested pigeon
- Crested screamer
- Crested wood partridge
- Croaking ground dove
- Demoiselle crane
- Diamond dove
- Double-barred finch
- Double-wattled cassowary
- East African crowned crane
- Eastern rosella
- Eastern screech owl
- Egyptian plover
- Emerald starling
- Emu
- European wood pigeon
- Fairy bluebird
- Forsten's lorikeet
- Fulvous whistling duck
- Giant kingfisher
- Gold coast turaco
- Golden-breasted starling
- Gouldian finch
- Great blue turaco
- Greater flamingo
- Green aracari
- Green junglefowl
- Green oropendola
- Green winged macaw
- Green-naped lory
- Green-winged dove
- Grey-winged trumpeter
- Guam rail
- Guira cuckoo
- Hadada ibis
- Hammerkop
- Hill mynah
- Hooded crane
- Hooded merganser
- Inca tern
- Lady Ross's turaco
- Laughing gull
- Lavender finch
- Laysan teal
- Lesser bird-of-paradise
- Lesser vasa parrot
- Little blue heron
- Madagascar partridge
- Madagascar teal
- Magpie goose
- Magpie shrike
- Maguari stork
- Malay great argus
- Malayan peacock pheasant
- Manchurian crane
- Marabou stork
- Marbled teal
- Mauritius pink pigeon
- Metallic starling
- Guam kingfisher
- Military macaw
- Moluccan radjah shelduck
- Musk lorikeet
- Namaqua dove
- New Guinea masked plover
- Nicobar pigeon
- North American ruddy duck
- North American wood duck
- Obi violet-necked lory
- Ocellated turkey
- Orange cheeked waxbill
- Ostrich
- Painted stork
- Palawan peacock pheasant
- Palm cockatoo
- Peruvian thick-knee
- Pied crow
- Pied imperial pigeon
- Plumed whistling duck
- Purplish jay
- Rainbow lorikeet
- Red bird-of-paradise
- Red bishop
- Red-and-yellow barbet
- Red-billed whistling duck
- Red-capped cardinal
- Red-crested finch
- Red-crested pochard
- Redhead duck
- Red-legged honeycreeper
- Red-legged seriema
- Ringed teal
- Rose-ringed parakeet
- Rosybill
- Rothschild's peacock-pheasant
- Sacred ibis
- Salvin's pigeon
- Sandhill crane
- Scarlet ibis
- Scarlet macaw
- Secretary bird
- Snowy-crowned robin-chat
- Snowy egret
- Speckled mousebird
- Speckled pigeon
- Spectacled owl
- Stanley crane
- Sunbittern
- Sun conure
- Superb starling
- Swainson's lorikeet
- Swan geese
- Taveta golden weaver
- Tawny frogmouth
- Vasa parrot
- Victoria crowned pigeon
- Violet-backed starling
- Wattled crane
- West African crowned crane
- White stork
- White-bellied bustard
- White-bellied stork
- White-crested laughing thrush
- White-crowned pigeon
- White-faced whistling duck
- White-headed buffalo weaver
- White-naped crane
- White-naped raven
- White-winged wood duck
- Whooping crane
- Wreathed hornbill
- Yellow-breasted ground dove
- Zebra dove
Reptiles
- African mud turtle
- African rock python
- Aldabra tortoise
- Alligator snapping turtle
- Amazon tree boa
- American alligator
- Angolan python
- Armenian viper
- Armstrong’s dusky rattlesnake
- Aruba island rattlesnake
- Ball python
- Banded alligator lizard
- Banded rock rattlesnake
- Black milk snake
- Black wood turtle
- Bull snake
- Caatinga lancehead
- Cagle's map turtle
- California kingsnake
- Chinese crocodile lizard
- Coahuilan box turtle
- Corn snake
- Cross-banded rattlesnake
- Cuban false chameleon
- Cuvier’s iguana
- Dumeril's ground boa
- Dunn's hognose viper
- Durango mountain kingsnake
- Dwarf caiman
