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Jardim Zoológico de Lisboa

by Jonas Livet and Olaf Paterok

Date of publication: March 22nd 2009

 

Factsheet

Established: 1884; 26 ha; 1600 animals from 350 species

Member of WAZA, EAZA and AIZA

www.zoo.pt

Maps of Jardim Zoológico de Lisboa in the 1900s, in the 1910s, in 1990, in 2000, in 2006 and in 2007

Zoological Collections in Portugal - Situation in 2007

 
 


entrance of the Jardim Zoológico de Lisboa - April 2007

 

The old and historic Lisbon Zoo is currently having a facelift. Though many buildings and some exhibits are listed, a number of buildings have been demolished, such as the well-known carnivore house, the polar bear pit and the gorilla house. The children's zoo has been moved to the entrance of the cable lift and a new pool behind the Dolphinarium has been built in the last two years. A medium-sized area above the elephants was transformed into a paddock for 2.0 okapis who arrived in 2005 from Cologne and Antwerp. The ancient elephant house is listed and has therefore been retained, with a new part added which preserves the Moorish appearance of the building. The group of 1.3 African elephants with two calves will also get some space added to their current outdoor enclosure, for which the old polar bear rock has been demolished. A modern bull stable and protected contact facilities are being installed. This is not the only new addition to the zoo. The carnivore house and the veterinary clinic, which had been sited one behind the other, were pulled down and a large new ape house was built on the same site. Unfortunately the – now very common – artificial rock-style exhibits do not at all match the general appearance of the historic zoo architecture from different centuries. The splendid group of chimpanzees has been split up – one half was send to Brazil and the others were brought to the new house. Two (1.1) Sumatran orang-utans from Zürich and Ramat Gan came into the collection and the 1.2 gorillas left their old house for the new quarters as well. The old gorilla house – one part of it dated from the 1930s! – has already been demolished to make way for a new rhino or hippo exhibit. We can only recommend every person interested in zoo history to ask the staff at Lisbon for permission to look into the historic Palacio dos Chimpanzes – the chimpanzee house – before it is demolished. They will be impressed by the size of it. Back in the 1960s and 1970s it was a regular ape house with a large row of cages on each side of it – and open to the public.
Some years ago a large part of the zoo was transformed into an amusement quarter with its own Zoo McDonalds, rides and the historic gardens. This part is freely open to the public. Surprisingly, it is here that one will find the best animal exhibit at Lisbon Zoo. In total contrast with the management's general policy of making animals easily visible to the public, this island for squirrel monkeys gives the animals many ways to move and hide from the public.
Entering the zoo by the new entrance, one's eye is caught by a large construction site a few hundred metres inside the zoo grounds. A former paddock for hoofstock and a pelican enclosure have been replaced by two new tiger enclosures. These two exhibits for Sumatran and Siberian tigers will be of the same style, with a steel-netting cover, as the new roofed enclosure for two white tigers close to the hippo exhibit. Right behind the new ape house, a brand-new row of six enclosures for large cats takes the visitor's attention. Jaguar, leopard, snow leopard, serval, ocelot and European lynx were on display, but we found no reference to any subspecies on the signs. We were surprised by the very large aperture size of the steel mesh covering the enclosures – a paw of a jaguar, let alone any smaller cat, would fit through one of the holes. Moreover, the extremely small distance from the net to the visitor barrier worried us a lot. Jaguars in particular are well known for trying to grab people. The public cable car passes directly over the exhibits. While doing the lift tour and coming across the cat area we detected a single clouded leopard ‘behind the scenes' in one of the shut-off rooms.
Behind the ten-year-old dolphinarium we found a new pool with a really strange sight. A single almost fully grown pilot whale (Globicephala melas) was swimming in the shallow pool while two animal trainers tried to encourage it to do something. We assume that this animal had been washed ashore or was found sick. During our tour around the zoo grounds we missed the mandrills and colobus monkeys which we had seen on a previous visit. The Japanese macaques who lived on the polar bear rock before it was demolished were moved to the old monkey pit with a lot of funny miniature houses in it. This pit – with the houses in it – is another listed building. The group of olive baboons (Papio anubis) that was previously housed in the pit had been transferred to the large gymnasio – the historic hamadryas baboon cage. We were surprised to realize that both species had simply been put together in this cage. Obviously a lack of space has caused some problems for the zoo authorities in properly managing their large stock of primates. An almost unbelievable total of 35 primate species (as some exhibits were closed, we imagine the real number may be as many as 40) should surely force the management to send some species out of the collection. The housing for many of the primates does not meet current standards and the minimum size for exhibits that EAZA demands its members to provide for their animals. Readers will imagine our surprise when we learned that, far from sending animals away, Lisbon Zoo is taking new species in, as they are doing for example by obtaining part of the group of Javan langurs from Omega Parque. Komodo dragons, Indian rhinos, dolphins and koalas are only some of the crowd-pleasers attracting more than a million people every year. Dozens of parrots and hornbills, a children's farm and a beautiful group of Angolan giraffes are appreciated as well. But when one asks if there is any highlight that would encourage people to come back and again pay the entrance fee of €14.50, one comes to the inevitable conclusion – giant pandas. The 26-ha Lisbon Zoo does not provide a lot of space for such a high number of more than 330 species, and especially for so many large mammals. We would love the zoo authorities to send at least the white rhinos away. Their housing in a tiny enclosure is just as miserable as the old bear enclosure, and two rhino species in a small zoo like Lisbon is really not necessary. (Unfortunately the zoo is currently waiting for a young female white rhino from South Africa.) To improve this will be the next project for the zoo in modernizing its animal housing. On the other hand, many new enclosures and some enlargements of existing exhibits show a general attempt to take a step into the modern zoo world and meet international standards. If the policy of displaying just everything rare and attractive can finally change to one of building up a carefully selected collection, the process of transformation into a modern zoo will be successful.

