Brookfield Zoo, also known as the Chicago Zoological Park,[2][3] is a zoo located in the Chicago suburb of Brookfield, Illinois. It houses around 450 species of animals in an area of 216 acres (87ha). It opened on July 1, 1934, and quickly gained international recognition for using moats and ditches instead of cages to separate animals from visitors and from other animals. The zoo was also the first in America to exhibit giant pandas, one of which (Su Lin[4]) has been taxidermied and put on display in Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History. In 1960, Brookfield Zoo built the nation's first fully indoor dolphin exhibit, and in the 1980s, the zoo introduced Tropic World, the first fully indoor rainforest simulation and the then-largest indoor zoo exhibit in the world.
The Brookfield Zoo is owned by the Cook County Forest Preserve District and managed by the Chicago Zoological Society. The society sponsors numerous research and conservation efforts globally.
History
This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2021)
In 1919, Edith Rockefeller McCormick donated land she had received from her father as a wedding gift to the Cook County Forest Preserve District for development as a zoological garden. The district added 98 acres (400,000m2) to that plot and in 1921, the Chicago Zoological Society was established. Serious construction did not begin until 1926, after a zoo tax was approved. Construction slowed during the Great Depression, but regained momentum by late 1931. Construction went on at an increased pace[5] and the zoo opened on July 1, 1934.[6] By the end of September 1934, over one million people had visited the new zoo;[7] the four millionth visitor was just two years later.[8]
The 1950s saw the addition of a veterinary hospital,[9] a children's zoo,[10] and the famous central fountain.[11] The zoo went through a decline in the 1960s until a large bond issue from the Forest Preserve District, close attention to zoo governance, and visitor services saw the zoo recreate itself as one of the nation's best. Tropic World, the then-largest indoor zoo exhibit in the world, was designed by French architect Pierre Venoa and opened in three phases (Africa, Asia, and South America) between 1982 and 1984.[12]
During the zoo's early decades, a narrow-gauge railroad existed, which carried guests around the outer perimeter of the park from the North Gate to the old Seven Seas dolphin habitat on the park's south end. Bison lived on a small prairie on the west end of the park and could only been seen from the train, reminiscent of the Old West. The railroad was dismantled in the mid-1980s, although the pathways once used by the train still exist as roads for service vehicles, as does the North Gate station (since converted into a snack stand)
In the early 21st century, the zoo has undergone significant capital upgrades, constructing the Hamill Family Play Zoo, Regenstein Wolf Woods, butterfly tent, sheltered group catering pavilions, and the largest non-restored, hand-carved, wooden carousel in the United States. Great Bear Wilderness, a new, $27.3 million sprawling exhibit for grizzly and polar bears, opened in 2010.[13] The interiors of several existing buildings were reconfigured into immersion exhibits, based upon ecosystems rather than by clades; these include the Living Coast (the shores of Chile and Peru), the Swamp, the Clouded Leopard Rain Forest, Desert's Edge, the African Savanna and Forest, and Australia House.
The zoo's reptile house, the first building to open in 1934, closed in 2005 and was converted into the Mary Ann McLean Conservation Leadership Center which does not display live animals, but it details the zoo's larger conservation mission.[14]
Because of the expense of constructing Great Bear Wilderness and protests from In Defense of Animals over the deaths of the zoo's African elephants, the Pachyderm House was closed for a year in 2011 for modifications and no longer exhibits elephants or river hippopotamuses.[15]
The Children's Zoo, which opened in August 1953, was dismantled in early 2013, and a new family-based series of exhibits known as Wild Encounters opened on the site on July 1, 2015, which features a red panda, a herd of reindeer, 2 Llamas, Bennet's wallabies, 22 Nigerian dwarf goats, and a free-flight parakeet aviary.[16]
The Pachyderm building also has a pygmy hippo named 'Banana' who arrived at the zoo in May 2022 after an old female hippo passed away in June 2021.[17]
The Brookfield Zoo is also known for its majestic fountain named after the 26th president of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt. On some days, the fountain's spouting water can reach up to 60 feet high.
The zoo has been closed only five times in its history: On September 14, 2008, after damage from a weekend rainstorm;[18] on February 2, 2011, after a major blizzard; on April 18–19, 2013, after flooding from a severe rainstorm;[19] January 30–31, 2019, due to below-freezing temperatures;[20] and from March 19 to July 1, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[21]
Notable animals (past and present)
Ziggy was a 6.5 ton male Asian elephant
Binti Jua is a female western lowland gorilla
Cookie, a Major Mitchell's cockatoo, had been part of the zoo's collection since the opening in 1934 until his death in 2016.
