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European Bison Released by Prague Zoo in Dolní Počernice Help Revitalise Landscape‼️🦬Thanks to Prague Zoo’s “European Bi...
24/10/2025

European Bison Released by Prague Zoo in Dolní Počernice Help Revitalise Landscape‼️🦬

Thanks to Prague Zoo’s “European Bison in Prague” project, Europe's largest land mammals will once again roam free in Dolní Počernice. The herd of three female European bison will soon be joined by a bull, who is on his way from Finland. Together, they will both enlarge the species’ numbers, it almost became extinct! They will also revitalise the local forest-steppe ecosystem, thus restoring the landscape to its natural character. Prague Zoo is working on the project with the Prague City Hall, the Dolní Počernice district, and the Czech Academy of Sciences.

More information: https://www.zoopraha.cz/en/about-zoo/news/15840-bison-released-by-prague-zoo-in-dolni-pocernice-help-revitalise-landscape

Photo: Oliver Le Que, Prague Zoo

Four Capybara Pups Born at Prague Zoo❗️Prague Zoo welcomed the offspring of one of today’s most popular animal species –...
20/10/2025

Four Capybara Pups Born at Prague Zoo❗️
Prague Zoo welcomed the offspring of one of today’s most popular animal species – the capybara. The world’s largest rodent has gained extraordinary popularity in recent years, especially on social media. All four young capybaras can already be seen in the Water World and Monkey Islands exhibit, located in the lower part of Prague Zoo.

ℹ️ More information 👉 www.zoopraha.cz/en/about-zoo/news/15813-four-capybara-pups-born-at-prague-zoo

Photo: Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

07/09/2025

🌊 Cool water and a good mud bath? Anoa bliss!

The lowland anoa is one of the world’s smallest bovid species. Its unusual name has a simple explanation: “anoa” is the Sulawesi word for “buffalo.” Their behaviour is similar to that of Indian water buffaloes—they love wallowing and bathing in pools of water and mud.



Video: Jiří Bálek

A double joy: two rare newborns at Prague Zoo! 🤎At Prague Zoo, two male calves of the most beautiful and also the most e...
03/09/2025

A double joy: two rare newborns at Prague Zoo! 🤎

At Prague Zoo, two male calves of the most beautiful and also the most endangered antelope in the world—the mountain bongo—were born just shortly apart. Come and see them! ✨

Meet Bugs! 🩶This young common wombat was rescued after his mother was most likely hit by a car. Bugs was found one sprin...
01/09/2025

Meet Bugs! 🩶

This young common wombat was rescued after his mother was most likely hit by a car. Bugs was found one spring night curled up and completely exhausted in the middle of the road. At that moment, he was taken in by the team from Wombat Rescue, an organization financially supported by Prague Zoo. 💚

Bugs was saved even though he was only about a year old and still dependent on his mother’s milk. For the Wombat Rescue carer, this meant bottle-feeding him special milk five times a day. After losing his mother, Bugs naturally sought comfort with another wombat, but wild wombats do not accept strangers’ young and may even attack them. Sadly, this happened to Bugs as well, as evidenced by his multiple injuries. 💔

Today, Bugs lives in a soft-release enclosure in a nature reserve on the outskirts of Canberra—a facility built with the support of Prague Zoo. He could be released into the wild once he reaches around 25 kg, which may take about another year. 🩶

Although Bugs’ story is one of hope, not all wombats are so lucky. Road collisions are unfortunately very common—as confirmed by Prague Zoo spokesperson Filip Mašek, who visited the rescue center in August and reported regularly encountering roadkill wombats while traveling along Australia’s east coast. 🚗

Prague Zoo sincerely thanks Wombat Rescue for their cooperation and for all their efforts in protecting wombats! 🌏

Through the eyes of Prague Zoo director Miroslav Bobek:SUNRISE WITH WILD CAMELSThe last time I was in Toli Bulag, deep i...
31/08/2025

Through the eyes of Prague Zoo director Miroslav Bobek:

SUNRISE WITH WILD CAMELS

The last time I was in Toli Bulag, deep in the Mongolian steppe, was many years ago with Mongolian conservationist Adiya and the Deputy Director for Zoology of our zoo Jaroslav Šimek. I can’t even remember exactly, when it was. At that time, we visited Toli Bulag to assess if this locality, whose name could be translated as “a crystal clear spring”, would be suitable for building the second breeding centre for wild camels. It was.

I returned again to Toli Bulag this August. The breeding centre has been built over the past two years mostly with funds from Prague Zoo, or rather the capital city of Prague, and seven wild camels moved in last year in September.

In the early morning the documentarist David Broda and I set up in the enclosure with camels. We were accompanied by the head of the project Adiya and the employee of the breeding centre Tserennadmid (the one in the traditional Mongolian hat, which is no longer seen in everyday life, and a long cigarette holder). As we were approaching the enclosure together over the gravelly, stone-hard surface, I realized again what a harsh environment wild camels live in. A minimum of vegetation, an absolute lack of water, and a temperature range from minus forty to plus forty degrees; from searing frost to scorching heat.

