The zoo has two types of displays: free exhibits accessible with a Limited Admission ticket, and premium exhibits which require a full Bronx Zoo admission ticket or additional fees.
Free exhibits and attractions , the Bronx Zoo is home to more than 4,000 animals of 650 species, many of which are
endangered or
threatened. The zoo also has
Indian peafowl that roam freely.
Astor Court (
Zalophus californianus) with trainer Astor Court is an old section of the zoo that is home to many of the zoo's original buildings, designed by
Heins & LaFarge. While most of the buildings are closed to the public, the former Lion House was reopened as the "Madagascar!" exhibit in 2008, and the Zoo Center still exhibits various species. Astor Court includes the historic
sea lion pool featuring
California sea lions. Small aviaries featuring small bird species can be found nearby and
white-headed capuchins can be seen behind the old Monkey House. The
New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated Astor Court's buildings as a city landmark in 2000, after a failed attempt to do so in 1966.
African Plains African Plains allows visitors to walk past
lions,
African wild dogs,
Grévy's zebras, and
spotted hyenas, and see herds of
nyalas,
Thomson's gazelles,
lesser kudus, and
slender-horned gazelles, It also includes hybrid
giraffes (
Baringo ×
reticulated giraffe) sharing their home with
common ostriches. The exhibit originally opened in 1941 and was the first in the country to allow visitors to view predators and their prey in a naturalistic setting as well as allowing large predators such as lions to be exhibited cage-free. The zoo has bred their lions on multiple occasions, including one male and two females born in January 2010 and three males and one female born in August 2013. The zoo, in partnership with the New York
Daily News, held a contest to name the 2010 cubs, which made their public debut in April 2010. The winning names were Shani, Nala, and Adamma. The 2013 cubs were named Thulani, Ime, Bahata, and Amara and the three males can still be found on-exhibit at the zoo. The
Carter Giraffe Building, a section of African Plains, features indoor/outdoor viewing of the zoo's giraffes and
South African ostriches, and is also home to
common dwarf mongooses,
Von der Decken's hornbills, and
northern white-faced owls. In June 2009, two
aardvarks imported from
Tanzania joined the exhibit. In September 2010, the pair gave birth to a male named Hoover, the first to ever be born at the zoo. Until 2009, the southwestern corner of African Plains was home to the endangered
Arabian oryx and
blesbok. Due to budget cuts and the unpopularity of the species with visitors, they were phased-out of the collection. They were replaced by the hyenas.
Big Bears Big Bears features four bears, a male
grizzly bear and three
ABC Islands bears rescued as orphans from
Baranof Island of
Alaska. Until 2015, two female grizzly bears named Betty and Veronica also lived in this exhibit, but moved to the
Central Park Zoo where they died in 2020 and 2021. The zoo also formerly housed
polar bears until the last individual, a 26-year-old male named Tundra died in December 2017. Three
dholes from the
San Diego Zoo Safari Park were added to the habitat in 2019.
Gelada Reserve in the reserve Gelada Reserve, originally called Baboon Reserve, opened in 1990. It is a two-acre recreation of the
Ethiopian Highlands which, at the time of its opening, was the largest primate exhibit in the United States. The exhibit's main features revolve around the zoo's troop of
geladas such as artificial rocks and earthbanks, and displays about life in the highlands and the side-by-side
evolution of
humans and geladas. Visitors can watch the geladas from multiple viewpoints along with
Nubian ibex and
rock hyrax, all of which are mixed together in the hilly enclosure. An African village-styled café overlooks the exhibit. Baboon Reserve won the AZA Exhibit Award in 1991. In the fall of 2014, a male gelada was born at the zoo, the first in over 13 years, and was the only zoo in the US to display them until the
San Diego Zoo in 2017 received their gelada troop for their Africa Rocks exhibit. Before the late 1980s, this place replaced a lawn of
aoudads.
