The Louisville Zoological Gardens, commonly known as the Louisville Zoo, is a 134-acre (54 ha) zoo in Louisville, Kentucky, situated in the city's Poplar Level neighborhood. Founded in 1969, the "State Zoo of Kentucky" currently exhibits over 1,700 animals in naturalistic and mixed animal settings representing both geographical areas and biomes or habitats.
![]() Zoo Entrance | |
Date opened | May 1, 1969; 53 years ago (1969-05-01) |
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Location | Louisville, Kentucky, United States |
Coordinates | 38°12′19″N 85°42′19″W |
Land area | 134 acres (54 ha) |
No. of animals | 1,700 |
Annual visitors | 900,000+ |
Memberships | AZA,[1] AAM[2] |
Major exhibits | Gorilla Forest, Islands |
Website | www |
The Louisville Zoo is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and the American Alliance of Museums. During the 2006–07 season, the zoo set an all-time yearly attendance record with 810,546 visitors.[3]
The Louisville Zoo's mission is "To better the bond between the people and our planet".
The Louisville Zoo opened on May 1, 1969, with 250 animals on exhibit.[4] The zoo was built on land acquired by the City of Louisville in the 1960s from the estate of Ben Collins. Much of the initial funding was donated by local philanthropist James Graham Brown.
Opening Day in 1969 mostly had exhibits with four-legged animals such as elephants and giraffes. The zoo also offered a train to take zoo visitors past several exhibits; this attraction operated until 2019, and the trains were ultimately sold in 2021.[5] Opening Day had some criticism from the general public as a lack of shade was evident throughout the zoo. Over time, tree growth has reduced the problem.
In 1997, a fully restored Philadelphia Toboggan Company (PTC #49) carousel was added as an attraction.[6] In May 2007, Glacier Run Splash Park, a children's water playground with 42 water-spray features, opened at the zoo.[7] The splash park was the first phase of the Glacier Run area to open, which features polar bears exhibits modeled after the town of Churchill, Manitoba, Canada.[8]
The Louisville Zoo has eight large exhibits: The Islands, Africa, Glacier Run, Australia, South America, HerpAquarium, Gorilla World, and the Cats of the Americas exhibit.
The zoo was awarded the 2003 Association of Zoos and Aquariums Exhibit Award for its 4-acre (16,000 m2) exhibit "Gorilla Forest".[9] The exhibit currently houses 11 western lowland gorillas, and two pygmy hippopotamuses. Inside the circular Gorilla Sanctuary, visitors are separated only by glass and can get nose-to-nose with the gorillas. Several different outdoor vantage points are available from which to see the gorillas playing and relaxing.[10]
The HerpAquarium features 17 Vampire bats , and over 100 species of reptiles, amphibians, and fish, from around the world. A notable resident of the HerpAquarium is a 6-foot-long (1.8 m) rare albino American alligator named King Louie. He is named after King Louis XVI of France, after whom the city of Louisville is also named.[11] Louie was hatched at the St. Augustine Alligator Farm Zoological Park. The Louisville Zoo currently houses a group of critically endangered Panamanian golden frogs. The zoo is working to preserve this species of frog from extinction. Their numbers have declined in the wild partly due to the chytrid fungus and habitat destruction. On March 31, 2006, the zoo added a bachelor group of seven vampire bats obtained from the Philadelphia Zoo, and another 10 from the Sedgwick County Zoo were added to the group in late May 2006. Eventually, the exhibit will house around 40 bats. The exhibit is designed to look like an old mine shaft. [12]
The zoo has a distinctive zoological exhibit called "Islands," which is the first zoological exhibit in the world that uses a system of rotating a variety of animals into one exhibit. This way, the animals can explore different habitats throughout the day, as they would in the wild. This helps to give the animals needed stimulation and heightens their awareness. Moreover, the exhibit is the first to have natural predator and prey in the same space. It has three outdoor exhibit areas and one indoor area. All animals in this exhibit are endangered or threatened species. The animals on display here change from day to day so that visitors can have a new and different experience with each visit to the zoo. The animals that can be seen in this exhibit include the Sumatran tiger, orangutan, siamang, babirusa, and Malayan tapir.[13] The zoo is home to four orangutans, two males named Teak and Segundo (aka Gunny) and two females named Amber and Bella. Amber and Teak are half-siblings sharing the same father and are hybrid orangutans, while Gunny and Bella are purebred Sumatran orangutans and are under breeding recommendation, though there has yet to be any successful breeding between them. The Islands Pavilion is an indoor area that houses many species of birds, including the white-throated ground-dove. The zoo was the first zoo in the world to hatch this rare dove in captivity. The first hatchling was born on October 17, 2006, and a second followed on December 1, 2006.[14] Some of the other bird species included in the Islands Pavilion are the Victoria crowned pigeon, Nicobar pigeon, pied imperial pigeon, Jambu fruit dove, Mariana fruit dove, Asian fairy-bluebird, red-crested cardinal, Indian white-eye, black-necked stilt, Inca tern, red fody, nene and the black-footed penguin. The pavilion also houses the Rodrigues fruit bat, Cuban crocodile, and Komodo dragon.
