Dubai Zoo

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Dubai Zoo
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Date opened 1967
Date closed 2014 (expected)
Location Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Land area 1.5 ha (3.7 acres)
Number of species 230
Memberships WAZA[1]

Dubai Zoo (Arabic: ‎‎حديقة حيوان دبي) is a 1.5-kilometre (0.93 mi) located in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It was originally built in 1967 by a Dubai resident when H. H. Sheikh Rashid bin Maktoum, the late Ruler of Dubai, permitted Otto J. Bulart to build a zoo on a two hectare plot in Jumeirah.[2] It is still the oldest zoo in the Arabian Peninsula. It was considered a Dubai landmark in the late 1960s as it indicated the "town's end".

In 1971 the management of the Dubai Zoo was taken over by the Dubai Municipality. During the first couple of years of its existence, the Dubai Zoo housed only a few animals like the big cats, monkeys and hoofed-animals. There was also a small aquarium with some fishes and reptiles. From May 1986 to May 1989, a part of the zoo was redesigned and rebuilt. From June 1989 to the present there has been constant re-designing and renovation. Dubai zoo is the first Arabian zoo to breed the rare chimpanzee and the Arabian or Gordon's wildcat (Felis silvestris gordoni).[citation needed]

In recent years, the Dubai Zoo has come under fire for the conditions in which its animals are housed. Animal rights activists and even hotels and tourist websites encourage the boycotting of the facility. Cages in which the animals are trapped are reportedly so small that the animals can barely move.[3]

Animals

The zoo houses approximately 230 animal species. Among these are around 248 mammal specimens, including foxes, hyenas, pumas, Asiatic lions, jaguars, chimpanzees, baboons, monkeys, deer, bears, porcupines, giraffes and Barbary sheep. Endangered species include Socotra shag or cormorant, Bengal tiger, gorilla, subspecies of grey wolf and Arabian wolf, Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris altaica), and the indigenous Gordon's wildcat. Birds include ostrich, golden eagle and parrots. Reptiles are represented by around 400 specimens.

Visitation and opening hours

Dubai Zoo attracts annually a large number of visitors. In 2008 the number of visitors was 336,346. .[4]

Opening hours during summer are 10 am to 6 pm, and 10 am to 5:30 pm during winter.

Better Dubai Zoo

Dubai Municipality has planned to build a new zoo since at least 2003 to replace the old zoo.[5] Construction was to be completed by 2008 and the zoo would be sited variously at Mushrif Park or Dubailand at an estimated cost of USD 55.6 million or AED 610 million. In February 2009, it was announced that the zoo project at Dubailand was on indefinite hold.[6][7][8]

On 11 February 2012 the municipality announced that it had commissioned a study to shift the two-hectare, government-run zoo from Jumeirah to new, world-class premises.Within two months a consultancy and action team is to come up with the final concept, proposing a new location and required area, and recommending the allocation of space for each species according to international standards, said Hussain Lootah, the director general of the municipality.[9]

On 14 May 2012, it was announced by the Dubai Municipality that the animals from the overcrowded Dubai Zoo will be relocated to an open safari within the next two years. Officials said they will redevelop 400 hectares (990 acres) of land in Al Warqa'a for the safari project, at a cost of Dh150 million. The safari will house the existing zoo animals and will also accommodate new ones."The zoo is one of the issues and has been the big talk for many years" said Mr Hussain Lootah, the municipality's director general.

On 23 April 2013, Hussain Nassir Lootah, Director General of Dubai Municipality said that the first phase of the Dubai Safari has completed and the construction of the project will be completed by end of 2014.[10]

The ambitious Dubai Safari will be developed on land that has been previously a landfill. Excavation work started in September 2012. Dubai Safari is spread across 120 hectares of land and include a zoo, safari and butterfly park, botanical garden, resort, and golf course, in addition to educational and veterinary facilities. It is expected to feature more than 1,000 animals and birds.[10]

The safari will be divided into African, Asian and Arabian villages, with each village accommodating animals from those respective regions.[10] After the new zoo is completed and opened, the old zoo will be closed down and eventually demolished.

Picture gallery

See also

Notes

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References