Among the species on display in Wilds of Asia are pileated gibbons, red pandas, wreathed hornbill, binturongs, Asian small-clawed otters, Burmese pythons and lion-tailed macaques.
Edge of Africa can be found within the far end of the zoo park, and houses grey crowned cranes, Kirk's dik-diks, blue cranes, blue duikers, cheetahs, spotted hyenas, mandrills, red river hogs and common warthogs in large outdoor areas.
Opened in August 2003, Playa Patagonia is home to an all-female group of five South American sea lions named Atlanta, Milan, Winnipeg, Paris and Sydney.
The enclosure also features the largest straight underwater tunnel in Europe, holding 500,000 gallons of water and with glass that is 10 millimetres thick.
The enclosure is designed to mimic conditions in the wild, and includes a large pool with showers, as well as a glass roof that can be drawn back to allow in sunlight.
An aviary complex that houses three species of birds of prey, Andean condors, great grey owls and king vultures.
Inca Trail is home to a large colony of Humboldt penguins, as well as a nearby enclosure with a troop of red-backed bearded sakis.
Opened in May 2009, Suricata Sands houses a mob of meerkats, including a breeding pair named Robin and Pippa.
[8] The enclosure is now currently home to three Bornean orangutans, a male named Tiga and two females, Mali and her daughter Tatau, who arrived from the Paignton Zoo.
Opened in May 2008, Worlds Apart consists of six enclosures, which include an open enclosure home to Fiji banded iguanas, rhinoceros iguanas, poison dart frogs, green anacondas and a walk-through exhibit that houses coppery titis, golden lion tamarins, Linnaeus's two-toed sloths, pied tamarins and a southern tamandua.
Other species found in the zoo include Barbary macaques, bush dogs, Chilean flamingos, collared mangabeys, Darwin's rheas, geladas, giant anteaters, L'Hoest's monkeys, Oxford Sandy and Black pigs, Visayan spotted deer and Visayan warty pigs.
In July 2016, the zoo opened a new augmented reality display that gives its visitors the chance to walk with digitally-recreated woolly mammoths.
Since 2005, Action for the Wild has been working to set up the 6,000 hectare UmPhafa Private Nature Reserve in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa.
[2] Working to rehabilitate the land which was previously managed as separate cattle farms, to return it to a healthy state and to release native animal species back onto the reserve.
The exhibit will be spread over two floors and will incorporate an underwater viewing tunnel in which visitors will be able to see crocodiles swim and feed above their heads, before coming out to see them basking around their outdoor pool on their heated rocks through three large glass windows.
This series was presented by former Blue Peter star Konnie Huq, and began transmission on 9 June 2008[11] and ran for 4 weeks.
[13] The zoo's history, and various incidents of animals escaping, were featured in the BBC Radio 4 series Mark Steel's in Town, first broadcast in September 2016.