Himalayan Highlands in the Himalayan Highlands exhibitHimalayan Highlands, which opened on June 27, 1986, recreates the
Himalayas region of Asia. The exhibit is known for its highly naturalistic look and use of the hilly and rocky terrain found in that portion of the zoo. The stars of the exhibit are the zoo's multiple
snow leopards. The exhibit also is home to
red pandas and
white-naped cranes. In 2006, the zoo brought in a male snow leopard named Leo from
Pakistan after he was orphaned at around two months old. Leo sired a male cub on April 9, 2013. The cub is one of more than 70 snow leopards born at the zoo, which was the first U.S. zoo to exhibit the species in 1903. Leo later became a grandfather when his son sired a female cub in 2017.
Madagascar! Madagascar!, which opened on June 20, 2008, recreates various habitats found on the island of
Madagascar and contains a variety of wildlife from the island, including
lemurs,
fossas,
Nile crocodiles,
radiated tortoises,
greater vasa parrots and highly endangered
cichlids.
Ring-tailed lemurs,
collared lemurs,
red ruffed lemurs,
crowned lemurs, and
Coquerel's sifakas are the lemur species held in the exhibit. Madagascar! holds the first two
ring-tailed mongoose in the United States and is home to over 100,000
Madagascar hissing cockroaches that can be named for $10 around
Valentine's Day. The exhibit has multiple educational displays focusing on the many threats to the survival of these species as well as the WCS's
conservation work in Madagascar. The building was converted from the former Lion House, which had opened in 1903 and closed by the late 1980s. The exhibit also has
tomato frogs and
Henkel's leaf-tailed geckos.
Mouse House The Mouse House is a small building home to various species of small
mammals, particularly
rodents. The building features both
diurnal and
nocturnal areas and a row of outdoor cages which, during the summer months, are home to a variety of small
primates, many of which are former monkey house inhabitants. Species include
black and rufous elephant shrews,
eastern spiny mice,
harvest mice,
common degus,
African pouched rats,
northern Luzon giant cloud rats,
lesser hedgehog tenrecs,
Damaraland mole-rats,
northern treeshrews,
long-tailed chinchillas, and
feathertail gliders.
Aquatic Bird House s (
Phoenicopterus ruber) in the pond The current Aquatic Bird House opened on September 24, 1964, on the foundation of the original house, which was opened on November 8, 1899, with the rest of the zoo. The building features a multitude of mostly open-fronted enclosures mainly focusing on
coastal and
wetland habitats and the species that rely on them.
Scarlet ibises,
roseate spoonbills,
anhingas,
boat-billed herons and
Madagascar crested ibises are among the residents here. The exhibit also features an outdoor pond home to a flock of
American flamingos and a large aviary home for
lesser adjutant storks. The zoo is one of only three zoos in North America working with the endangered storks and has bred them several times, including the hatching of two chicks on June 27 and August 15, 2015. The Aquatic Bird House is also home to another endangered stork species: the
Storm's stork. The zoo is one of only two in the United States working with this species; the other being the
San Diego Zoo. In May 2014, the zoo opened a new nocturnal enclosure for a
North Island brown kiwi in the building, and in May 2015, a colony of
Australian little penguins from the
Taronga Zoo were added.
Russell B. Aitken Sea Bird Aviary in the Sea Bird Aviary: The zoo is the last to hold the species outside of South America. The Russell B. Aitken Sea Bird Aviary, which opened on May 17, 1997, is a huge walk-through
aviary designed to resemble the
Patagonian coast. The aviary stands at 60-feet high, occupies 615,000 cubic feet, is supported by five steel arches, and netted with a stainless steel mesh. The aviary was built to replace the original De Jur Aviary that opened with the zoo in 1899 and collapsed in a snowstorm in February 1995. The exhibit's height and open space allows the residents to soar around above visitor's heads and the fake
sea cliff walls allows for more natural
nesting and
roosting behavior. The aviary is home to about 100 birds, most being
Inca terns, but also a small colony of
Magellanic penguins,
grey gulls, and
brown pelicans. The aviary was also home to the last
guanay cormorant in captivity outside of South America. In April 2014, four
Peruvian pelicans were added to the exhibit, and in January 2015, a pair of
ruddy-headed geese were added.
