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Tallinn Zoo

Tallinn Zoo
Tallinna Loomaaed
Tallinn Zoo logo.svg
Tallinn Zoo logo
Loomaaed.jpg
Zoo entrance
Date opened 25 August 1939
Location Tallinn, Estonia
Coordinates 59°25′14.59″N 24°39′28.95″E / 59.4207194°N 24.6580417°E / 59.4207194; 24.6580417Coordinates: 59°25′14.59″N 24°39′28.95″E / 59.4207194°N 24.6580417°E / 59.4207194; 24.6580417
Land area 89 hectares (220 acres)
No. of animals 13,336 (2012)
No. of species 548 (2012)
Annual visitors 333,696 (2012)
Memberships WAZA,EAZA,VDZ,EARAZA
Website

Tallinn Zoo is a zoo in Tallinn, Estonia, that was founded in 1939. It is the only zoo in Estonia, and as of 2012, it housed 13,336 animals representing 548 species. Since 2009, it is the most visited zoo in the Baltic states.

In 1937, a team of Estonian marksmen won the World Champion title in Helsinki. They brought back with them a young lynx, named Illu. Illu became the first exhibit in the zoo, which was formally opened on 25 August 1939. The lynx was later chosen to be the zoo's emblem animal.

Inititally, the zoo was based on the edge of Kadriorg Park. Estonia was occupied and annexed by the Soviet Union in 1940, delaying the planned development of the zoo. It relocated to a 89-hectare (220-acre) site in the Veskimetsa district in 1983.

Tallinn Zoo has the world's largest mountain goat and sheep collection, and a large eagle and owl collection.

The zoo has two tropic houses which include crocodiles and other reptiles, as well as fishes, exotic birds, marmosets, chimpanzees, and mongooses.

The Elephant House was built in 1989 to celebrate the zoo's 50th birthday. It houses snakes, African elephants, pygmy hippos, armadillos, and rodents.

The Alpinarium has been part of the zoo since 2004. In the Alpinarium, one can find mountain sheep, ibex, and snow leopards.

The Middle-Asia Complex was built in 2002, and includes animals such as Przewalski's horses, Bactrian camels, bison, yak, and hyaenas. Near the Middle-Asia complex are pheasants, and water bird lakes that are home to ducks, pelicans, swans, and other water birds.


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Wikipedia

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