Animal list
Australia House
Bennett's wallaby
Cape Barren goose
Carpet python
Emu
Frilled lizard
Gippsland water dragon
Green tree python
Laughing kookaburra
Magnificent tree frog
Queensland red-claw crayfish
Rodrigues flying fox
Short-beaked echidna
Southern hairy-nosed wombat
Spiny-tailed monitor
Western gray kangaroo
Woma python
Big Cats
African lion
Amur leopard
Amur tiger
Sloth bear
Snow leopard
Clouded Leopard Rain Forest
Asian yellow-spotted climbing toad
Binturong
Emperor newt
Fishing cat
Indian ornamental tarantula
Indochinese box turtle
Mainland clouded leopard
Mandarin rat snake
Prevost's squirrel
Tentacled snake
Thai bamboo racer snake
Desert's Edge
Bat-eared fox
Black-footed cat
Blue spiny lizard
Cape porcupine
Common chuckwalla
Damaraland mole-rat
Meerkat
Naked mole-rat
Ocelot
Small-spotted genet
White-nosed coati
Feather & Scales
Andean cock-of-the-rock
Arizona mountain kingsnake
Aruba Island rattlesnake
Bali myna
Banded knob-tailed gecko
Beautiful fruit dove
Black tree monitor
Blue-billed curassow
Blue-crowned laughingthrush
Blue-crowned motmot
Blue-faced honeyeater
Blue-gray tanager
Blue-necked tanager
Bumblebee toad
Carrot-tail viper gecko
Chicago garter snake
Chinese crocodile lizard
Common musk turtle
Cope's gray tree frog
Crested wood partridge
Curl-crested aracari
Desert grassland whiptail lizard
Dumeril's boa
Eastern fox snake
Egyptian tortoise
Gambel's quail
Greater roadrunner
Green honeycreeper
Helmeted curassow
Jamaican boa
Jambu fruit dove
Madagascar spider tortoise
Northern mockingbird
Ornate flying snake
Red-capped cardinal
Red-vented bulbul
Rio Fuerte beaded lizard
Rosy boa
Rough green snake
Saffron finch
Santa Catalina rattlesnake
Sheltopusik
Silver-beaked tanager
Spiny-headed tree lizard
Spotted turtle
Tawny frogmouth
Turquoise tanager
Victoria crowned pigeon
Violaceous turaco
Western gaboon viper
Western hognose snake
White-rumped shama
White-winged dove
Free Flight Room
Andean cock-of-the-rock
Blue-crowned motmot
Blue-gray tanager
Brazilian teal
Green honeycreeper
Paradise tanager
Red-capped cardinal
Red-vented bulbul
Saffron finch
Silver-beaked tanager
Sunbittern
Venezuelan troupial
Wattled curassow
Frogs & Reptiles
Anthony's poison dart frog
Argus monitor
Baja blue rock lizard
Baron's green racer snake
Brazil-nut poison dart frog
Caiman lizard
Desert iguana
Eastern casquehead iguana
Eastern indigo snake
Gila monster
Gray's monitor
Gray-banded kingsnake
Green tree monitor
Green-and-black poison dart frog
Green-crested basilik
Jamaican iguana
Lake Titicaca water frog
Lemur leaf frog
Mexican beaded lizard
Panamanian golden frog
Papuan olive python
Emerald tree skink
Prehensile-tailed skink
Puerto Rican boa
Puffing snake
Reticulated python
Solomon Island leaf frog
Spiny-headed tree lizard
Texas tortoise
Timor python
Utila Island spinytail iguana
Weber's sailfin lizard
Yellow-banded poison dart frog
Great Bear Wilderness
American bison
Bald eagle
Grizzly bear
Polar bear
Habitat Africa! The Forest
Blue-bellied roller
Congo peafowl
Dwarf crocodile
Home's hinge-backed tortoise
Madagascar tree boa
Okapi
Red river hog
Red-billed hornbill
Red-flanked duiker
White-bellied pangolin
Yellow-backed duiker
Habitat Africa! The Savannah
African painted dog
African spurred tortoise
Dwarf mongoose
Gerenuk
Giant plated lizard
Giraffe
Gray crowned crane
Kirk's dik-dik
Klipspringer
Leopard tortoise
Lowland nyala
Pancake tortoise
White-throated monitor
Habitat Africa! (The Savannah) Kopje Free Flight Aviary
Chicago cartoonist John T. McCutcheon was the president of the Chicago Zoological Society from 1921 until 1948 and oversaw the zoo's construction, opening and its early years, including helping it through the war years, when the zoo saw a decrease in attendance.
Grace Olive Wiley briefly worked as a reptile curator at the zoo in 1935.[22]
George B. Rabb was the director of Brookfield Zoo from 1976 until 2003, having originally worked as a researcher and an assistant to the director.