Tiger Mountain Tiger Mountain, which opened on May 15, 2003, is a three-acre exhibit which features
Amur tigers and occasionally
Malayan tigers, who are usually kept off-exhibit. The exhibit has two enclosures with glass viewing, the second of which has a 10,000 gallon pool with underwater viewing. Outside of the
tigers, the exhibit has multiple interactive displays designed to educate visitors on
behavioral enrichment and on the zoo's/WCS'
ex-situ and
in-situ conservation. The exhibit won the AZA Exhibit Award in 2004. The zoo has had good breeding successful with both
subspecies of tiger, having bred both in 2010. Another set of Siberian tiger cubs were born in 2012, and a pair of Malayan tiger cubs were born in 2016. One of the tiger cubs named Nadia tested positive for
COVID-19 during the
COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, but have since recovered from the disease. Across from the entrance to Tiger Mountain, a large herd of
Père David's deer and a pair of
whooper swans can be found. Before 2003, this part of the area was once Wolf Wood, and includes a pack of
wolves.
World of Birds World of Birds, which originally opened in 1972, is an indoor bird house spanning two floors and featuring several walk-through
aviaries. The building closed for repairs and upgrades in the summer of 2010, and reopened the following year. The exhibit has multiple educational displays focusing on
deforestation and the
illegal wildlife trade and their affects on wild bird populations. The most prominent residents of the exhibit include the
maleos,
great hornbills,
knobbed hornbills,
Andean cock-of-the-rocks,
Nicobar pigeons,
southern bald ibises,
great argus pheasants,
ocellated turkeys,
hyacinth macaws,
grey parrots,
grey-winged trumpeters,
lesser birds-of-paradise and
white-throated bee-eaters. Some mammals like
Bolivian gray titis and
greater mouse deer also live here.
Emus can be found in an outdoor yard. In mid-2009, the zoo's hand-reared pair of
great blue turacos successfully raised chicks, the first known instance of a hand-reared pair doing so. In March 2013, three maleo chicks hatched at the zoo, bringing their total number of birds to 12. The zoo, along with the WCS, works toward preserving this species in the wild as well. Built by
Morris Ketchum Jr. & Associates, the house was built where the zoo's Rocking Stone Restaurant stood until 1942. The exhibit used
red-lights to dimly illuminate the enclosures within the windowless building. Like all nocturnal exhibits, the house ran on a reversed lighting schedule, which simulated night and day at opposite times to allow visitors to view nocturnal animals in a more naturalistic setting. Due to budget cuts and the high cost of running the exhibit, it was closed in 2009. This was later confirmed on December 4 when the zoo announced that the exhibit reopened on July 12, 2025. The exhibit used to have species including
leopard cats,
Rodrigues flying foxes,
bay duikers,
African brush-tailed porcupines,
spotted skunks,
rock cavies,
common genets,
Pallas's long-tongued bats,
Jamaican fruit bats,
lesser spear-nosed bats,
short-tailed bats,
sand boas, and
marine toads until 2009.
World of Reptiles World of Reptiles has been an attraction at the zoo since it first opened. The building's first curator was
Raymond Lee Ditmars, who had kept 45 snakes in his attic before being hired at the zoo. The exhibit is a long hall with various
terrariums situated on both sides. The exhibit also features a nursery area, which exhibits newborn
herptiles born at the zoo, as well as a window into the off-show breeding and caring facilities. In the building, the zoo breeds and exhibits a wide range of species, including
Chinese alligators,
blue iguanas,
Cuban crocodiles,
false gharials,
dyeing poison dart frogs,
eyelash vipers,
Fly River turtles,
giant musk turtles,
green anacondas,
hellbenders,
Milos viper,
king cobras and
Philippine sailfin lizards. The building also is home to the zoo's breeding population of
Kihansi spray toads, which the zoo saved from extinction. On March 25, 2011, an
Egyptian cobra escaped from its off-show enclosure, during which time the exhibit was closed to the public. Six days later, the animal was found elsewhere in the building. The zoo named the cobra MIA (Missing In Action) and placed it on exhibit.
