Cologne Zoological Garden

The Aktiengesellschaft Cologne Zoological Garden is the zoo of Cologne, Germany. Being the third oldest zoo in Germany, it features over 10,000 animals of more than 850 species on more than 20 hectares. The internationally renowned zoo with an attached aquarium and invertebrate exhibit is active in preservational breeding of animals that are in danger of becoming extinct. In addition, in-the-wild conservation efforts and research focussing on animals of Madagascar, Wallacea, and Vietnam are actively promoted and supported via cooperation with Cologne University and local projects, such as in the case of Przewalski's horses.

Cologne Zoological Garden
Aerial view
Map
50°57′30″N 06°58′24″E / 50.95833°N 6.97333°E / 50.95833; 6.97333
Date opened1860
LocationCologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Land area20 hectares (49 acres)
No. of species700+
MembershipsEAZA, WAZA
Public transit access18 Zoo/Flora
Websitewww.koelnerzoo.de
Share of the Cologne Zoological Garden, issued 20. June 1930

History edit

The zoo was founded in 1860 by a shareholding company organized by local citizens, with biologist Heinrich Bodinus appointed as the first director (who would later become a director of the Berlin Zoological Garden). The animal enclosures being built at the time were recognized by their ornate, detailed building designs, with the most notable being the elephant house (designed to resemble a Moorish temple), the bird house (designed to resemble a Russian cathedral), the sea lion pool, and the cattle and ox houses (designed to resemble Swiss log cabins). Carl Hagenbeck's enclosure design also influenced the layout of the zoo, as interpreted by naturalistic looking baboon and polar bear rockwork exhibits built around 1914.

Initially, the zoo's financial track was a successful start, but the World Wars in Germany resulted in phases of stagnation. World War I and the Great Depression resulted in economic losses and development slowdown, and many animals suffered from a lack of food supply. Shortly after World War II the zoo had to close for two years entirely, after being heavily destroyed.[1][2]

After reopening in 1947, the zoo saw a wave of modernization and renovation of its old exhibits. In 1960, the existing area expanded from 11 to 18.8 hectares and the first education center in a European zoo three years later. From 1981 to 2012, several new exhibits considered revolutionary were constructed including a great ape tropical house (1985), Southeast Asian rainforest house (2000), open-air Asian elephant enclosure, and West African-themed hippo and crocodile house (2010), as well the development of a Friends of the Zoo Organization (Freunde des Kölner Zoos e. V.) in 1982 and the launch of the first European Endangered Species Programme in 1985.[1][2]

Notable exhibits edit

Cologne Zoological Garden (video)
 
Southern crowned pigeon in the zoo
 
Mother Marlar and Moma born 2017

Primates edit

The great ape jungle house (Urwaldhaus) opened in 1985 as one of the first immersion exhibits in Europe. The enclosures mainly consist of swinging ropes, climbing bars, and various tropical plants to provide enrichment for the animals. Species housed include western lowland gorilla, orangutan, bonobo, pygmy marmoset, king colobus, and lion-tailed macaque.[2]

The baboon rock, which opened in 1914, houses a troop of hamadryas baboons. The enclosure is a rocky island surrounded by a deep moat. The daily feeding of the baboons is very popular with visitors.

The bird house which was built at the time of the zoo's founding now houses South American monkey species including red howler and golden lion tamarin.[3]

Rainforest Hall edit

Opened in 2000, this building houses animals native to the rainforests of Southeast Asia. The free-flight aviary in the exhibit includes palm cockatoo, blue-faced honeyeater, Bali mynah, fairy bluebird, wrinkled hornbill, Black-naped fruit dove, Palawan peacock-pheasant, green peafowl, sailfin lizard, Southern crowned pigeon, and reticulated python. Other animals include small-clawed otters, northern Luzon giant cloud rats, and lar gibbons.

Pachyderms edit

The new Asian elephant park[4] opened in 2004 to replace the old elephant and antelope house. Since its inception, the zoo has had successes in elephant breeding, with the latest calf being born in 2020.[5]

The hippo and crocodile house Hippodom, which opened in 2010, has common hippopotamuses, sitatunga antelopes, and Nile crocodiles as the main attractions. Other species housed include aardvarks, Rodrigues' flying foxes, hamerkops, hadada ibises, cattle egrets, and grey parrots.

Aquarium edit

Opened in 1971, the aquarium is located outside the main zoo grounds and is home to the majority of the zoo's amphibian, reptile, fish, and invertebrate collection. The most notable features include an insectarium, a coral reef tank, a Lake Tanganyika cichlid tank, a Philippine crocodile exhibit, and a Rhine panorama tank with various native fishes.

Incidents edit

In 1978, the zoo sought to acquire two young mountain gorillas, Coco and Pucker, from Rwanda. The capture of these gorillas caused the deaths of 20 adult gorillas, who tried to defend them. Dian Fossey tried unsuccessfully to prevent the export.[6]

On May 25, 2012, the female Asian elephant Chumpol, who was imported from Thailand, was killed while in a socialization conflict with other members of the existing elephant herd.[7]

On August 25, 2012, the Siberian tiger Altai attacked his zookeeper and fatally injured her. The animal had entered through an open security lock into a covered part of his enclosure, which the zookeeper was cleaning. The cat was shot by director Theo Pagel with a rifle to allow rescue workers access to the carer.[8]

On March 15, 2022, a fire broke out in the Southeast Asian rainforest house, killing at least 130 animals.[9]

Notes edit

Much of the content of this article comes from the equivalent German-language Wikipedia article. Retrieved on 27 November 2022. Some of the following references are cited by that German-language article:

  1. ^ a b Nogge, G. (2001). Zoologischer Garten Köln in Encyclopedia of the World's Zoos - Volume 3. Fitzroy-Dearborn. pp. 1458–1459.
  2. ^ a b c Pagel, T. (2010). Der Kölner Zoo. Begeistert für Tiere. Köln. p. 136.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Görtz, Oliver (2021). Mensch und Tier ganz nah Das modernisierte ehemalige Südamerikahaus im Zoo ist ein Spektakel. In: Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger (229 ed.). Lokales. p. 24.
  4. ^ https://www.baukunst-nrw.de/en/projects/Elephant-park--114.htm (article in English and some photos)
  5. ^ Görtz, Oliver (June 26, 2020). "Erst wenige Tage alt: Kölner Zoo verrät kölschen Namen der kleinen Elefantenkuh". Kölner Stadtanzeiger.
  6. ^ Mowat, Farley (1987). Woman in the Mists: The Story of Dian Fossey and the Mountain Gorillas of Africa. New York, NY: Warner Books. pp. 74–80. ISBN 0-446-51360-1.
  7. ^ Katzmarzik, Anja (May 3, 2012). "Kölner Zoo: Chumpol starb an einem Schock".
  8. ^ "Drama im Kölner Zoo: Tierpflegerin ließ offenbar Tür offen". Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger. August 2012. p. 25.
  9. ^ "Köln: Feuer im Tropenhaus des Kölner Zoos ausgebrochen". Der Spiegel. March 15, 2022.

External links edit