Royal Burgers' Zoo
Zoo in Arnhem, Netherlands From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zoo in Arnhem, Netherlands From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Royal Burgers' Zoo (Dutch: Koninklijke Burgers' Zoo) is a 45-hectare (110-acre) zoo in Arnhem, Netherlands, and is one of the biggest zoos in the country. Arnhem is a city that lies partially in the Veluwe, a nature park in the east of the Netherlands. The zoo is popular with both Dutch and German people, and receives about 1 million visitors annually. It was founded by Johan Burgers in 1913.
Royal Burgers' Zoo | |
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52°00′36″N 5°53′59″E | |
Location | Arnhem, Netherlands |
Land area | 45 ha (110 acres)[1] |
No. of animals | 10,000+[2] |
No. of species | 500+[2] |
Total volume of tanks | 8,000,000 L (2,100,000 US gal) |
Annual visitors | 1.415 million (2014)[3] |
Memberships | NVD,[4] EAZA,[5] WAZA[6] |
Website | www |
The zoo is a member of the Dutch Zoo Federation (NVD), the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria (EAZA), the International Species Information System (ISIS), and the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA).
The zoo has 8 theme sites called ecodisplays (ecological display):
Burgers' Zoo has two larger playgrounds and a smaller one.
The two larger playgrounds are located next to each other and connected through the Park Restaurant.
Burgers’ Zoo has been successful enough in breeding fish and coral for their own aquarium that they can now help provide animals to other public aquariums. They use an artificial moon to stimulate sexual reproduction of corals in their reef, and also clone some 60 varieties.[10]
Besides presenting many of its animals in simulated habitat in spacious indoors ecosystems, Burgers' Zoo also has facilities for conservation and captive breeding of animals nearly extinct. The Socorro dove (Zenaida graysoni) for example does not exist outside captivity at present; it was wiped out by introduced mammals on its home island. The species is being bred in Burgers' Zoo for eventual reintroduction into the wild.
Burgers' Zoo supports several nature conservation projects. The projects are small but with a big impact.
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