Pheasant Aviary (
Polyplectron napoleonis) at the aviary The Pheasant Aviary is a long row of cages home to a large variety of bird species, particularly pheasants. Exhibited species include
Elliot's pheasant,
Lady Amherst's pheasant,
Cabot's tragopan,
blue eared-pheasant,
mountain peacock-pheasant,
Mérida helmeted curassow,
Swinhoe's pheasant,
Java peafowl,
eastern loggerhead shrike (
Lanius ludovicianus migrans),
white-throated ground-dove,
Lord Derby's parakeet,
Montezuma oropendola and
yellow-crested cockatoo.
Birds of Prey Birds of Prey is a row of cages for multiple
raptor species. The exhibit is home to
bald eagles,
golden eagles,
turkey vultures,
snowy owls,
Andean condors,
palm nut vultures and
king vultures. In February 2011, the zoo received two bald eagles rescued in
Wyoming. Nearby is a small pond for
black-necked swans,
American white pelicans and
brown pelicans.
Zoo Center The Zoo Center, built in 1908, is a one-story
Beaux-Arts building located in Astor Court. The exhibit houses
blue tree monitors,
Mertens' water monitors and
spiny-tailed monitors indoors and has both indoor and outdoor enclosures for
Komodo dragons,
Aldabra giant tortoises and
southern white rhinoceros. The building's animal
frieze was carved by
A. P. Proctor. The building is east of the Children's Zoo and south of Madagascar!. The building was originally designed as the zoo's Elephant House and has held all three
elephant species over its history. The building has also been home to various
rhinoceros species,
hippopotamus,
Bactrian camel,
Malayan tapir and
North Sulawesi babirusa. The building also held Rapunzel, one of the few
Sumatran rhinos held in U.S. zoos, until her death in 2005.
Bison Range The Bison Range is in the northeast corner of the zoo, and has been a feature of the zoo since its opening, having been only renovated since 1971. The range initially served to breed
Plains bison, who were in danger of becoming
extinct in the United States. The exhibit is one of the few large herds of bison in U.S. zoos. In 1913, at the behest of the
American Bison Society, fourteen bison were transported from the range to
Montana's
National Bison Range, as well as to
Wind Cave National Park in
South Dakota.
Northern Ponds Northern Ponds is a series of naturalistic ponds home to a variety of
waterfowl and other aquatic birds both wild and captive. Captive residents include
red-crowned cranes,
red-breasted geese,
lesser white-fronted geese,
ruddy ducks,
barnacle geese,
mute swans and
trumpeter swans. A wide variety of wild bird species can also be found in the ponds, including several native
ducks such as
mallards and
mergansers, as well as other birds such as
black-capped night-herons. In June 2024, a red-crowned crane chick hatched in this exhibit.
Mitsubishi Riverwalk The Mitsubishi Riverwalk is a path that curves around the
Bronx River, on the opposite bank from the zoo. It opened in 2004 upon the completion of a cleanup project on the river. The walkway was funded by
Mitsubishi International Corporation Foundation and protects of Bronx River
watershed.