The new Wallaroo Walkabout that opened in 2007 lets guests walk directly through the exhibit, which is home to the wallaroo and red-necked wallaby, as well as some Australian birds including the kookaburra, blue-faced honeyeater, emu, and tawny frogmouth. Visitors are able to interact with the wallaroos and wallabies if they stay on the walkway. Then after the wallabies and wallaroos, guests can go into the Lorikeet Landing, which is an Australian exhibit that is a walkthrough aviary filled with several brightly colored birds known as lorikeets. Visitors can feed nectar to the birds right out of their hands. The lorikeet species at the Louisville Zoo are the black-winged lory, green-naped lorikeet, perfect lorikeet, red lory, and Swainson's lorikeet.[15]
Finished in early 2011, this 4.3-acre (1.7 ha) outdoor exhibit is based on the theme of an old gold-mining town bordered by a glacier. It features polar bears, harbor seals, gray seals, California sea lions, grizzly bears, snowy owls, Steller's sea eagles, Mandarin ducks, the Red-breasted goose, and Azure-winged magpies. Outside the gold mine town are 3 exhibits for snow leopards, Amur tigers, and Red-crowned Cranes. The exhibit also has a splash park for children that opened in 2007, and was the first part of this $25 million exhibit to open.[16][17] The exhibit also includes classrooms, party rooms available for rental, viewing areas above and below water, and a 200-seat outdoor auditorium for watching animal training demonstrations.
This region of the zoo is based on the African Serengeti. Animals featured here include the lion, dromedary camel, southern white rhinoceros, common warthog, addax, meerkat, naked mole-rat, Hartmann's mountain zebra, Masai giraffe, gray crowned cranes, wattled cranes, eastern bongo, rock hyrax, and a new colobus monkey exhibit that opened in 2019. The zoo is one of the few zoos to exhibit African and Asian elephants together in the same habitat. The zoo is home to an Asian elephant named Punch, who is 51 years old, and an African bush elephant named Mikki, who is 36 years old and her son named Fitz, who is now 2 years old.
This part of the zoo is next to the South America exhibit, and it has all rescued animals that cannot be returned to the wild. The animals include Canada lynxes, bald eagles, and cougars.
This exhibit of the zoo has animals from the Andes grasslands and Amazon rainforest of South America along with a botanical garden area. The animals contained in this exhibit include Chilean flamingos, maned wolves, two-toed sloths, jaguars, hyacinth macaws, and guanacos.
Western lowland gorilla | Black-and-white colobus | Cottontop tamarin | Patas monkey |
Orangutan | Siamang | African lion | Cougar |
Jaguar | Ocelot | Amur tiger | Grizzly bear |
African elephant | Asian elephant | Addax | Hartmann's mountain zebra |
Masai giraffe | Mhorr gazelle | Polar bear | Babirusa |
Bongo | Rodrigues fruit bat | Vampire bat | Dromedary camel |
Black and rufous elephant shrew | Black-footed ferret | Guanaco | Four-toed hedgehog |
Pygmy hippopotamus | Black-and-white ruffed lemur | Meerkat | Naked mole rat |
Virginia opossum | Brazilian porcupine | White rhinoceros | Rock hyrax |
Grey seal | California sea lion | Malayan tapir | Sumatran tiger |
Wallaroo | Red-necked wallaby | Warthog | Maned wolf |
Malayan tapir | Red ruffed lemur | Ringtailed lemur | Zebra mouse |
Spiny mouse | Donkey | Nigerian Dwarf goat | Angora goat |
Nubian goat | African pygmy goat | Three-banded armadillo | Snow leopard |
Chinese alligator | Anaconda | Bearded dragon | Boa constrictor |
Rosy boa | Panther chameleon | Chuckwalla | Cuban crocodile |
African clawed frog | Poison dart frog | Argentine tegu | Tomato frog |
White's tree frog | Gila monster | Komodo dragon | American alligator |
Philippine sailfin lizard | Western green mamba | Andean milksnake | Ball python |
Calabar python | Reticulated python | Timber rattlesnake | River cooter |
Blue-tongued skink | Shingleback skink | Corn snake | Eastern indigo snake |
Sonoran gopher snake | Western hognose snake | Aldabra giant tortoise | Desert tortoise |
Greek tortoise | Star tortoise | Chicken turtle | Matamata turtle |
Musk turtle | Razor-back musk turtle | Gaboon viper | Panamanian golden frog |
Grey tree frog | American toad | Sonoran desert toad | Smoky jungle frog |
African bullfrog | Puerto Rican crested toad | Sinai desert cobra | Egyptian cobra |
Green tree python | Eyelash viper | Gopher snake | Red diamondback rattlesnake |
Aruba island rattlesnake | Madagascar tree boa | Spotted skaapsteker | Emerald tree boa |
Desert sidewinder | Cottonmouth | Copperhead | African house snake |
Red-tailed green ratsnake | Angolan python | Rough scaled sand boa | Prairie rattlesnake |
Eastern diamondback rattlesnake | Green vine snake | Black kingsnake | Trans-Pecos ratsnake |