 

Jardim Zoológico de Lisboa - Pictures:

 

Amusement quarter

 


pool for Nile crocodiles in the amusement quarter - April 2007

 


McDonalds in the amusement quarter - April 2007

 


old gardens in the amusement quarter - April 2007
 

island for squirrel monkeys in the amusement quarter - April 2007
 

 

New exhibits for tigers and dolphinarium

 


new exhibits for tigers under construction - April 2007

 


main avenue of the zoo - April 2007

 


entrance of the dolphinarium - April 2007

 


dolphinarium - April 2007

 


dolphinarium - April 2007

 


dolphinarium - April 2007

 


new pool for the pilot whale - April 2007
 

pilot whale (Globicephala melas) in Lisbon Zoo - April 2007
 

 

Children's zoo, cable lift and exhibit of the koalas

 


new children's farm - April 2007

 


new children's farm - April 2007

 


new children's farm - April 2007

 


entrance for the cable lift - April 2007

 


aviary for coconut lorikeets at the entrance of the cable lift - April 2007

 


coconut lorikeets (Trichoglossus haematodus) - April 2007

 


general exhibit for the koalas - April 2007
 

one of the exhibits of the koalas - April 2007
 

 

Aviaries, Indian rhinoceros exhibit and enclosures for buffalos

 


aviaries in Lisbon Zoo - April 2007

 


aviaries in Lisbon Zoo - April 2007

 


aviaries in Lisbon Zoo - April 2007

 


Indian rhinoceros exhibit - April 2007

 


Indian rhinoceros exhibit - April 2007

 


Indian rhinoceros - April 2007

 


enclosure of the American bisons - April 2007
 

enclosure of the Cape buffalos - April 2007
 

 

Vivarium

 


entrance of the vivarium - April 2007

 


exhibit for the Komodo dragons in the vivarium - April 2007

 


vivarium - April 2007

 


vivarium - April 2007

 


vivarium - April 2007

 


vivarium - April 2007

 


outside exhibits of the vivarium - April 2007
 

exhibit of the Aldabra giant tortoises - April 2007
 

 

Palacio dos Chimpanzes and hoofstocks enclosures

 


old Palacio dos Chimpanzes - April 2007

 


old Palacio dos Chimpanzes - April 2007

 


dromedaries enclosure - April 2007

 


camels enclosure - April 2007

 


enclosure of the black-faced impalas - April 2007

 


black-faced impalas (Aepyceros melampus petersi) - April 2007

 


exhibit of the Angolan giraffes - April 2007

 


exhibit of the Angolan giraffes - April 2007

 


exhibit of the Angolan giraffes - April 2007
 

exhibit of the Angolan giraffes - April 2007
 

 

