@joelsartore may be the photographer, but Kambo has an eye for editing! #redcrestedturaco #turaco #birds #tracyaviary #saltlakecity #slc #utah #ut (at Tracy Aviary)
No title available
sheepfilms
Three Goblin Art
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
almost home
cherry valley forever
Cosimo Galluzzi
h
official daine visual archive

JVL
No title available
Not today Justin
hello vonnie
Claire Keane
todays bird
$LAYYYTER
Mike Driver
Cosmic Funnies
Monterey Bay Aquarium
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

seen from Türkiye
seen from T1

seen from Malaysia

seen from Austria
seen from Russia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from Germany
seen from Iraq
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Iraq
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@zooreviews
@joelsartore may be the photographer, but Kambo has an eye for editing! #redcrestedturaco #turaco #birds #tracyaviary #saltlakecity #slc #utah #ut (at Tracy Aviary)
Thank you @joelsartore and @natgeo for showing off our amazing Andean Condor, Andy. His 58th birthday is coming up in January, it will be a party you don’t want to miss! #andeancondor #andy #condors #vultures #tracyaviary #birds #saltlakecity #slc #utah #ut #nationalgeographic (at Tracy Aviary)
It’s vet day today here at Tracy Aviary. Here is a shot of our bald eagle getting a check up. #veterinarian #vetday #birds #baldeagle #eagles #tracyaviary #saltlakecity #slc #utah #ut (at Tracy Aviary)
You know a lot of people dont know this but….
An important part of an SSP is making breeding recommendations to maximize genetic diversity and keep the population healthy. Breeding recommendations are made based on genetics and pedigree analysis. One of the recommendations we made when doing the plan was for male sloth Cocoa (who lived at a zoo in California at the time) to breed with female sloths Okra and Bonnie. Cocoa arrived in 2014 and fortunately, he got along great with both girls and resulted in Bonnie having Raisin!
Raisin has been growing like a weed and meeting all her developmental milestones! She started tasting Bonnie’s food at about a week old and since then, has been consuming more and more vegetables, fruits and lettuce but is also still nursing from Bonnie (sloths can nurse for up to a year). She started to touch branches near Bonnie and gradually began climbing on her own more and more and venturing further from Bonnie.
Even though Bonnie is a first-time mom, she is doing an excellent job! She is very attentive to Raisin and licks her to clean her and makes sure she is safe when she climbs. She carries Raisin even now when Raisin is large and agile enough to climb on her own. If she climbs away without Raisin, she stops and goes back for her – making sure Raisin is coming and she is willing to let Raisin hop on for a ride.
Some of the best moments have been watching Raisin try and play with Bonnie, which Bonnie was not very keen on doing.
Raisin would try and wrestle with Bonnie’s feet and would become active and climb around above Bonnie’s head, swatting at her gently to try and get a reaction. Bonnie would tolerate it for a while, then she would gently raise one of her arms and gently pull Raisin back down to her chest and seemed to be encouraging her to take a nap.
Sloths stay with their mothers for 10-13 months, so we have been monitoring Bonnie and Raisin closely to see how Raisin transitions to being more independent. In the last few months, we have observed Raisin sitting next to Bonnie on the shelf instead of on her stomach, but Bonnie still carried Raisin when she traveled. Lately, though, we have started to observe Raisin sleeping on a separate shelf from Bonnie and traveling more on her own – which is another sign she is growing up. Raisin will continue to become more and more independent from Bonnie and will eventually transition to living completely on her own.
I can’t believe Raisin is almost a year old! The year has flown by, but watching her grow and develop has been amazing to watch! It seems like only yesterday that we were so excited the first time we saw her nursing and then tasting her first solid food (sweet potato) and watching her climb on her own. At times now, she seems like a full-grown adult, but at other times I still catch her trying to play with Bonnie and see that she still is a juvenile and has some maturing to do.
To learn more things people dont realize about zoos here ~> Zoos Queues
Sunday brunch looks a little different in the Giant Ocean Tank | #VisitorPicture by : @mishavictoria #regram #brunch #myrtletheturtle #seaturtle #oceananimal #scuba #diver #newenglandaquarium #boston #massachusetts
Everyone needs more cute porcupine faces in their life. Chimalsi wants you to know that he thinks you’re an awesome person and he believes in you. And he wouldn’t say no to extra chin scratches or corn on the cobb. #zoolife #porcupine #spreadlove #notquills
Throwing it back to 2011 when Kiburi was a wee one.
9:30 is the perfect time to train? Got it.
there’s a lot of negativity going around right now and the world is pretty scary so everyone please enjoy this picture of two giraffes I work with who are best friends
King Vulture!
Photos Credit: M. Owyang.
Redneck wallaby baby.
Photo Credit: K. Rairdin
Ringtailed Lemur babies and their perpetually woogly eyeballs.
Gertie the groundhog showing off her winter weight!
Photo Credit: A. Lynn.
Wolf’s Guenon
Photo Credit M. Owyang
Birthday “cake” for a North American Porcupine on her birthday!
Photo Credit: Sarah Stoltenberg
Mongoose Lemur
Photo Credit: M Owyang
Muntjac snoot at Zoo New England in MA.
Photo Credit: M. Rupani