Australia Zoo
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Australia Zoo is primarily a reptile zoo located in the Australian state of Queensland on the Sunshine Coast near Beerwah/Glass House Mountains. It is owned by Terri Irwin, widow of Steve Irwin, whose wildlife documentary series The Crocodile Hunter made the zoo a popular tourist attraction. It is directed by Wes Mannion, Steve's best friend.
Although best known for the crocodiles and the live crocodile feedings, the zoo is also known for featuring exhibits of other Australian wildlife, including Asian otters, koalas, wombats, Tasmanian devils, snakes, and (until 2006) a giant Galápagos tortoise called Harriet, who was generally acknowledged as the world's oldest living chelonian when she died on June 23, 2006, at the age of 176.[1] The Zoo also features a smaller selection of animals from around the world, including elephants, tigers, cheetahs and Komodo Dragons.
Australia Zoo won the Australian Tourism Awards for 2003-2004 in the category Major Tourist Attraction.[2]
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[edit] History
Australia Zoo was opened by Bob and Lyn Irwin in 1970 under the name Beerwah Reptile Park. Bob Irwin is a world renowned herpetologist (amphibian and reptile scientist), who is regarded as a pioneer in the keeping and breeding of reptiles. His wife Lyn was the first to care for and rehabilitate sick and injured wildlife in southeast Queensland.
Bob and Lyn passed on their love and respect for wildlife onto their children, especially to their son Steve Irwin, who had helped his parents since childhood to care for crocodiles and reptiles and to maintain the growing number of animals in the zoo.
Over a decade later the park was renamed to the Queensland Reptile and Fauna Park and the area was doubled with the purchase of another four acres. In 1987 the Crocodile Environmental Park was opened in an effort to aid saltwater crocodile protection. By the 1990s the Crocodile Environmental Park had become very popular and was seen as unique for its display of crocodile feeding within the park.
The zoo expanded slowly and in 1991 Steve "The Crocodile Hunter" Irwin overtook management of the zoo. In 1992 the park was renamed again, becoming Australia Zoo. Currently, the zoo maintains more than 1000 animals and 550 staff.
[edit] Improvements
In the meantime, the zoo has encompassed a large area of 72 acres, (this will be expanded to over 500 acres in due course), in which many animals live. In order to reduce long walks, a 'modified trailered bus' has been utilised, named Steve's Safari Shuttle, which operates on a reasonably narrow bitumen roadway circuit.
At the zoo there is additionally a stadium which has been named the 'Animal Planet Crocoseum' which has a capacity of approximately 5000, which at the time of its construction was the first in the world where snake, bird and crocodile shows are conducted called, 'Wildlife Warriors 101'. One can also view a crocodile feeding and even participate in an elephant feeding (the elephant feeding can be participated in during the mornings on the roadway circuit at the first crossover to the internal section of the zoo or in the afternoons at 'elephantasia' around the back of the zoo near tiger temple.
There is a running space for kangaroos, and there is often the opportunity to pat a koala. The zoo's sponsored charity 'wildlife warriors' also run a care station for any native wildlife who may be injured in accidents outside the zoo.
As of the end of 2006, the elephant enclosure is being expanded, the waterpool has just been completed and elephantasia officially opened on 26/12/2006. Furthermore, a construction of an artificial island (to represent the Island of Madagascar, began in 2006, which will accommodate African animals such as tortoises, lemurs and other species not yet represented. The South-East Asian Precinct will also be improved with the Introduction of Orang-utans, and Transfer of the Komodo Dragons, which inhabit an enclosure near to the entrance to create a more complete Bio-Climatic Asian Region.
[edit] References
- ^ Harriet finally withdraws after 176 years - Sydney Morning Herald, Friday, 23 June 2006
- ^ Tourism South Australia
[edit] External links
Zoo • Public aquarium • Aviary • Menagerie • Tourist attraction
List of zoos • List of aquaria • List of zoo associations
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