Indianapolis Zoo
The Indianapolis Zoo is a zoo located in White River State Park, in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, housing more than 3,800 animals of more than 320 species and subspecies. The institution is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and the American Alliance of Museums as a zoo, an aquarium, and as a botanical garden. The zoo is a private non-profit organization, receiving no tax support and is supported entirely by membership fees, admissions, donations, sales, grants, and an annual fundraiser.
History
In 1944, thoughts of the Indianapolis Zoo first came to mind by a newspaper columnist named Lowell B. Nussbaum. He began to write his opinions of wanting a zoo through his column "Inside Indianapolis." It was his writing that inspired the Indianapolis people and in October 1944 the "Articles of Incorporation for the Indianapolis zoological society, INC" emerged. Soon the members of this group had outlined the future plans of their zoo, one thing that the group members were adamant about; "the zoo will rely on admissions, in-park sales, contributions, and memberships to support the zoo. " It first opened to the public in 1964.George Washington Park
The Indianapolis Zoo opened on April 18, 1964, at its original location in George Washington Park on East 30th Street. The official opening was two decades after the Indianapolis Zoological Society Inc. had been formed and planning for the zoo started. In its first year, the new attraction drew more than 270,000 visitors. The zoo originally featured an Asian elephant, penguins, kangaroos, foxes, raccoons, camels, bison, deer, lambs, tortoises, llamas, prairie dogs, pygmy goats, and buffalo exhibits. In 1965, the zoo became one of few in the country to employ a full-time education staff. By the 20th anniversary of the zoo, its animal collection had doubled in size and it was determined that the zoo needed a new location where it could continue to expand.In 1982, international zoo, aquarium, and wildlife authorities gathered to set goals for establishing the new zoo. It was determined that a zoo should not only be a place to see animals, but also an institution of conservation and education. That same year, White River State Park was announced as the new site of the zoo. The groundbreaking at the new downtown location was held in September 1985. The old zoo closed in 1987.
White River State Park
The current zoo in White River State Park was opened in 1988 with a size of.After the construction of the Waters building and the Dolphin Pavilion, the zoo earned AZA accreditation as an aquarium as well as a zoo. In 1996, the Indianapolis Zoo became the first institution to be triple-accredited as a zoo, aquarium and botanical garden. White River Gardens was considered a separate facility from 1999 to 2006, but now is included as part of the zoo.
The zoo hosts more than a million visitors each year and plays a role in worldwide conservation and research, including accomplishing the world's first successful artificial insemination of an African elephant.
Biomes
The Indianapolis Zoo is organized around the concept of biomes. Biomes are areas of the planet with similar climate, plants, and animals. Animals at the Indianapolis Zoo are clustered in groups with similar habitats, which define the biomes. At the Indianapolis Zoo, one can visit the five biomes listed below.Each of the biomes participates in conservation and breeding programs.
Oceans
Pinniped Shore- California sea lion
- Gray seal
- Cownose ray
- Smooth dogfish shark
- Tang fish
- Unicorn fish
- Butterfly fish
- Coral
- Sea anemones
- Green moray eel
- Angelfish
- Red lionfish
- Smooth dogfish shark
- Pot-bellied seahorse
- Clownfish
- Starfish
- Cardinal fish
- King Penguin
- Gentoo Penguin
- Rockhopper Penguin
- Long-tailed macaque
- Pacific walrus
- Atlantic bottlenose dolphin
Forests
- Ring-tailed lemur
- Red panda
- Amur tiger
- Great green macaw
- Green-winged macaw
- Scarlet macaw
- Hyacinth macaw
- Blue and gold macaw
- Military macaw
- Blue-throated macaw
- Rose-ringed parakeet
- White-handed gibbon
- Alaskan brown bear
- Bald eagle
- Turkey vulture
- Chinese alligator
- Nile crocodile
- Hoffmann's two-toed sloth
- Linnaeus's two-toed sloth
- Golden eagle
- Victoria crowned pigeon
- American alligator
Deserts
- Rhinoceros iguana
- Mali spiny-tailed lizard
- Blue-tongued skink
- Central bearded dragon
- Grand cayman blue iguana
- Desert tortoise
- Radiated tortoise
- Egyptian tortoise
- Northern bobwhite quail
- Greater roadrunner
- Laughing kookaburra
- Meerkat
- Great plated lizard
- Chuckwalla
- Colorado River toad
- Jamaican iguana
- Reticulated python
- Copperhead
- Timber rattlesnake
- Cottonmouth
- Black mamba
- Eastern green mamba
- Burmese python
- Gaboon viper
- Cape cobra
- Red spitting cobra
- Gila monster
- Massasauga rattlesnake
- Santa catalina rattlesnake
- Spotted python
- Green tree python
- Hognose snake
- Madagascar tree boa
- Eyelash viper
- Green iguana
- Australian snake-necked turtle
- Ocelot
- Northern bald ibis
Australian Outback
- Red kangaroo
- Eastern grey kangaroo
- Sulphur-crested cockatoo
- Emu
- Saltwater crocodile
- Wedge-tailed eagle
- White-bellied sea eagle
- Roseate spoonbill
- Steller's sea eagle
- Andean condor
- California condor
- Crested ibis
