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Africa Rainforest Exhibit
Overview
Completed in 1991, bats and a variety of tropical birds and waterfowl live in this
tangle of lush vegetation.
In the Bamba du Jon Swamp building, visitors experience tropical thunder, lightening
and a torrential downpour that passes over endangered slender-snouted
crocodiles, lung fish and frogs.
In the Kongo Ranger Station, kids and adults get a hands-on educational experience
and learn about the people of the rain forest, as well as the threats that animals face.
Animals
Mammals |
Birds |
Reptiles
& Amphibians |
Fish |
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Cape
Thick Knee Birds |
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Talapia |
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Saddle-Backed Stork |
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Cichlids |
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Golden
Mantella Frogs |
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* symbol
indicates endangered species
Walk Through the Exhibit
- You start your travels at the Sankuru Trader, a trading post/gift shop
from where a banded mongoose colony is visible.
- A fog-shrouded sign beckons you to head down a winding trail, through
dense vegetation, and into the canopy of the rain forest, an area so
diverse in the wild that scientists have not yet classified and described
many of its thousands of insects, plants, birds, mammals, and other
animals. The path leads to a place where large, fruit-eating bats fly in a 180-arch around you. 75 bats live in this spacious exhibit.
In the background, a mural gives you a view from the precipice of a
hill, overlooking a fog-shrouded valley at sunset. A crevice in the
wall beside the bats is home to Madagascar giant day geckos.
- Exiting the bat area, you again walk through dense vegetation to
an area where Allen's swamp
monkeys frolic near a forest stream and Colobus monkeys scramble among the branches overhead. An
African rock
python is found in a cave along the trail.
- A turn in the trail brings you to the Kongo Ranger Station, a simulation
of a ranger compound that serves as a conservation interpretive area
with hands-on exhibits about wildlife poaching and consumerism as it
relates to the effect on plant and animal populations. Kongo Rangers
will staff the exhibit during the summer months, informing you about
their activities. When weather permits, they will bring out snakes and
other animals for a closer look. Displays include ivory and other animal
materials confiscated from poachers.
- After leaving the ranger station, the trail becomes a boardwalk,
snaking
its way through a foggy marsh. Inhabitants of the marsh include yellow-billed
storks, Hadada ibises, and African waterfowl.
- Last stop is the Bamba du Jon Swamp Building (a "mixed species"
exhibit), home of endangered African slender-snouted
crocodiles, African lungfish,
frogs, and leeches. Smaller
free-flying birds will be overhead. While admiring the crocodiles, you
will be surprised by a sudden darkening of the room and accompanying
thunder and lightening. Rain will begin to fall over the crocodiles'
pond, becoming a torrential downpour. (The rain goes off on the hour
- lasts for 6 minutes.)
- Visitors exit the Bamba du Jon Swamp Building and head back to the familiar
Sankuru Trader.
Exhibit Art
Local
artists Wague Baba Diakite & Ronna Neuenswander received a commission
to create art for the exhibit under the Percent for Arts program.
Diakite
is a native of Mali in W. Africa, & is well-known for his ceramic
work. Ronna, his wife, is also a well-known local ceramicist.
The art they
created is in three parts:
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Four cast-concrete
murals which are built into the gunite walls of the exhibit walk ways.
Each is of an exhibit animal and each has a hand-written, West African
saying about relationships between people and nature.
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Six hand-embossed
gunite lizards (also with hand-painted messages) and three ceramic fish
fossils are incorporated into the exhibit walkways.
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Just before
the Kongo Ranger Station, the presence of man in the rain forest
is noted with the "Wall of Hands." Under Wague's direction,
Oregon Zoo volunteers and staff, construction workers and others
placed their handprints in the wet gunite of the walkway wall.
This is an age-old technique used in Mali to decorate construction.
Lincoln
High School students designed & painted the Sankuru Trader building
through the Artist-in-Education program.
Individually,
the students developed designs with guidance from project architect
David Slusarenko & inspiration from photographs of painted housed
in remote West African villages.
Once
a design was selected, the students worked with Portland mural artist
Jenny Joyce to learn the art of transferring the design to the building.
(Joyce has done 3 other murals at our zoo.)
| Project
Cost: |
$4.3 million |
| Size: |
1.3 acres |
| Location: |
West end of Africa exhibit |
| Construction: |
Began 3/13/90 by L. D. Mattson, Inc. of Salem. |
| Funding: |
Construction money came from 1987 serial levy. Kongo Ranger
Station funded by $250,000 donation from Friends of the Zoo, the largest
donation ever made by FOZ at that time. (Friends of the Zoo is now known
as The Oregon Zoo Foundation) |
| Architects: |
GSA Partnership, P.C. |
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