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2300 Southern Blvd.
Bronx, NY 10460
USA
Forget the twenty-eight hour flight to Kathmandu! Open year round, our Himalayan Highlands exhibit will transport you to the high passes and remote mountaintops in Nepal—no sherpa required!
This one-acre naturalistic habitat provides a home for Asia's highly endangered snow leopards, red pandas, Temminck's tragopan (a kind of pheasant), and white-naped cranes.
A winding path will lead you among hearty rhododendrons, oaks, and conifers, around boulders, under cave ledges, and across bridges spanning ravines. A Tibetan monk was commissioned to decorate the graphic pylons scattered throughout this AZA-award-winning exhibit.


HABITAT:
Madagascar! will represent a dazzling reproduction of intriguing habitats on the world’s fourth largest island, located off Africa’s east coast and will highlight the extraordinary array of Madagascar’s wildlife and the many threats and challenges to species conservation. The exhibit will delight guests with a display of colorful and exotic creatures from this “eighth continent” and inspire a conservation ethic by illustrating the threats to the island’s biodiversity and the urgent need for WCS and others to protect its wildlife and wild lands.
EXHIBITS:
Only In Madagascar
This introductory exhibit to Madagascar! will orient guests, through graphics and video, to the island’s geography and distinctive assemblage of wildlife, the vast majority of which exist nowhere else.
Animals Exhibited: pinstripe damba
Conservation Trail
This path through the exhibit’s rich interpretive experiences will interweave varied learning opportunities for guests to engage, both emotionally and intellectually, in the wonders of Madagascar and WCS’s conservation activities.
Tsingy Cliffs
This dramatic entrance gallery features spectacular limestone cliff formations extending a full two stories high, a striking habitat for Coquerel’s sifaka, a critically endangered species of lemur that inhabits the northwest forests of Madagascar. Sifakas have a unique mode of locomotion-- called vertical clinging and leaping—where they use their powerful hind limbs to leap from tree to tree.
Animals Exhibited: Coquerel's sifaka
Tsingy Caves
Drawing guests deeper into the exotic world of Madagascar, the Tsingy Caves will introduce one of the island’s most dramatic habitats: an underground limestone cave created by the eroding effect of rivers and seeps over thousands of years. As guests navigate the dim passageway, they will come face-to-face with a giant Nile crocodile.
Animals Exhibited: Malagasy killifish and Malagasy tree boa
Crocodile Pool
Placed at eye level, a 15,000-gallon tank in the Tsingy Caves will bring guests face-to-face with a 13-foot-long giant Nile crocodile lying in wait for its prey in the darkness of the cave.
Small Wonders, Big Threats
This gallery introduces, at child’s eye level, an array of living gems: tomato frogs, leaf-tailed geckos, rainbow fish and other fascinating creatures that introduce the diversity of Madagascar’s wildlife. The exhibits will be set into a high-tech surround "theater-in-the-round" with dramatic video portraying the island’s animals in their native environments contrasted with scenes of habitat destruction and the threats to Madagascan wildlife.
Animals Exhibited: lesser hedgehog tenrec, Malagasy killifish, white fin rainbowfish, tomato frogs, Madagascar giant day gecko, golden mantella, painted mantella, blue-leg mantella, leaf tailed gecko, giant orb-weaving spider
Spiny Forest
In this gallery, the centerpiece of the exhibit, guests will enter a bizarre arid forest of spiny trees found in Madagascar’s dry south. There they will encounter a diverse range of animals, including a dozen charismatic ring-tailed lemurs, a pair of brown lemurs, radiated tortoises, and two bird species: the Madagascar red fody and greyheaded lovebird.
Animals Exhibited: ring-tailed lemur, brown lemur, gray-headed lovebird, Madagascar red fody, radiated tortoise.
Baobab Tree
Within the Spiny Forest gallery, guests will step into a “cockroach tree,” a fabrication of the oddly shaped baobab tree, where they will view a glass-enclosed collection of Madagascan hissing cockroaches.
Animals Exhibited: hissing cockroaches
Discovery Zone
At the central point of the Conservation Trail, this child-focused interactive area will provide an opportunity for hands-on exploration through educational activities designed to spark curiosity and foster learning in Madagascar!
Observation Station and Tortoise Nursery
This interactive display brings guests inside a “WCS field hut” in the Spiny Forest for a close look at the science behind conservation. Here they will learn how scientists use observation of lemur behavior as part of conservation efforts in the wild. Guests also will see a “nursery” where juvenile radiated tortoises are raised and protected.
Animals Exhibited: ring-tailed lemur, radiated tortoise, four-lined plated lizard, spiny-tailed iguana, spider tortoise (aka pixie tortoise)
Masoala
A dramatic final gallery, here guests will experience a re-creation of the Masoala National Park, critically important to many of Madagascar’s species and a site of WCS’s field conservation efforts for more than a decade. A habitat formed around a cascading waterfall will be home to a small group of vociferous red-ruffed lemurs, and a separate habitat will host a pair of fossa, a unique mammalian predator found only on Madagascar.
Animals Exhibited: red ruffed lemur, fossa
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