Paid exhibits and attractions One admission to a premium exhibit costs $7 per exhibit if paid separately. A holder of a limited admission may upgrade for a fee, granting the ticket holder free access to all attractions for that day. Family memberships include full access. There are nine premium exhibit attractions: • Budgie Landing • Bug Carousel • Butterfly Garden • Children's Zoo • Congo Gorilla Forest • JungleWorld • Nature Trek • Wild Asia Monorail • Zoo Shuttle
Budgie Landing Budgie Landing is an exhibit featuring of 1,000
budgerigars which opened on May 27, 2023. Unlike premium attractions and exhibits, Budgie Landing requires all visitors pay a small entrance fee ($5 for regular guests and $3 for members). A complementary feeding stick is handed out with admission.
Bug Carousel The Bug Carousel has seats shaped like
insects. Installed in 2005, it has an annual ridership of 540,000 as of 2014.
Butterfly Garden This permanent structure is an indoor
butterfly conservatory which lets visitors walk through gardens and meadows and watch the butterflies up close. Built and inaugurated in mid-1996, the attraction is a 170-foot-long maze, where "visitors can walk through the stages of a
monarch's
metamorphosis" with a
greenhouse in the middle hosting 44 species and over 1,000 butterflies; the greenhouse is really "a plastic tent on an aluminum frame". The structure, costing $500,000, is the precursor for a future permanent House of Invertebrates in the Monkey House near the Fordham Road entrance. Many species come from the
New York metropolitan area, and all species of
butterflies and
moths are from around the continent. If not successful, the
Oklahoma City Zoo would have purchased it in September 1997. Before the Butterfly Garden opened, this was where the Great
Ape House was located, and it was once home to
gorillas,
chimpanzees,
orangutans, and
gibbons through the exhibit's history.
Children's Zoo The original Children's Zoo in the Bronx Zoo opened in 1941 with a
nursery-rhyme theme; in 1981, a new Children's Zoo opened, and was instantly successful, seeing almost 250,000 visitors in two months. It closed for renovations in 2013; it reopened on May 30, 2015, with new exhibits featuring
giant anteaters,
common degus,
Patagonian maras,
white-nosed coatis,
Linnaeus's two-toed sloths,
squirrel monkeys,
American flamingos,
Asian small-clawed otters,
North American porcupines,
great horned owls,
striped skunks,
prairie dogs,
fennec foxes,
African spurred tortoises,
Nubian goats,
zebus,
alpacas,
sheep,
donkeys,
chickens,
ducks,
pigs,
geese, and
domestic turkeys.
Congo Gorilla Forest In the southwestern part of the zoo, Congo Gorilla Forest is a rainforest that is home to the 20 or so
western lowland gorillas in the zoo.
Angolan colobus,
Wolf's guenons,
pygmy marmosets,
mandrills,
okapis,
red river hogs, an
ornate monitor, and an
African rock python also call this area home. It also includes a bird exhibit that houses
white-crested hornbills,
Congo peafowls, and
African pygmy geese. The Congo Gorilla Forest was opened in 1999 and was visited 7,000,000 times . In one of the largest breeding groups of
western lowland gorillas in
North America, the exhibit has two troops of gorillas, for a total of 19 gorillas. Since 1999, 14
gorillas, 23
red river hogs, 11
Wolf's guenons, and four
okapis have been born in the exhibit. and the exhibit has netted $12.5 million in exhibit fees . Before the Congo Gorilla Forest was constructed, this site was once South America, and it is known to house
pygmy hippopotamuses,
tapirs,
giant anteaters,
Patagonian maras,
guanacos,
greater rheas,
babirusas,
brocket deer, and
peccaries.
JungleWorld This exhibit is an indoor tropical jungle and home to nearly 800 species including
Asian small-clawed otters,
Javan lutungs,
silvery lutungs,
northern white-cheeked gibbons,
Matschie's tree-kangaroos,
gharials, a
clouded leopard,
common treeshrews, a
carpet python,
northern Luzon giant cloud rats,
greater mouse deer,
Malayan tapirs, and
lesser adjutants living in mangroves and on the beaches. Visitors can watch the gibbons swinging or singing and watch the otters play. The exhibit includes species that are usually on the jungle floor including
stag beetles,
scorpions and
fire-bellied toads, but behind glass. A pond with a waterfall lets visitors sit and observe
gourami and
Fly River turtles. s (
Trachypithecus cristatus), at JungleWorld Planning for JungleWorld, in the southeastern Wild Asia portion of the zoo, was started in 1977 and completed at a cost of $9.5 million in June 1985. $4.1 million in funds were donated by
Enid A. Haupt, a member of the
New York Zoological Society's board of trustees. The building was built to emphasize the fact that of rainforest is lost every minute.
