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Wuppertal Zoo

Wuppertal Zoo
Zoo Gaststätten Wuppertal 001.jpg
Zoo-Gaststättengebäude
Date opened 8 September 1881
Location Wuppertal, Germany
Coordinates 51°14′23″N 7°06′44″E / 51.23972°N 7.11222°E / 51.23972; 7.11222Coordinates: 51°14′23″N 7°06′44″E / 51.23972°N 7.11222°E / 51.23972; 7.11222
Land area 24 ha (59 acres)
Number of animals 5,000
Number of species 500
Website www.zoo-wuppertal.de/index.php?id=73&L=2

Wuppertal Zoo (German: Zoologischer Garten Wuppertal or Zoo Wuppertal) is a 24-hectare (59-acre) zoo in Wuppertal, Germany. About 5,000 animals representing about 500 species from around the world live at the zoo, including apes, monkeys, bears, big cats, elephants, as well as birds, reptiles, and fish.

The zoo was founded on 5 December 1879. The central building opened together with the zoo itself on 8 September 1881. It featured 34 animals, among them a pair of wolves and a bear. Since then, the zoo has been steadily expanded.

The gorilla enclosure was updated and expanded to 525 square metres (5,650 sq ft) in 2006, coinciding with the 125th anniversary of the opening of the zoo. Visitors can view the gorillas through a large glass window. The drill baboon enclosure was also renovated in 2006.

On 24 May 2007, the zoo opened a new enclosure for lions and tigers. The 1-hectare (2.5-acre) lion enclosure is claimed to be the largest in a German zoo, and the Siberian tigers now live in several enclosures in the Valley of Tigers.

Anori, a polar bear cub born on 4 January 2012, who shares a father with the internationally well-known late polar bear Knut, made her debut to the public alongside her mother Vilma on Thursday, 29 March 2012. Until then, a camera inside their enclosure had been monitoring her progress learning to walk and get around.

Modern enclosures and zoo buildings exist for elephants and apes, there is a house for birds with a specially designed hall, where freely flying birds can be observed, and a small combined aquarium/terrarium.

The zoo lies in the western part of Wuppertal on the so-called "Boltenberg" between Elberfeld and Vohwinkel.


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