- Sumatran rhino
- Dall sheep
- Pileated woodpecker
- Yak
- Water buffalo
- Great hornbill
- Takin
- White stork
International Orangutan Center
- Sumatran orangutan
- Bornean orangutan
Flights of Fancy
- Caribbean flamingo
- Chilean flamingo
- Greater flamingo
- Budgerigar
- Cockatiel
- Eurasian eagle owl
- Great horned owl
- Red lory
- Rainbow lorikeet
- Green-naped lorkeet
- Cabot's tragopan
- Crested wood partridge
- Golden pheasant
- Green woodhoopoe
- Himalayan monal
- Indian peafowl
- Lady Amherst's pheasant
- Superb starling
- Taveta golden weaver
- White-cheeked turaco
- Vulturine guineafowl
- Rock hyrax
- Southern ground hornbill
Plains
- Grant's zebra
- Greater kudu
- White-bearded wildebeest
- Thomson's gazelle
- Ostrich
- Marabou stork
- Ruppell's griffon vulture
- Addra gazelle
- Impala
- Reticulated giraffe
- Southern white rhino
- African lion
- Guinea baboon
- Cheetah
- African crowned crane
- Saddle-billed stork
- Crested coua
- Helmeted guineafowl
- Eastern yellow-billed hornbill
- African bush elephant
- Warthog
- Cape porcupine
St. Vincent Dolphin Pavilion
;Underwater Viewing Dome
The pavilion has a diameter, high, underwater dome placed squarely in the middle of the dolphin performance pool – a first for U.S. zoos. Opened on Memorial Day weekend 2005, zoo visitors can view dolphins from underneath the surface of the water.
;St. Vincent Dolphin Theater
On top of the water, the interior of the St. Vincent Dolphin Theater features a million-gallon plus pool where dolphin presentations occurs daily. There are 7 bottlenose dolphins : Bo, Maddie, Jag, Neo, Wahoo, Apollo and Turner.
;Dolphin In-Water Adventure
The Indianapolis Zoo has the Midwest's only in-water dolphin program for the public, allowing guests to interact with the dolphins in their exhibit.
International Orangutan Center
In early September 2012, the Indianapolis Zoo broke ground on a new, $21.5 million project known as the International Orangutan Center which will serves not only as an exhibit for guests to enjoy, but also as a research hub to help orangutan conservation. The project is being partially funded by a $2 million donation from the family foundation of Dean and Barbara White. The exhibit houses nine orangutans and features a 90-foot-tall viewing atrium and an aerial cable ride to give visitors a one of a kind view of the animals. The exhibit includes a series of cable highways to allow the orangutans to travel throughout the zoo at their leisure. The exhibit opened Memorial Day weekend 2014.MISTery Park
MISTery Park is a landscaped path featuring flowers, tall grasses, and trees with a cooling fog created by misters. It is also the home of the two-toed sloth exhibit. The exhibit opened in 2019.Other Rides and Attractions
- Flamingo Feed Experience
- Feed a Budgie or Lorikeet
- Feed a Giraffe
- Race-a-Cheetah
- Kombo Family Coaster
- White River Junction Train Ride
- Endangered Species Carousel
- Skyline
- Playground
- Tots Treehouse and Play Area
Conservation and research
Notable Animals
Rocky
Born September 25, 2004, Rocky is a rescued entertainment orangutan. He moved to the Indianapolis Zoo prior to opening of the International Orangutan Center in 2014. Rocky has been noted for his unique vocal demonstrations and ability to "speak". A video of Rocky went viral in 2017, picturing Rocky interacting with a zoo guest. The guest had recently suffered a burn, and had a large bandage covering a portion of her arm and shoulder. Rocky expressed interest in the bandage, gesturing at it and seemingly requesting she remove the bandage. The guest did so, and Rocky is seen inspecting her burn.Incidents
On August 9, 2006, a truck with a shipment of 24 penguins, an octopus, and several exotic fish from the Indianapolis Zoo to Moody Gardens in Galveston, Texas, flipped over due to driver error. Several fish died immediately as their bags popped. Three gentoo penguins were killed after being hit on the roadway. As the truck was turned back over, two rockhopper penguins were found, one dead and one alive. A king penguin had an injured wing and two other penguins were in shock. The surviving animals were taken to a zoo near Tyler, Texas for treatment. Texas law requires that drivers of such a vehicle hold a commercial driver's license to legally drive it, and neither of the women driving the truck held such a license. The surviving animals eventually arrived at their destination at Moody Gardens.On November 11, 2007, a fire broke out in the Encounters area and killed several small animals. Before 4:30 am, it started in the Critter Corner building, and fire fighters arrived within five minutes. The flames were put out within 35 minutes. However, it killed three turtles, two birds, an armadillo, a snake, a colony of hissing cockroaches, several different birds and other animals in that time, and more were treated at the zoo's hospital. The Critter Corner temporarily closed and the cause of the fire was due to the armadillo pushing hay bedding high enough to touch a heat light.
On January 19, 2009, 15 bonnethead sharks died due to a maintenance error. When the filtration system was taken offline for cleaning, the ozone valve was turned off, to prevent the sharks from suffocating. The valve was turned back on by a staff member effectively killing them.