Schneiders skink | Sandfish | Mali uromastyx | Madagascan giant day gecko |
Sheltopusik | Pygmy spiny tailed skink | Green basilisk | Asian box turtle |
Diamondback terrapin | Red-footed tortoise | Eastern box turtle | Red-eared slider |
Wood turtle | Green iguana | Hellbender | Alligator snapping turtle |
Argentine horned frog | California kingsnake | Four-lined zonosaur | Rock rattlesnake |
Tiger rattlesnake | Sinaloan milksnake | Black rattlesnake | Black-tailed rattlesnake |
Southwestern speckled rattlesnake | Mexican burrowing python | Spotted turtle |
Mariana fruit dove | Pink-headed fruit dove | White-throated ground-dove | Wompoo fruit-dove |
Pink pigeon | Jambu fruit-dove | Beautiful fruit-dove | Caribbean dove |
White-crowned pigeon | Papuan mountain-pigeon | Nicobar pigeon | Pied imperial-pigeon |
Cinnamon ground-dove | Violaceous euphonia | Demoiselle crane | Red-crowned crane |
Wattled crane | East African crowned crane | Steller's sea eagle | Bald eagle |
Hawaiian hawk | American kestrel | African openbill stork | Oriental stork |
White stork | African pygmy-falcon | Black winged lorikeet | Perfect lorikeet |
Green naped rainbow lorikeet | Red-flanked lorikeet | Rupell's griffon vulture | Chilean flamingo |
Asian fairy bluebird | Blue-gray tanager | Bay-headed tanager | Eastern screech owl |
White-rumped shama | Ostrich | Greater rhea | Emu |
African penguin | Bird of paradise | Peafowl | Black-necked stilt |
Bali starling | Masked laughingthrush | Inca tern | Red-crested cardinal |
Madagascar fody | Blue-winged leafbird | Wattled jacana | Yellow-hooded blackbird |
Warbling white-eye | Golden white-eye | Crested wood-partridge | Blue dacnis |
Egyptian goose | Yellow-headed amazon | Red-billed hornbill | Hawaiian goose |
Hyacinth macaw | Barn owl | Red shoveler | Emerald starling |
Sun conure | Tawny frogmouth | Chestnut teal | Turkey vulture |
Chiloe wigeon | Bernier's teal | Barnacle goose | Bar-headed goose |
Coscoroba swan | Barnacle goose | Southern screamer | Blue-faced honeyeater |
Kookaburra | Bridled white-eye | Geen-naped pheasant pigeon | Victoria crowned pigeon |
Waldrapp ibis | Geen-naped pheasant pigeon | Black stork | Sunbittern |
Red-billed leiothrix | Swainson's lorikeet | Red lory | Oriental white-eye |
Red-tailed hawk | Peregrine falcon | Victoria crowned pigeon | Yellow-breasted ground dove |
Socorro ground dove | White-tailed trogon |
Bucktooth tetra | Green severum | Silver arowana | Redhook metunnis |
African lungfish | Banded archer fish | Banded lepornus | Lookdown |
Silver moony | French grunt | Red-bellied piranha | Largemouth bass |
Redear sunfish | Bluegill | African moony | Spanish hogfish |
Spotted gar | Longnose gar | Dolphin catfish |
Blue bloom birdeater | Texas brown tarantula | Venezuelan suntiger tarantula |
Salem ornamental tarantula | King baboon spider | Mexican redknee tarantula |
Chilean rose tarantula | Mexican fireleg tarantula | Brazilian salmon pink |
Giant millipede | Madagascar hissing cockroach | Deathstalker |
During October, the zoo hosts the "World's Largest Halloween Party", one of the largest Halloween parties in the United States.
The zoo has a booth called "Handimals" located by the entrance where kids can make an animal out of their hand prints.
Often when an animal is born in the zoo, the zoo holds a contest where participants send in ideas for names.
On July 1, 1994, a man was picked up and dropped several times by an African elephant named Kenya. As a result of the man's injuries, his spleen and part of his pancreas were removed. The elephant had just finished giving rides to zoo visitors and was being led away when she wandered off and picked up the man. Zoo officials said that the elephant, who was normally considered calm and docile, was just "horsing around".[29]
On June 1, 2009, the zoo train derailed. Three open-air cars and the engine went off the tracks and caused the passenger car to topple over, due to excessive speed and operator inexperience.[30] The incident injured 22 people. An Indiana family that was on the train when the accident happened has sued the Louisville Zoo. Amy and Darren Bamforth filed the lawsuit on June 10, 2009. Another family in Louisville who was on the train, also filed a suit. They sought unspecified monetary damages as well as a court order preventing the zoo from altering or destroying the train while the lawsuit proceeds. A spokesman for the zoo declined to comment. The zoo train was closed for four years. On July 2, 2013, the zoo train reopened to the public after buying new trains and investing in expanded training procedures. All legal actions regarding the incident were concluded as of October, 2015.[30]
Media related to Louisville Zoo at Wikimedia Commons
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