Fossil Rim Wildlife Center

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Fossil Rim Wildlife Center
Blackbuck antelope in Texas.jpg
A blackbuck at the Fossil Rim Wildlife Center
Date opened1984
LocationGlen Rose, Texas
Coordinates32°10′50″N 97°47′47″W / 32.180556°N 97.796389°W / 32.180556; -97.796389Coordinates: 32°10′50″N 97°47′47″W / 32.180556°N 97.796389°W / 32.180556; -97.796389 [1]
Land area1,800 acres (7.3 km2)[2]
No. of animals1000+[2]
No. of species50[2]
MembershipsAZA,[3] WAZA[4] IRF[5] [5] ZAA[5] [5]
Websitewww.fossilrim.org

Fossil Rim Wildlife Center is a 501(c)(3) non-profit conservation center near Glen Rose, Texas. They specialize in the breeding of endangered species, public education, scientific research and natural land management. As of 2020, the park requires that all tickets be purchased online prior to guest arrival. The facility has over 1,000 animals from 50 species.[6] Guests have access to guided and self-guided tours across the center's 1800 acres of Texas Hill Country, as well as lodging, dining and educational facilities.

Experiences[]

Fossil Rim allows guests the opportunity to participate in several on-property experiences including overnight lodging, tours and educational classes.

Tours

Guests have the option of either a self-guided driving tour along the property's Gosdin Scenic Drive, or one of two guided tours in a safari vehicle. The regular guided tour takes guests through the park where riders will have the opportunity to learn more about the animals they're seeing and ask their tour guide questions. This tour can be booked for a private group. The behind-the-scenes guided tour takes guests where others are normally not allowed to go, like the Jim Jackson Intensive Management Area. Guests will have the opportunity to learn more about endangered species and the work Fossil Rim does behind-the-scenes.

Lodging

Guests can stay in one of two locations onsite. The Lodge is located inside the original house on Fossil Rim property, built in the 1980s by the facility's original owner. The house was completed in a classic hill country aesthetic, and features several suites that guests can choose from in a bed-and-breakfast style. For a more rugged stay, guests can spend the night at the Foothills Safari Camp, which is located deeper inside the property than the Lodge. The camp allows guests to feel surrounded by wildlife, while still having access to amenities like Wi-Fi and plumbing.

Education

Fossil Rim offers in-person and virtual educational programs through their Environmental Education with Texas T.W.A.N.G program. These programs are available to students from 3rd through 12th grade, and are offered in half day, full day, and overnight packages. Overnight accommodations are available for students and chaperones onsite. Fossil Rim also has special programs for scouts.

Areas[]

Fossil Rim's property covers 1800 acres of hill country topography including rolling hills, limestone deposits, and wooded and open land. In addition to providing habitat for the facility's animals, this land is also used for hay production and the protection of native Texas flora and fauna. The property is divided into several pastures, some of which guests have the opportunity to travel through on tours. The areas include:

Front Pasture

The first pasture guests enter during a tour. Houses various hoof stock such as the blackbuck and wildebeest.

Buffer Pasture

This area acts not only as pasture for crepuscular species like the bongo and the greater kudu, but as hay producing land.

Main Pasture

So called for its status as the largest pasture guests can travel through on tour, the main pasture houses many of Fossil Rim's species.

Preserve Pasture

This pasture is home to some of the most recognizable animals on Fossil Rim property including giraffes. When travelling through it, guests will likely notice a steep change in altitude as the land transitions into several hills.

The Jim Jackson Intensive Management Area

This area, also known as the IMA, is off-limits to guests unless on a guided tour. This area houses species that are typically vulnerable and endangered, and have historically had better conservation breeding success with less human interaction. For this reason, these species are kept out of the public eye more than other animals on property, so that staff can better assess their needs. This area is well known for containing one of two cheetah facilities on site. The other location, known as Cheetah Hill, is open to guests on a standard drive-though tour.

The Overlook

One of two locations on property where guests can exit their cars, the Overlook is home to the Overlook Café, restrooms, the conservation-focused Nature Store, and the Children's Animal Center (CAC). Here guests can interact with animals in the CAC, pause for a meal or even enjoy one of two hiking trails on property: the Wolf Trail and Mark's Bird Trail.

Other land owned by Fossil Rim is used for hay production, educational facilities, conservation and administrative buildings.

Animal Species[7][]

Fossil Rim Wildlife Center houses over 1000 animals in 50 species, of which 22 are vulnerable or endangered, including:

Conservation[]

The first mission of the Fossil Rim Wildlife Center is the conservation of species through scientific research, responsible management of natural resources, professional training and public education.

Conservation Centers for Species Survival[]

The Fossil Rim Wildlife Center is one of the five founding organizations of the Conservation Centers for Species Survival (C2S2), a consortium created to develop programs for the sustainability of endangered species. The center brings the expertise of many large-scale zoological and environmental institutions to address issues related to the conservation of endangered species through study, management and recovery plans. The central office of the consortium is in the Fossil Rim Wildlife Center.[8]

Conservation Research Support Program (CRSP)[]

Created in 2009 to extend Fossil Rim's mission beyond their facility, CRSP is made up by a board of park staff who decide on causes to be funded by guest donations. Tens of thousands of dollars worth of donated money has now gone to the conservation of species and land worldwide. Their latest project includes working with the Texas Children In Nature Network (TCINN) for the environmental education of future generation.

