Woodland Park Zoo is a zoological garden located in the Phinney Ridge neighborhood of Seattle, Washington.
History
Occupying the western half of Woodland Park, the zoo began as a small menagerie on the estate of Guy C. Phinney, a Canadian-born lumber mill owner and real estate developer. Six years after Phinney's death, on December 28, 1899, Phinney's wife sold the 188-acre (76Â ha) Woodland Park to the city for $5,000 in cash and the assumption of a $95,000 mortgage. The sum was so large that the Seattle mayor (W. D. Wood) vetoed the acquisition, only to be later overruled by the city council. In 1902, the Olmsted Brothers firm of Boston was hired to design the city's parks, including Woodland Park, and the next year the collection of the private Leschi Park menagerie was moved to Phinney Ridge.
As of the summer of 2010, the zoo includes 92 acres (37Â ha) of exhibits and public spaces. It is open to the public daily, and received 1.05 million visitors in 2006. Its collection includes:
- 1,090 animal specimens
- 300 animal species
- 35 endangered and 5 threatened animal species
- 7,000 trees
- 50,000+ shrubs and herbs
- 1,000+ plant species
Exhibits
Woodland Park Zoo is a recipient of multiple Best National Exhibit awards from the Association of Zoos & Aquariums, and ranks second to the Bronx Zoo in New York City for the number received. Woodland Park Zoo created what is generally considered the world's first immersion exhibit, a gorilla habitat, which opened in the late 1970s under the direction of zoo architect David Hancocks. Other exhibits include:
- Zoomazium, (a portmanteau of "zoo" and "gymnasium"), is an interactive play space for children that opened in May 2006. It includes nature-themed play spaces as well as a Nature Exchange desk and open areas for interactive programs. It was built to be energy efficient and includes a green roof of native plants.
- Tropical Rain Forest - A walkway approaches the building with views of a habitat for jaguars (opened in 2003), and underwater viewing. Nearby is a jungle researcher's tent. Inside the building are animals from Central America and South America, including ocelots, poison arrow frogs, bushmasters, tamarins, toucans, and a variety of tropical birds. An outdoor loop houses several African rain forest species, including red ruffed lemurs, colobus monkeys, and a rambling gorilla exhibit.
- Tropical Asia - This biome consists of two major areas: Banyan Wilds and Trail of Vines. The newest addition, Banyan Wilds, represents Southeast Asian forests. Phase One opened in 2013, featuring Asian small-clawed otters and an aviary of tropical Asian birds. The second and final phase opened in May 2015, featuring new exhibits for sloth bears and Malayan tigers. Trail of Vines takes the visitor on a journey through several different Southeast Asian rainforest habitats, featuring numerous endangered species. Beginning with Malayan tapirs, it proceeds to lion-tailed macaques, Indian pythons, and finally large indoor/outdoor habitats for siamangs and orangutans. The biome's third exhibit area, Elephant Forest, was closed when the zoo phased out its elephant program in April 2015.
- Northern Trail - This exhibit takes the visitor through the northern habitats of the tundra, taiga, and montane. It is landscaped to resemble an actual trail in Alaska's Denali National Park. The Northern Trail is home to a variety of North American animal species, including timber wolves, Arctic foxes, grizzly bears, mountain goats, Steller's sea eagles, and Roosevelt elk (which are actually endemic to Washington).
- African Savanna - The visitor enters through a model African village, which combines elements of African culture and themes of the human/animal balance in conservation. The main "savanna" houses giraffes, zebras, gazelles, oryxes, and ostriches, while two connected exhibits house hippopotamus and patas monkeys. During the summer, visitors may hand-feed the giraffes for a small fee at specified times. Hidden moats allow these areas to appear to be part of a continuous landscape. In addition to the herbivores, two separate exhibits house Southeast African lions and African warthogs.
- Australasia - This exhibit is one of the smaller biomes at the zoo. It features Willawong Station, which houses more than 100 parrots from Australia, plus parakeets, cockatiels and eastern rosellas. Other animals in Australasia are kookaburra, wallaroo and wallaby, emu and snow leopards.
- Temperate Forest - home to a variety of animals from temperate regions of Asia, North America, and South America. It includes an aviary with a number of exotic birds, including hornbills and pheasants, as well as sections for cranes, red pandas, and a marsh exhibit featuring local waterfowl species. In 2008 a small exhibit was opened in the Temperate Forest area featuring Chilean flamingos and southern pudús, which have bred successfully at the zoo. In 2014, a pair of cheetah were temporarily housed in this area, part of a reinterpretation called "Wildlife Survival Zone", which also features a small alcove focusing on the zoo's efforts to restore the native western pond turtle.
- Other notable animal exhibits at Woodland Park Zoo include a Raptor Center and accompanying flight demonstration, and lowland anoa. The zoo also includes "Family Farm" and Bug World exhibits. In the Adaptations building visitors can find meerkats, added in 2010, as well as nocturnal animals, including Indian flying fox and sloths.
- The zoo also has a hand-carved carousel, originally built for the Cincinnati Zoo in 1918 by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company. In the 1970s, the carousel was moved to Santa Clara, California, where it operated into the 1990s. It was donated to Woodland Park Zoo by the Alleniana Foundation, and opened May 1, 2007 in a new pavilion on the zoo's North Meadow.
- In May 2009, the Woodland Park Zoo opened a new 17,000-square-foot (1,600Â m2) Humboldt penguin exhibit. The outdoor enclosure is designed to recreate the penguin's native habitat in Peru, and features cliffs and pools. The exhibit is also designed to use green energy, such as geothermal power.
Financial difficulties
On January 5, 2010, the zoo announced that due to the "difficult economy," it would be closing its Night Exhibit.
Notable animals
From 1953 to 1968, Woodland Park Zoo was home to Bobo, a western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla, the same species as the gorillas currently living at the zoo). Bobo was acquired from the Lowman family of Anacortes, Washington, who had purchased the gorilla as an infant from a hunter in Columbus, Ohio in 1951 and had raised him in their family home in Anacortes. Bobo drew many visitors to the zoo and was one of Seattle's main attractions in the years preceding the construction of Seattle Center and the expansion of major-league professional sports into the city; his popularity is credited with helping the zoo obtain funding to build a new primate house.
Anthropologist Dawn Prince-Hughes spent many years working at Woodland Park Zoo and observing the western lowland gorillas there, which she wrote about in her book Songs of the Gorilla Nation: My Journey Through Autism.
Two lionesses named Busela (Seyla) and Nobuhle (Nabu) transferred from this zoo to Hogle Zoo in Salt Lake City, Utah to breed with the Montgomery Zoo's two male lions, Baron and Vulcan. On February 24, 2016, Nabu gave birth to two males, Brutus and Titus, and a female, Calliope. Baron fathered the three cubs.
Other displays
Two 6"/30 caliber guns from USS Concord (PG-3) are displayed near the zoo.
References
External links
- Official website
- RadioLab episode on 'Zoos' - First segment describes Woodland Park Zoo's first immersion exhibit