New at the Zoo: Madagascar
This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2009, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Michael Nance has learned a thing or two about Madagascar.

Who lives there? "That lion," says the 3-year-old, who was visiting Utah's Hogle Zoo with his mother on Friday morning. "And that giraffe!"

Actually, Madagascar isn't home to any lions or giraffes. Nor does it have any wise-cracking zebras or sultry hippos, as depicted in Dreamworks' 2005 hit animated comedy about a quartet of New York zoo animals that gets marooned on the island nation off Africa's east coast.

But the toddler's misconception is common -- even among much older zoo visitors. And that's part of the reason why the east Salt Lake City animal park is introducing its newest exhibit, simply called "Madagascar," today.

"A lot of kids think it's just a movie," says zoo keeper Nate Strong, who wrote the proposal to bring a little piece of Madagascar to Utah. "They don't realize it's an island with all kinds of diverse animals."

That would include the star of Hogle's new show, the carnivorous foosa. The island's biggest mammalian predator looks a bit like a cat, but it's more closely related to the mongoose. And it's an amazing species, says Strong, who will act as keeper of the long-tailed animals, on loan from the San Diego Zoo, at least until this fall.

"They're curious and they're smart," Strong says. "They're amazing leapers and great climbers. I've seen them climb trees, head first, straight down."

The exhibit -- in the same building where Hogle's popular Ghost of the Bayou was staged last year -- also includes hissing cockroaches, radiated tortoises, tenrecs and boa constrictors.

Just down the way, in the zoo's primate building, visitors can also meet and greet three species of lemurs -- no, they don't dance to electronic ragga pop tunes -- all of which are also endemic to the Red Island.

Zoo spokeswoman Holly Braithwaite said that the lemurs are losing ground in Madagascar, both because they're a favorite meal for the foosas and because their habitats have been stolen by Malagasy farmers and commercial coffee growers.

"The island is the size of Texas, but the remaining natural habitat is about the size of New Jersey," she said.

mlaplante@sltrib.com

Exhibit » There really is such a home for exotic animals -- and it's not just a movie.
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