Conservation programs
The Brookfield Zoo has a conservation project in Punta San Juan, Peru. Disney World partnered with the zoo by giving a $25,000 grant assigned specifically to the work in Punta San Juan, Peru, which helped the Chicago Zoological Society conservationists gain clearance into the highly restricted and protected area. The CZS has hired multiple people that already worked for the reserve to help build a conservation research team. Samples are taken from wildlife such as South American sea lions, Inca terns, Peruvian boobys, Guanay cormorants, and the endangered Humboldt penguins. The team uses the information they gathered to research the environment, observe the species, and monitor populations. Project results further knowledge about the ocean and help save endangered species. Team members also continuously have groups of children, of varying ages, go out to clean up garbage that accumulates on the beaches of Punta San Juan from the Pacific Ocean.[23]
Economics
In 2014, revenue of the Brookfield Zoo was made up by $26.6 million from admissions and guest services, $15.2 million from taxes, $11.5 million from membership dues, $11.5 million from contributions, sponsorships, and net assets released, and $1.2 million from investments and other income. Expenses in 2014 included $15.7 million for admissions and guest services, $15 million for animal collections and conservation programs, $10.7 million for care of buildings and grounds, $7.9 million for management and general, $5.9 million for public education and communications, $3.8 million for marketing and public relations, $3.4 million for fundraising, and $1.4 million for membership. Revenue totaled $66 million and spending totaled $63.8 million during 2014.[24]
In 2010, Governor Pat Quinn granted the Brookfield Zoo $15.6 million to aid repairing and remodeling many parts of the zoo. This included updating the north entrance to the zoo on 31st Street and Golfview Avenue.[25]
The CZS has hosted several fundraising events, Wines in the Wild and Wild Wild Whirl, where they collected various donations ranging in totals from $130,000 to $1.5 million.[26][27]
A total of 808 volunteers help the zoo with 74,401 community service hours which equates to $1.86 million of work.[24]
Economic movement approaches $150 million, 2,000 jobs, 580 volunteers, and 2.2 million visitors every year.[28]
Gallery
Ibex Island - demolished
Siberian ibex - in old habitat
Giraffe Enclosure in Habitat of Africa - Savannah precinct
"50 CWA Workers Rush Construction on Brookfield Zoo". Chicago Daily Tribune. 1933-12-31. p.6.
Kelley, Katherine (1934-01-18). "Brookfield Zoo Will Be Ready to Open July 1". Chicago Daily Tribune. p.20.
"Total of Brookfield Zoo Visitors Exceeds Million". Chicago Daily Tribune. 1934-09-29. p.5.
"Zoo's 4,000,000th Visitor". Chicago Daily Tribune. 1936-09-08. p.1. Phyllis Guren of Bemidji, Minn., the 4000000th visitor to the Brookfield zoo, with bicycle which was her reward.
Hutchinson, Louise (1953-01-15). "Brookfield Zoo Hospital Gives Succor to Sick". Chicago Daily Tribune. p.S9.
Hutchinson, Louise (1953-07-19). "2 Kinds of Kids Ready for New Brookfield Zoo". Chicago Daily Tribune. p.NW6.
"Dedicate Theodore Roosevelt Fountain at Zoo". Chicago Daily Tribune. 1954-05-15. p.B7.
Presecky, William (1983-05-11). "Brookfield Zoo's Tropic World opens doorway to Asia". Chicago Tribune. p.SD3.
Smith, Katie. "Gov. Quinn Gives $15.6 Million to Brookfield Zoo, Which Is Criticized by Animal Rights Groups for Its Elephant Conditions." Gov. Quinn Gives $15.6 Million to Brookfield Zoo, Which Is Criticized by Animal Rights Groups for Its Elephant Conditions. January 12, 2010. Accessed February 28, 2016. http://newsarchive.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/news-153397-print.html {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160513025935/http://newsarchive.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/news-153397-print.html |date=2016-05-13 }}.
Litas, Lee A. ""Wines in the Wild" Raises $130,000 for Brookfield Zoo." Western Springs, The Doing. Chicago Tribune, 23 Nov. 2015. Web. 11 Feb. 2016. <http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/western-springs/lifestyles/ct-dhd-faces-brookwine-tl-1203-20151120-story.html>.
Pioneer Press. "Brookfield Zoo Celebrates a Wild Wild Whirl." Western Springs, The Doing. Chicago Tribune, 7 May 2015. Web. 11 Feb. 2016. <http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/western-springs/lifestyles/ct-dhd-trend-zoowhirl-tl-0507-20150507-story.html>.
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