Scimitar Oryx[]

Fossil Rim Wildlife Center participated in the reproduction and rehabilitation program of the Scimitar-horned Oryx in Chad and the rest of sub-saharan Africa. The species is extinct in the wild since the 1980s (poaching, loss of habitat and political strife are some of the causes of its decline), but a worldwide breeding program helped the restoration of the species. A first herd of 25 beasts was released in Chad in April 2016 with collars giving their position via satellite to follow them in their habitat. The Fossil Rim helped in the evaluation of the collar on their own herd inside the park to make sure the animals would not be incapacitated by them.[9][10]

Attwater's prairie chicken[]

The center participates in a program to rehabilitate the Attwater's prairie chicken, a small grouse native of the coastal plains of Louisiana and Texas, now one of the most endangered bird species in America. Fossil Rim Wildlife Center and five other zoos initiated a breeding program for the species in 1992. Between 170 and 175 birds are released in the wild every year, of which half were bred in the center. Even if the species has not grown in the wild, the project prevented complete extinction.[11][12]

Cheetah[]

The center has one of the most successful cheetah breeding programs in the world, with more than 135 feline bred and raised there.[13] Fossil Rim has two cheetah areas that can house a combine 25-plus cats in a simulating, comfortable environment. The cheetah breeding program emphasizes genetic diversity and multiple mate choices so that the healthiest cubs possible can be born with minimal stress on the parents.

Affiliations and Awards[]

Fossil Rim is an accredited member of the Zoological Association of America (ZAA), the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA), a member and the home base of the Conservation Centers for Species Survival (C2S2), the International Rhino Foundation (IRF), the Sahara Conservation Fund (SCF), the Saola Working Group (SWG) of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the Giraffe Conservation Foundation (GCF), the Exotic Wildlife Association (EWA), the Second Ark Foundation, the USDA, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Tarleton State University, and the Glen Rose Independent School District.


In 2020 Fossil Rim was voted #1 Safari Park in the nation by readers of USA Today and received the AZA's Plume Award for their work with the Attwater's Prairie Chicken. In 2021 and 2019 the Zoological Association of America awarded Fossil Rim with the ZAA Long-Term Commitment and Significant Propagation of a Single Species Award for their sustained support of the Addax and Cheetah. They also received the 2016 "One for Tomorrow" award from Clarke for their environmental conservation efforts.

History[]

The center was first an exotic herding ranch acquired by a Texan businessman from the oil industry named Tom Mantzel. He bought the ranch in 1973 and renamed it Fossil Rim Wildlife Ranch. The project was at first a weekend retreat for Mantzel, but it soon became a full-time occupation. Concerned by the extinction of species, Mantzel started experimenting with breeding endangered species in 1982 with Grévy's zebras. Fossil Rim was the first ranch to participate in the Species Survival Plan, an initiative partnered with the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA), and their success with zebras prompted the association to continue its work with Fossil Rim.

Mantzel decided to open the zoo to the public in 1984; with the oil crash, he was in dire need of funding to continue his breeding program. With a small team, he built a road along the 1,400 acres of land and opened a snack bar and a souvenir shop. He also brought a few more animals to bring in the public, Grant’s zebras, ostriches, and reticulated giraffes.

A volunteer program was developed to help with the visits, and the park started his education mission. In 1985, more endangered species were brought to the ranch, African scimitar-horned oryx. At that time the park got permission from the U.S. government to import cheetah for a breeding program, one of the most successful projects of the center. But even with the success, the maintenance costs were still too high, and in 1987 Mantzel start looking for partners.

Jim Jackson and Krystyna Jurzykowski were looking for a venture to engage themselves in conservation, planning to open a marine park in Martinique. Learning that they were seeking information from the Fossil Rim Ranch, Mantzel approached the couple to ask them if they would be interested in partnering with him to save the park, giving operational funds for the park. But seeing foreclosure as imminent, they decided to buy the ranch, which became the Fossil Rim Wildlife Center on May 7, 1987.[14][15]

Gallery[]

Panorama of Fossil Rim Wildlife Center, taken from The Overlook Cafe balcony.
Panorama of Fossil Rim Wildlife Center, taken from The Overlook Cafe balcony.

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Fossil Rim Wildlife Center". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2008-08-27.
  2. ^ a b c "About Us". fossilrim.org. Fossil Rim Wildlife Center. Retrieved 21 February 2010.
  3. ^ "Currently Accredited Zoos and Aquariums". aza.org. AZA. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  4. ^ "Zoos and Aquariums of the World". waza.org. WAZA. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d "Fossil Rim Wildlife Center". Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  6. ^ "Fossil Rim Wildlife Center". fossilrim.org. Fossil Rim Wildlife Center. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  7. ^ "Animals – Fossil Rim Wildlife Center". Retrieved 2021-11-08.
  8. ^ "About C2S2". Conservation Centers for Species Survival. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  9. ^ "25 SCIMITAR-HORNED ORYX TO BE REINTRODUCED TO THE WILD IN CHAD". Smithsonian Insider. 2016-04-13. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  10. ^ "Simitar-Horned Oryx". Conservation Center for Species Survival. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  11. ^ "Attwater's prairie-chicken". Conservation Centers for Species Survival. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  12. ^ Campbell, Steve (2013-04-13). "Texas wildlife center works to save nearly extinct bird". Phys.org. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  13. ^ "Touring Texoma: Fossil Rim/Dinosaur Valley". Texoma's. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  14. ^ "History". Fossil Rim Wildlife Center. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  15. ^ Kimble, Amanda (2014-05-17). "Fossil Rim Wildlife Center celebrates 30 years". Glen Rose Reporter. Retrieved 2017-08-30.

External links[]

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