Our Family
Badger
 Sherman (not on display)
 Prairie (not on display)
Bald Eagle
 Hal
 Izumi
 Sarah
Barn Owl
 Silo
 Barney (a.k.a. Moonface)
Black Bear
 Kootenay
Black Rat Snake
 Kingston
 Licorice
Blanding's Turtle
 Oliver
Bobcat
 Rufus
Box Turtle
 Murtle
Bull Frog
 Fergus
Cottontail Rabbit
 Peter
Cougar
 Kokanee
Coyote
 Wylie (not on display)
 Sancho (not on display)
Fisher
 Forrest
Flying Squirrel
 Pixie
Great Horned Owl
 Bubo (not on display)
 Dr. Hoo (not on display)
Green Frog
 Kermy
Groundhog/Woodchuck
 Clover
Kestrel
 Punk
Lynx
 Yeti
Mink
 Marsha
Moose
 Zeus
 Chocolate
Opossum
 Virginia
Painted Turtle
 Willamina
Peregrine Falcon
 Cliff (not on display)
 Tundra (not on display)
Porcupine
 Quillber (not on display)
Raccoon
 Dawn
Red Fox
 Rusty
Red-sided Garter Snake
 Squeezer
Red-tailed Hawk
 Will (not on display)
Silver Fox
 Frosty
Snapping Turtle
 Sam
Striped Skunk
 Flower
 Oreo
Toad
 Wart
Tree Frog
 Twiggy
 Leaf
Turkey Vulture
 Mortisha (Not on Display)
 Barfalomew (not on display)
Wolf
 Montana
 Akayla
 Nikita
Wolverine
 Hyde
 Gulo


Chocolate the Moose

Born:
Sex:

Chocolate was acquired July 21, 2003

Chocolate was born in captivity in Timmins. She was purchased by a big-screen film company to appear in a movie alongside Ray Romano and Gene Hackman, which was filmed in Port Perry, Ontario. Upon completion of the movie, she was sent here to keep our bachelor company. We are working on plans for an new moose enclosure in the near future, one with a great deal more space.

 

Moose (Alces alces)

Average Size:
up to 2.4 m (8 ft) high at the shoulder
Average Weight:
329-820 kg (700-1800 lbs)
Average Lifespan:
up to 27 years
Range:
widespread throughout Ontario
 

Dining and Dwelling

The Moose is primarily a browser. During the winter they eat shrubs, twigs, and bark of saplings. The summer months are more plentiful with leaves, grasses, foliage, and large quantities of aquatic plants. The aquatic plants help to restore the sodium levels that the Moose needs over winter.

They prefer to live in mixed forests adjacent to swamps and lakeshores, where there is an abundance of edible plant material both on land and in the water.

Life and Death

The Moose will breed late in September through early October and give birth 8 months later, usually May-June. Young weigh 11-16 kilograms and gain about 1 kilogram per day while nursing. Calves remain dependent on the mother for at least one year. Calf mortality is very high; almost 50% of the mortality rate is due to predation by bears and wolves. The Cow will evict her surviving calf just before bearing a new calf. The young calves take 4-5 years to reach sexual and full physical maturity.

 


That's Amazing

-The moose has the heaviest antlers of any animal on earth

-Moose can swim very well on the surface or under the water

-Moose can run faster than horses