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Nashville Zoo at Grassmere

 
Wikipedia: Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
Date opened 1996
Location Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Land area 200 acres (0.8 km²)
Coordinates 36°05′19″N 86°44′32″W / 36.0885°N 86.7422°W / 36.0885; -86.7422Coordinates: 36°05′19″N 86°44′32″W / 36.0885°N 86.7422°W / 36.0885; -86.7422
Memberships AZA
Website http://www.nashvillezoo.org

The Nashville Zoo at Grassmere is a zoo and historic plantation farmhouse located six miles (10 km) southeast of downtown Nashville, Tennessee.

Contents

Background

The Nashville Zoo at Grassmere was founded in 1996, the result of a merger between two upstart competing facilities, The Nashville Zoo (located in nearby Pleasant View) and Grassmere Wildlife Park (which was located at the zoo's present location). The resulting facility has been engineered to grow so as to take maximum advantage of its 188 acres (760,809.01 m2).[1]

Grassmere Historic Home

The Historic Grassmere Home

On the grounds of the zoo facilities, the property still maintains the original historic plantation house, called Grassmere or the Historic Croft Home.

Visitors to the zoo can tour this 19th century historic house museum, its gardens and the associated Grassmere Historic Farm.

Current exhibits

The zoo contains a number of exhibits including:

Other exhibit areas provide homes for many other native and exotic animals including Bengal Tigers, Cougar, Meerkat, and numerous others.

The Nashville Zoo at Grassmere

In addition, the zoo also sports the "Jungle Gym," the largest community-built playground of its kind in the country, created in 1998. Thousands of volunteers worked together to build a vast array of slides, cargo netting, swings and climbing structures for children.

New exhibits

  • The Giraffe Savanna opened in April 2006 featuring three rare Masai giraffes.
  • Lorikeet Landing opened in fall of 2005 featuring a variety of Lories and lorikeets along with two species of Touraco and a Tragopan. This new aviary allows visitors to interact directly with the birds while feeding them nectar.
  • The Alligator Cove opened on July 22nd, 2006.
  • A Red River Hog exhibit in the savanna area is open.
  • An African Wild Dog exhibit is now open.
  • A Lynx exhibit is opened.
  • An African Crested Porcupine exhibit is now opened.
  • A Flamingo exhibit is scheduled to open in Spring 2010.
  • After the completion of the Pantanal exhibit, the number of animals will double.

Species conservation efforts

The zoo is active in numerous research and conservation activities including participating in a number of the programs in the Species Survival Plan which is managed by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums.

Gallery

References

External links


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