- Dwarf crocodile
- East African green mamba
- Eastern box turtle
- Egyptian cobra
- Emerald alligator lizard
- Eyelash palm-pitviper
- Fischer's chameleon
- Gaboon viper
- Gharial
- Giant Mexican horned lizard
- Giant South American river turtle
- Green anaconda
- Green tree python
- Grey-banded kingsnake
- Guatemalan palm viper
- Habu
- Hamilton’s pond turtle
- Humantlan rattlesnake
- Indian flapshell turtle
- King cobra
- Komodo dragon
- Madagascar ground boa
- Malaysian painted terrapin
- Mang Mountain viper
- March's palm-pitviper
- Matamata
- Mexican beaded lizard
- Mexican black-tailed pitviper
- Mexican giant musk turtle
- Mexican ground alligator lizard
- Mexican lance-headed rattlesnake
- Mexican milksnake
- Mexican pygmy rattlesnake
- Mexican twin-spotted rattlesnake
- Mixtecan alligator lizard
- Mottled rock rattlesnake
- New Mexico ridge-nosed rattlesnake
- Nile crocodile
- Northern blue-tongued skink
- Northwestern Neotropical rattlesnake
- Oaxacan alligator lizard
- Olmec viper
- Orinoco crocodile
- Prehensile-tailed skink
- Querétaro dusky rattlesnake
- Radiated tortoise
- Red spitting cobra
- Red-eared slider
- Reticulated python
- Rhinoceros ratsnake
- Rhinoceros viper
- Rosy boa
- Rowley's palm-pitviper
- Russian blunt-nosed viper
- San Luis mountain kingsnake
- Savu Island python
- Sheltopusik
- Snub-nosed viper
- Southern lined pine snake
- Southern ridge-nosed rattlesnake
- Southern Sierra Madre spiny lizard
- Speckled palm pitviper
- Spiny-tailed monitor
- Standing's day gecko
- Tamaulipan flat rock lizard
- Tamaulipan rock rattlesnake
- Taylor’s cantil
- Tentacled snake
- Terciopelo
- Texas slider
- Texas spiny lizard
- Texas tortoise
- Thai bamboo ratsnake
- Tomistoma
- Trans-Pecos ratsnake
- Vogel’s river turtle
- West African green mamba
- Western cottonmouth
- Western diamondback rattlesnake
- Western hognose snake
- Western painted turtle
- Yellow sided twist-necked turtle
- Yellow-spotted Amazon river turtle
Amphibians
- African bullfrog
- American bullfrog
- Axolotl
- Black-spotted newt
- Dyeing dart frog
- Emperor newt
- European fire salamander
- Giant marine toad
- Golden frog
- Golden mantella
- Green toad
- Australian green tree frog
- Green-and-black poison arrow frog
- Gulf Coast toad
- Japanese giant salamander
- Mexican burrowing frog
- Mexican dumpy frog
- Puerto Rican crested toad
- Red-eyed tree frog
- Red-spotted toad
- Rio Grande leopard frog
- Rio Grande siren
- Sierra Madre salamander
- Couch's spadefoot toad
- Texas toad
- Tiger salamander
- Vietnamese mossy frog
- White's tree frog
- Yellow-banded poison arrow frog
- Yellow-striped caecilian
References
- "Zoo Facts: San Antonio Zoo". sazoo-aq.org. San Antonio Zoo. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- "Currently Accredited Zoos and Aquariums". aza.org. AZA. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- "Accredited Facilities". Zoological Association of America. Retrieved 17 Jun 2017.
- San Antonio Zoo - Zoo Train
- "Exhibits at the San Antonio Zoo Archived 2009-01-30 at the Wayback Machine." San Antonio Zoo and Aquarium. Retrieved on January 15, 2009.
External links
- Media related to San Antonio Zoo at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website