Wild Asia Monorail The
monorail was inaugurated in 1977 with the rest of the formerly underdeveloped Wild Asia section of the zoo. There are six 9-car monorails on this ride, originally built by
Rohr; the ride was refurbished in 2007. Some animals in the zoo can only be seen on this ride such as
tigers,
Przewalski's horses,
greater one-horned rhinoceros,
Asian elephants,
red pandas, and a plethora of
even-toed ungulates such as
axis deer,
barasingha,
blackbuck,
Bactrian deer,
gaurs,
brow-antlered deer,
babirusas,
sambar deer,
nilgai,
red muntjacs,
Indian hog deer,
Formosan sika deer,
tufted deer,
Himalayan tahrs, and
markhors. This ride takes visitors through a area that recreates the mud wallows and pastures, forests and riverbanks of Asia. Visitors will see
tigers,
Indian elephants,
rhinos and wild horses in their natural habitats. As the monorail travels along the Bronx River, visitors can see native animals including
egrets,
turtles, and
ducks. The monorail is accessible for wheelchairs up to 26 inches (66 cm) wide. Smaller chairs are available at the monorail platform for visitors with wider wheelchairs or motorized scooters.
Nature Trek Nature Trek opened on July 1, 2017, in the southeast portion of the park near Wild Asia. It consists of twelve
covered rope bridges connecting small porches on the sides of towers. There are also elevated tunnels and a large
overlook, as well as several small challenges resembling
American Ninja Warrior obstacles.
Dinosaur Safari Dinosaur Safari takes visitors on a safari ride through a normally off-exhibit 2-acre wooded area and features
animatronic dinosaurs from throughout time, starting at 300-million-years ago in the
Permian Period and ending 235-million-years later in the
Cretaceous Period. The ride lasts approximately 20 minutes. The "robo-saurs" are manufactured by Billings Productions, who lease them out to sites all over the world. The exhibit features more popular species such as the
Tyrannosaurus rex,
Triceratops,
Stegosaurus,
Velociraptor and
Brachiosaurus, as well as less well-known species such as the
Pachycephalosaurus,
Carnotaurus and
Spinosaurus. The ride's
Dilophosaurus spit water at visitors as a nod to the species' acid-spitting abilities in
Steven Spielberg's
Jurassic Park film and
Michael Crichton's
novel, even though there is no reason to believe the living animal did so. The exhibit originally ran through the summers of 2013 It also returned for the 2022 season as a walking trail, and after a three year hiatus. On April 12, 2025, Dinosaur Safari opened once again. Visitors can get up-close to life-sized animatronics of dinosaurs and pterosaurs plus 11 new ones. Kids can dig up ancient fossils in a sandbox, and they can walk through a ribcage and enjoy photo ops with dinosaur eggs.
Former exhibits Rare Animal Range Rare Animal Range was a trail which focused on highly endangered species. Featured species included
guanaco,
Formosan sika deer,
pied ruffed lemurs and
blue-eyed black lemurs. The exhibit also had duplicate enclosures for the zoo's
Arabian oryx,
blesbok,
Père David's deer and
broad-snouted caiman as well as a large pond with a pair of small islands in the center which were home to a pair of
golden-cheeked gibbons. They had the Big Birds exhibits, which were lawns for
ostriches,
emus,
rheas, and
cassowaries. Due to budget cuts and the unpopularity of many of the species, the zoo was forced to close the exhibit in 2009. The zoo's popular Dinosaur Safari ran through a part of this area and the zoo's yearly Run for the Wild event runs through its entirety. On April 20, 2024, the Animal Chronicles opened in honor of the 125th Anniversary of the Bronx Zoo. it features 13 scenes of 68 animal eco-sculptures that showcase key achievements in the zoo's 125 year history of saving animal species and connecting visitors to wildlife.
