Chattanooga Zoo at Warner Park
Date opened | 1937[1] |
---|---|
Location | Warner Park, Chattanooga, Tennessee, Tennessee |
Coordinates | 35°02′35″N 85°16′58″W / 35.0431°N 85.2829°WCoordinates: 35°02′35″N 85°16′58″W / 35.0431°N 85.2829°W |
Land area | 13 acres (5.3 ha) |
Number of animals | 860 (2012)[2] |
Number of species | 148 (2012)[2] |
Annual visitors | 150,095 (2012)[2] |
Memberships | Association of Zoos and Aquariums[3] |
Major exhibits | Himalayan Passage, Gombe Forest, Corcovado Jungle, Walkin' the Tracks, Warner Park Ranch, Deserts of the World, and Forests of the World. |
Website |
www |
The Chattanooga Zoo at Warner Park (formerly the Warner Park Zoo) is a 13-acre (5.3 ha) zoological park located in Warner Park in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The zoo was established in 1937 by the City of Chattanooga with the construction of two 4 by 6 feet (1.2 by 1.8 m) cages for rhesus monkeys. (An earlier zoo was established in 1900, Oxley Zoo, by Colonel F. G. Oxley of Bridgeport, Alabama when he donated $500 to open the first public zoo in Chattanooga. Oxley Zoo closed due to financial constraints in 1911.)[1] The zoo has been accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) since 1998.[1]
Exhibits and facilities
The most notable exhibit is the Himalayan Passage, which houses the zoo's red panda. The exhibit boasts the largest indoor red panda exhibit in the world, despite the zoo being one of the smallest zoos accredited by the AZA. The Himalayan Passage passage was expanded in 2006 to include habitats for snow leopards and Hanuman langurs.
The Gombe Forest is a $2.1 million exhibit that is home to the zoo's chimpanzees. The Gombe Forest is an indoor/outdoor exhibit built in 2001 to house Hank, the zoo's long-time resident and seen in photo at right, as well as several other chimps. Hank, found in the rain forests of Africa in 1968, was donated to the zoo in 1976 and became the longest and most famous resident of the zoo before passing away of natural causes at age 42 on January 24, 2011.[4] The Donovan Interpretive Center features an indoor chimpanzee viewing area and other small exhibits.
The Corcovado Jungle is home to animals from Latin America, including jaguars, spider monkeys, macaws, and capybaras.
Walkin' the Tracks holds the zoo's North American animals, including prairie dogs and white-tailed deer. The Cougar Express has indoor viewing in a train car for the zoo's cougars.
A new front entrance complex opened in 2008, and includes new parking areas, a gift shop, restroom facilities, a concessions pavilion, and an endangered species carousel.
Conservation
The Chattanooga Zoo is actively involved in conservation efforts, specifically the AZA's Species Survival Plan which manages the breeding, conservation, and welfare of endangered species throughout AZA accredited facilities in North America. Since 1998, the zoo has also been a partner with the Zoo Conservation Outreach Group/Fundacion Zoologica (ZCOG). ZCOG is an organization that partners with Latin American zoos and assists with conservation initiatives in Latin America, specifically the saving of the Amazon Rainforest.
The future
The zoo is currently undergoing a five-phase, $12 million Master Plan that is transforming it into an excellent zoological facility. In the last 10 years, the zoo has expanded from 1.5 acres (0.61 ha) to its current 13 acres (5.3 ha). The Master Plan includes new exhibits and expansion of the animal collection to specifically include African penguins, gibbons, and Komodo dragons.