In the enclosure, Tserennadmid climbed onto a dune, looked around and showed us in which direction we were to continue. We followed—and we saw the camels just at the moment when the first rays of sunlight hit them. It was a breathtaking sight! The desert, the dunes, the orange light and unique, rare animals bathing in it!

There are only a few hundred wild camels remaining in the Gobi Desert (hence our effort to create a backup population) and they differ from domestic Bactrian camels at first glance. One wonders how disputes about whether they are truly a distinct species could have dragged on for so long, disputes that were finally resolved only by DNA analysis. Wild camels are slimmer and, I would say, even more graceful, and differently colored than domestic camels, but above all they have different humps: smaller, erect and pointed like mountain peaks.

Cautiously we got closer to the group in the enclosure and finally we spotted also three calves! Yes, three of five females gave birth to baby camels in April! They stack together, the first, second, third… Tserennadmid kept an eye on the male so he would not endanger us, so we could get even closer. Cuteness itself…

It was mainly these calves that brought us here. We carried detailed instructions to their local breeders, and our colleague Honza Marek did his best to pass on his experience. After all, with wild animals it is necessary to work in a different way than with domestic ones... But we also addressed the improvement of both breeding centres and many other things as well.

STOP! You won’t see anything cuter today! 🐾In the South American carnivores exhibit you can now spot two jaguarundi kitt...
30/08/2025

STOP! You won’t see anything cuter today! 🐾

In the South American carnivores exhibit you can now spot two jaguarundi kittens. They were born on July 7 to female Blanche and male Chaco. Both are thriving and have already started trying solid food. For this pair it is only their second litter. Last year’s offspring was in fact the only one in all of Europe! 🌍

Jaguarundis are more sociable than other wild cats, which allows the male to stay with his partner even during the rearing period. Visitors can often see the whole family resting together in one bundle or playfully exploring their enclosure.

Jaguarundi births are rare in European zoos, which makes us especially proud of these newborns 💙

Photo -ph-

MIROSLAV BOBEK: ONCE AGAIN IN THE EAST, IN THE VALLEY OF MONASTERIESA surprise awaited us during our August visit to Kha...
29/08/2025

MIROSLAV BOBEK: ONCE AGAIN IN THE EAST, IN THE VALLEY OF MONASTERIES

A surprise awaited us during our August visit to Khalkhgol, Mongolia’s easternmost province. After the director of the Nömrög National Park, D. Naranbaatar, had received the new Land Cruiser 79 from us, which will help when building the reintroduction centre for Przewalski’s horses in the Valley of Monasteries, he unexpectedly handed me, in return, a brand new, powerful motorcycle. I had never dreamed of anything like this. For me it was yet another proof of how strong Mongolia’s interest is in bringing back Przewalski's horses, as well as the willingness to take part in it.

The next day, our project member Dalai mounted the motorcycle—while I myself preferred driving the car—and we moved from Khalkhgol to the Valley of Monasteries, eighty kilometres away. This valley has already been written about here several times: it is where we plan to return the Przewalski’s horses, hopefully starting as early as 2028. Incidentally, along the way to the valley, there is a sign in the steppe announcing that wild horses will return to this area.

The Valley of Monasteries is enthralling, with a bright green carpet of grass, blooming in multifarious colours, with magnificent views that are in constant flux as the clouds chase one another across the big sky. I am more and more certain that we could not have chosen a more beautiful or more suitable location, with plenty of pasture and water.

The two hectares, where our reintroduction centre will be located, have been allocated on long-term loan to our organisation, We Help Them to Survive—Mongolia, while the acclimatisation enclosures will be built on the grounds of Nömrög National Park. The projects are already prepared, however, we still needed to specify the individual structures’ location on site, as well as the enclosures’ relation to the Hook River and the Southern Monastery Stream.

I believe we have planned and measured it well—in fact, as well as it could possibly be done. In contrast to the original draft, we shifted the reintroduction centre’s main building to the most suitable terrain, we chose the best possible site for the garage and hayloft, and, above all, we decided not to include the stream or, even less so, the fast-flowing river within the enclosures, but instead to end them a short distance away and dig pools inside. Now all that remains is to fine-tune the documentation, obtain the already pre-negotiated permits, and construction should begin next spring.

It looks like the laying of the ‘foundation stone’ in spring will be a big celebration (albeit completely different kind than what such ceremonies look like back home). The date of the event will be based on the lunar calendar and its lucky days. The selected lucky day should be in conjunction with a day of the pig, whose nature is to dig into the ground, and therefore such days are considered suitable for beginning construction work. According to our key Mongolian partner, Ganbaatar, the ceremony could in fact be held at another time as well, but tradition is tradition; not to mention that I am not about to take any risks.

So we are looking forward to the Day of the Pig—but we certainly aren’t twiddling our thumbs in the meantime.

Adresa

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