Monkeys exhibits

 


one of the new exhibits for the lemurs - April 2007

 


pool of the seals and sea lions - April 2007

 


island of the lar gibbons - April 2007

 


exhibit for marmosets - April 2007

 


exhibits for marmosets - April 2007

 


exhibits for marmosets - April 2007

 


exhibits for marmosets - April 2007

 


old monkeys cage, empty at the time of our visit - April 2007

 


cages for guenons and macaques - April 2007

 


howler monkeys cage - April 2007

 


island of the siamangs family - April 2007
 

listed monkeys pit used for Japanese macaques - April 2007
 

 

Hippopotamus exhibit

 


exhibit for the common hippopotamus - April 2007
 

exhibit for the hippopotamus viewed from the cable lift - April 2007
 

 

New apes exhibit

 


chimpanzees island - April 2007

 


chimpanzees island - April 2007

 


chimpanzees island - April 2007

 


gorillas island - April 2007

 


one female lowland gorilla - April 2007

 


apes house - April 2007

 


one of the night cages for the gorillas - April 2007

 


view on the gorillas island from the apes house - April 2007

 


orangutans islands - April 2007
 

orangutans islands - April 2007
 

 

White rhinoceros enclosure and lions exhibit

 


white rhinos enclosure viewed from the cable lift - April 2007

 


white rhinoceros enclosure - April 2007

 


white rhinoceros exhibit - April 2007

 


enclosure of the flamingos - April 2007

 


exhibit of the Southwest African lions - April 2007

 


exhibit of the Southwest African lions - April 2007

 


Southwest African lion (Panthera leo bleyenberghi) - April 2007
 

exhibit of the lions viewed from the cable lift - April 2007
 

 

Elephants exhibit

 


African elephants exhibit - April 2007

 


group of African elephants and keeper - April 2007

 


elephants exhibit and temporary pen of the male in the back - April 2007

 


African elephants exhibit - April 2007

 


breeding male elephant named John - April 2007

 


constructions to enlarge the elephants facilities - April 2007

 


young African elephant born in Lisboa - April 2007
 

young African elephant born in Lisboa - April 2007
 

 

Okapis exhibit and ungulates pens on the top of the park

 


main okapis exhibit - April 2007

 


main okapis exhibit - April 2007

 


okapis house - April 2007

 


okapis house - April 2007

 


okapis house - April 2007

 


enclosure of the scimitar-horned oryx - April 2007

 


enclosure of the scimitar-horned oryx - April 2007
 

exhibit of the lowland tapirs - April 2007
 

 

Big cats enclosures

 


new enclosure of the Persian leopards - April 2007

 


new enclosure of the ocelots - April 2007

 


new enclosure of the snow leopards - April 2007

 


new enclosure of the jaguars - April 2007

 


new big cats exhibits - April 2007

 


night facilities of the new cats exhibits - April 2007

 


white tigers enclosure - April 2007
 

old cages for the Siberian tigers - April 2007
 

 

Baboons cage, old bears pits, cemetery and historic gardens

 


the gymnasio, historic baboons cage - April 2007

 


the gymnasio, historic baboons cage - April 2007

 


male olive baboon (Papio anubis) - April 2007

 


one of the old bears pits - April 2007

 


old brown bears pit - April 2007

 


old brown bears pit - April 2007

 


aviary for three species of ibises - April 2007

 


cemetery for domestic animals - April 2007

 


historic hoofstocks enclosure - April 2007

 


island for pileated gibbons - April 2006

 


pileated gibbon (Hylobates pileatus) - April 2007

 


pelicans pond in the historic gardens - April 2007

 


historic buidling in the gardens - April 2007
 

historic gardens viewed from the cable lift - April 2007
 

 

Pictures from a previous visit in December 2001

 


Palacio dos Chimpanzes - December 2001

 


listed monkeys pit used for baboons - December 2001

 


male Asian elephant Ganapati sent to Spain in 2004 - December 2001

 


white rhinoceros - December 2001

 


group of Southwest African lions - December 2001

 


young male Southwest African lion - December 2001

 


breeding group of Angolan giraffes - December 2001

 


sea lions feeding - December 2001

 


historic big cats cages - December 2001

 


historic big cats cages - December 2001

 


jaguar in the old cats house - December 2001

 


lion in the old cats house - December 2001

 


old bears pits - December 2001

 


one of the old bears pits - December 2001

 


hybrid of brown and polar bears - December 2001
 

cemetery for domestic animals - December 2001
 

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