"Africa Rocks" is slated to open in 2017
By Monica Garske
The San Diego Zoo broke ground Wednesday on a major, $68 million project: an 8-acre space that will be transformed into the new “Africa Rocks” exhibit with a habitat for African plant and animal species.
The
largest expansion in the famous zoo’s 99-year history, the Conrad
Prebys Africa Rocks exhibit will take over an area once known as “Cat
and Dog Canyon.” The transformation will replace 1930s-era grottos and
enclosures with new habitats for African species that range from savanna
to shore.
San Diego Zoo officials plan to open the exhibit in 2017.
The
attraction will include a gently winding, ADA-accessible pathway that
leads guests through different types of African habitats, including a
West African forest, acacia woodlands, Ethiopian highlands, kopje
gardens and a Madagascar habitat.
Renderings of the exhibit were also released Wednesday, as seen in the photo gallery above.
Zoo
officials say the project is being funded with a $11 million donation
from Conrad Prebys, plus donations from more than 6,500 other
individuals. In 2013, Ernest Rady donated $10 million to the exhibit and
issued a challenge that resulted in 3,800 individual donors giving more
than $20 million toward the project, officials said.
Dan
and Vi McKinney donated $5 million for an African penguin habitat
within the exhibit. Other donations have come from corporations, private
foundations and estates, the zoo says.
Africa Rock will be home to mammals, reptiles, birds and plant life native to Africa.
This
includes hamadryas and gelada baboons, vervet monkeys and lemurs. Other
mammals in the exhibit will include southern ratel, fossa and an
African leopard. There will also be an aviary. Dwarf crocodiles, Agama
lizards and spurred tortoises will fill the reptile habitats.
The
zoo will also relocate several old-growth trees into the area,
including a ficus and sausage tree, officials said. Other African-native
plants in the exhibit will include acacia, aloe, Madagascar ocotillo
and palms.
A
penguin beach area will house African penguins as the San Diego Zoo
partakes in an international species survival plan for these endangered
aquatic birds. The zoo is currently home to two African penguins that
live in the Children’s Zoo area.
Douglas
Myers, president and CEO of San Diego Zoo Global says the exhibit will
be designed to tell a story, and “help connect people to wildlife.”
”We
want Conrad Prebys Africa Rocks to showcase Africa, where wildlife and
habitat are being threatened like never before,” said Myers.
In
true animal-friendly zoo fashion, an African-crested porcupine had the
honor of taking the first dig at the groundbreaking ceremony Wednesday,
officials said.
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