Bremerhaven Zoo

Bremerhaven Zoo

Bird's eye view of the Zoo (2009)
Location Bremerhaven, Germany
Coordinates 53°32′41″N 8°34′13″E / 53.54472°N 8.57028°E / 53.54472; 8.57028Coordinates: 53°32′41″N 8°34′13″E / 53.54472°N 8.57028°E / 53.54472; 8.57028
Land area 1.2 ha[1]
Number of animals 292[1]
Number of species 56[1]
Annual visitors 100000[2]
Memberships WAZA, EAZA, VDZ, yaqupacha.org, Wild Chimpanzee Foundation (WCF), International Species Information System (ISIS)
Website http://www.zoo-am-meer-bremerhaven.de/en/

The Bremerhaven Zoo (officially Zoo am Meer, which is German for Zoo next to the Sea) is located next to the river Weser and exhibits mainly species which live in the water or in northern environments; exceptions are, for instance, chimpanzees and White-headed marmosets.

Animals

One of Bremerhaven's polar bears swimming.

Mammals

The main attraction are the polar bears, the South American sea-lions, the harbour seals and the South African fur seals.

Birds

The northern gannet is naturally abundant in Germany only since 1991 on the high-sea island Heligoland. These birds share their area with cormorants and different ducks.

The Humboldt penguins of the zoo became famous because there was a homosexual penguin couple among them.

Other animals

The giant Fischer’s chameleon was found in the woods near Bremerhaven, it is suspected that it was held illegally by somebody and set free when it became too big.

History

In 1912, the North Sea Aquarium started in the cellar so-called Strandhalle. On June 24, 1928 the Tiergrotten (literally Animal Grotto) was opened outside the Weser embankment.

The North Sea flood of 1962 killed a lot of animals in the zoo.

Major renovations took place in 1976 and from 2000 to 2004. The Zoo am Meer was opened on March 27, 2004.

Polar bears

The polar bear Victoria was transported from Tierpark Hagenbeck on January 10, 2008: (video) to Zoo am Meer with the hope that she and Lloyd might breed. She stayed in Bremerhaven until October 24, 2011. [3]

The polar bear Irka came from Canada to Bremerhaven in 1979 when she was probably a year old and she spent whole her life in the zoo. She was suffering from arthritis when she got old, but she was otherwise fit for long. She was euthanize on June 4, 2012 after she became disoriented, lost coordination and a blood test suggested changes in her liver. After her death a tumor was found in her liver.[4]

The eight-year-old polar bear Valeska came to Bremerhaven in September 2012 from the Ranua Wildlife Park in Finnland as new partner for Llyod who is in Bremerhaven since 2002.[5]

Other animals

The two baby seals called Luna and Paula were born on 21 and 22 July 2012 by different mothers.[6]

Future plans

The Zoo am Meer will build a new aquarium in the cellar rooms underneath the compound of the polar bears. The exhibit will have an area of 325 m2 and will cost around 1.5 million euro which will be paid by the European Regional Development Fund. The operational costs is estimated to be around 70 thousand Euro per year.[7]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zoo am Meer.

Valuable information was also taken from the charts in the zoo, see Official English Website Zoo am Meer

  1. 1 2 3 "Bremerhaven's zoo". German Zoo Data Base. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  2. Gehrke, Jens (5 September 2012). "Eisbär Lloyd lockt die Urlauber". Nordsee Zeitung Bremerhaven. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  3. Maffiotte, Lili (25 October 2011). "Der Liebesurlaub ist vorbei". Nordsee Zeitung Bremerhaven. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  4. Joerres, Ulrike und Gerhard. "Eisbären im Zoo – Polar Bears in Zoos". Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  5. "Eine Eisbärin für den Zoo am Meer". Nordsee Zeitung Bremerhaven. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  6. "Seelöwenbabys trauen sich ins Wasser". Nordsee Zeitung Bremerhaven. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  7. Donsbach, Rainer (27 September 2012). "Zoo bekommt ein Aquarium". Nordsee Zeitung. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.