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Self-guided visit
cild £4.30 (age 3-15)
18+ years £5.00
beastiality movies Adult £8.00

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Visit with an activity lead by an Education Officer
Child £4.70 (age 3-15)
16+ years £5.50
Adult £8.00

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One adult is admitted FREE with every ten paying children. For Reception to Year 2, the ratio is 1:6.

Admission fees are paid at London Zoo’s Main Gate on the day of the educational visit. Please make cheques payable to "Zoological Society of London".

Coaches using London Zoo’s coach park will be charged £10; fees payable as you enter the coach park.

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Educational activities held in beastiality movies the Education forum Centre beasty take place at:
10.30am 11.15am 12noon 1pm 1.45pm

Free Pre-visits
As a teacher you know your class and what you want to study at London Zoo. Once a booking has been made we will send you (on request) a map and a FREE pre-visit ticket (one per class), so that you can plan your day. movie In June, London Zoo’s female red panda gave birth to two cubs.
When the cubs were still very young, the female was seen carrying the babies around looking for a suitable nesting site. The keepers immediately cordoned off the area surrounding the red panda enclosure so that the female could find a place to settle and rear her young. The nesting box she chose is positioned on the ground next to the perimeter fence and therefore very close to the visitor path.

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The area will remain closed off until the cubs emerge from the nest box and are seen to be mobile. In the meantime, Mum and Dad are enjoying the time with their new offspring.

For the first time, London Zoo has successfully bred the kowari, otherwise known as Byrne’s pouched mouse.

clip The parents arrived at London Zoo when they were very young, and bred when they were about one year old. The keepers noticed that the male and female were squabbling and took the decision to separate the pair xxx and keep an eye on the female, as it was suspected that she might be pregnant. Three babies have emerged from the female’s pouch, and when they were about five weeks old their mother deposited them in the nest box.

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Kowaris are nocturnal marsupials, and would normally be housed in the Moonlight World of the Small Mammal House. In this case, the female and her young sample have been given free beasty a private off-show area while she rears them.

Several years ago, two pairs of striped possums arrived at London Zoo. Although males and females were put together to mate, there was no sign of them successfully breeding.

The keepers in the Small Mammal House decided that it was time to lend a helping hand, and checked the females’ pouches. One female was found to have young in the pouch (about one week old), while the other female was not pregnant xxx. To monitor the pregnancy the keepers installed a remote camera, and noticed that the female was behaving very aggressively to the male. To protect the young, the female was separated from the male, and the keepers kept a visual check on the female’s pouch. The ‘bump’ was seen to develop and about two months later a young possum was seen emerging from the pouch. Shortly afterwards, the baby was deposited in the clip nest box.

It is too soon to tell if separating the male and female during pregnancy was the key to this success, but at least the keepers will be able to test this management regime again in the future.

To adopt a striped possum, see London Zoo's

forum London Zoo's breeding pair of otters has successfully reared their fourth litter.