

Please support this free service by just sharing with your friends. Select the language from the dropdown given below & click on the button (Or Enter) to get the Meaning in your language. These languages include Russian, Latin, Irish, Malay, Finnish, Urdu, Chinese Simplified, Slovak, Indonesian, Spanish, Filipino, Thai, Persian, Bengali, Danish, Czech, Swahili, Afrikaans, Galician, Lithuanian, Latvian, Japanese, Yiddish, German, Greek, Azerbaijani, Hungarian, Italian, Kannada, Arabic, Albanian, Welsh, Hebrew, Hindi, Basque, Telugu, Portuguese, Catalan, Norwegian, Turkish, Serbian, Polish, Haitian Creole, Georgian, Korean, Maltese, Vietnamese, French, Icelandic, Croatian, Romanian, Ukrainian, Dutch, Chinese Traditional, Malayalam, Tamil, Swedish, Belarusian, Slovenian, Gujarati, Esperanto, Estonian, Macedonian, Bulgarian etc. The deer collection is still amazing but I was stuck by how much space is dedicated to less important species such as axis deer, Japan sika deer, red deer, common fallow deer while the park should ratherhold more of the already present endangered species and rather host Bukhara deer, forest reindeer, white-lipped deer, Chinese water deer or Prince Alfred's deer.It's a free Multilanguage dictionary with many languages around the World. I can also confirm there is no more Siamese Eld's deer. On the other hand,other species were only representedby few individuals (2 or 3 Przewalski horse, scmitar-horned oryx). A male European elk was visible and replaced the last American moose. I have counted 7 sambar deers (with youngs), 6 beisa oryx (one young), at least 4 gaurs, 5 Mishmi takins, 12 Mackenzie wolf!, more than 15 dholes and 14 hog deers, at least 8 Nubian ibex. The new red river hog enclosure is simple but super large and naturel, maybe the best in Europe for this specie. There must be some 10 individuals with a few youngs and individuals separated.

I enjoyed decent views of the white-tailed wildebeest group, quite an incredible-looking specie even though it looks like it far from common.

It was a nice fall visit, most animals were active even if ungulates in the large conservation enclosures remained most of the time far away.

some renovations will be done in the american moose enclosure, the park hoping to welcome a new trio (it is not specified if it's for mooses or elks and if the last single moose is still alive). the old white-tailed sea-eagles aviary will be enlarged and refurbished to allow better conditions for the birds. Another possibility is that this two species could be put on two old islands which were due to welcome javan lutungs and javan gibbons. Don't know more for the exhibits but the director told me last year that he was thinking about a mixed enclosure for tonkean macaques and babirusas (which are not a species at the park) in a large wooded area. the park will receive tonkean macaques and brown capuchins. A great news as Paris has 3 groups for just one enclosure ! From what I heard the group will be for bachelors. The island has already been done and the money was just missing for the building. a group of guinea baboons from Paris will arrive. The zoo has projects which will take shape late 2022/early 2023 :