Skyfari The Skyfari was a popular
gondola lift which transported visitors from the Zoo Center to the Asian Plaza, running over African Plains and several other popular exhibits at the zoo. The seasonal exhibit ran from April to October and rose feet in the air. With around 490,000 riders annually, the lift was the zoo's third most popular attraction after Congo Gorilla Forest and the Wild Asia Monorail. Despite its popularity, ticket sales for it were barely breaking-even and
maintenance costs led to a loss of profit. On July 8, 2008, high winds and heat led to one of the cars derailing, which trapped thirty-six passengers for up to five hours. Due to this, along with heavy budget cuts, the ride was permanently closed in January 2009, after 35 years of operation.
Monkey House The Monkey House, which first opened in 1901 and was originally named the Primate House, closed in late February 2012 after 111 years of operation. At the time of closing, it was home to
cotton-top tamarins,
white-faced sakis,
Wied's marmosets,
moustached tamarins,
black-chinned emperor tamarins,
Goeldi's monkeys and
grey-handed night-monkeys, as well as
Brazilian porcupines and
Pallas's long-tongued bats. This was the building where
Ota Benga, a young man from the Congo, spent most of his time during his stay at the zoo. He had his own exhibit and was often mocked by the visitors. While none of these species are currently on-exhibit at the zoo, the Puerto Rican crested toads can be seen at the
Central Park Zoo, which breeds this species for
reintroduction back into
Puerto Rico.
4-D Theater The 4-D Theater showed
4-D films with the help of
3-D film and built-in sensory effects, including moving seats, wind, mist, and scents. Produced by
SimEx-Iwerks, the theater showed condensed versions of popular children's movies. The 4-D Theater previously showed
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs , one episode of
Dora the Explorer,
Rio and
Storks. It closed in 2019 and was replaced with a giraffe encounter where guests can feed the giraffes for a fee.
The Most Dangerous Animal in the World exhibit at the Bronx Zoo, 1963
The Most Dangerous Animal in the World exhibit debuted at the Bronx Zoo on April 26, 1963. The exhibit was installed at the Great Apes House and it featured a statement about the danger humans pose. The words: "The Most Dangerous Animal in the World" were printed in red on top of a cage. Behind the bars of the cage there was a mirror. The exhibit was reportedly still at the zoo in 1981.
WCS's Run for the Wild In April 2008, the zoo hosted the first Run for the Wild event. The event is a
5k run ( long) organized by the Wildlife Conservation Society with the goal of raising money and awareness for their conservation programs of endangered species. Each year, there is a set entry fee for participants with varying prices depending on age; child (3–15), adult, and senior (65+). WCS Members get a discounted fee. Along with the entry fee, there is a $35 minimum donation per adult/senior participant. The event offers free prizes for donors, based on donation size, ranging from a Run for the Wild T-shirt to a special animal experience at the zoo. All donations are
tax-deductible. All participants are also offered free all-day entry to the zoo and its paid exhibits/attractions. The yearly event takes place at the end of April and originally began at 8 am for those wishing to actually run, and 8:45 for those who wish to simply walk or jog; the start times were changed to 7 am and 7:45 am in later years. In 2011, another WCS institute, the
New York Aquarium, held its own Run for the Wild event for
sea turtles in early October. The 5k run began at the aquarium and led down the
Riegelmann Boardwalk on
Coney Island. The aquarium held a second run the following year for
walruses. The event has not returned to the aquarium since. ==Conservation==