River Safari
Coordinates: 1°24′14″N 103°47′39″E / 1.403782°N 103.79414°E
Date opened | 29 November 2012 (Giant Panda Forest) 3 April 2013 (Soft opening) 28 February 2014 (Official opening) |
---|---|
Location | Mandai, Singapore 80 Mandai Lake Road, Singapore 729826 |
Land area | 12 ha (30 acres)[1] |
No. of animals | 5000[2][3] |
No. of species | 300[3] |
Annual visitors | 966,890 (FY 2019/20)[4] |
Website | riversafari |
The River Safari is a river-themed zoo and aquarium located in Singapore. It is built over 12 hectares (30 acres) and nestled between its two counterparts, the Singapore Zoo and the Night Safari, Singapore.[2] It is the first of its kind in Asia and features freshwater exhibits and a river boat ride as its main highlights. The safari was built at a cost of S$160m, with an expected visitor rate of 820,000 people yearly.[5]
The Giant Panda Forest was opened to the public on 29 November 2012,[6] with a soft opening on 3 April 2013, attracting close to 1,500 visitors.[7] This attraction is the fourth zoo in Singapore, along with the Singapore Zoo, Jurong Bird Park, and Night Safari, all of which are managed by Wildlife Reserves Singapore. The park was officially opened on 28 February 2014, and it was announced that more than 1.1 million have visited the River Safari since its soft opening in April 2013.[8]
Construction[]
Conceptualization of such as River Safari began in early 2007, and its construction was officially announced to the public on 11 February 2009 with an estimated completion date of late 2011.[9] The project began with an estimated budget of S$140 million as well as an annual visitor rate of 750,000,[9] however since the original announcement in 2009 the budget has since increased by S$20 million in 2010, due to rising construction costs, to S$160 million and the annual visitor rate has also increased to 820,000.[10]
The park is built within the current 89-hectare (220-acre) compound already shared by the Singapore Zoo and Night Safari[9] and occupies 12 hectares (30 acres), making it the smallest of the three parks.[5]
Animals[]
The park has over 14 zones that showcase different animals that are native to rivers around the world.
River Gems[]
- Pearl gourami
- Cardinal tetra
- Rummy-nose tetra
- Penguin tetra
- Black phantom tetra
- Rainbow shark
- Jandaya parakeet
- Brown-throated parakeet
- Blue-crowned parakeet
- Green-cheeked parakeet
- Bare-faced curassow
Mississippi River[]
Congo River[]
Lake Tanganyika[]
- Lemon cichlid
- Fairy cichlid
- Yellow sand cichlid
- Tanganyikan butterfly cichlid
- Descamp's strange-tooth cichlid
- Red-spot callochromis
- Cuckoo Catfish
River Nile[]
Ganges River[]
- Mahseer
- Clown knifefish
- Black pond turtle
- Gharial
- Goonch
Mary River[]
- Banded archerfish
- Eastern rainbowfish
- Peacock gudgeon
- Red rainbowfish
- Boeseman's rainbowfish
- Scortum barcoo
- Australian lungfish
- Mudskipper
- Mangrove horseshoe crab
Mekong River[]
- Lion-tailed macaque
- Giant freshwater stingray
- Bala shark
- Asian arowana
- Blackhawk catfish
- Iridescent shark
- Giant pangasius
- Mekong giant catfish
- Spotted whistling duck
- Nankeen night heron
- Eurasian spoonbill
- Painted stork
- Masked Lapwing
- Green imperial pigeon
- Vietnamese pheasant
- Clouded archerfish
- Coolie loach
- Fiveband barb
- Galaxy rasbora
- Sawbwa barb
- Emerald dwarf danio
- Fire eel
- Kissing gourami
- Flying fox
Yangtze River[]
- Chinese stripe-necked turtle
- Chinese softshell turtle
- Chinese alligator
- Chinese giant salamander
- Phoenix barb
- Amur sturgeon
- Black carp
- Grass carp
Giant Panda Forest[]
- Red panda
- Giant panda
Amazon River Quest[]
- Collared peccary
- Tufted capuchin
- Venezuelan red howler
- Geoffroy's spider monkey
- Giant anteater
- Guanaco
- Bearded saki
- White-faced saki
- South American tapir
- South American coati
- Cotton-top tamarin
- Jaguar
- Black howler
- American flamingo
- Capybara
Wild Amazonia[]
- Oscar
- Kelberi peacock bass
- Plumed basilisk
- Green anaconda
- Emperor tamarin
- Red tailed catfish
- Silver arowana
- Yellow-spotted river turtle
- Cuvier's dwarf caiman
Squirrel Monkey Forest[]
- Great curassow
- Helmeted curassow
- Common squirrel monkey
- White-faced saki
- Azara's agouti
Amazon Flooded Forest[]
- Giant otter
- Electric eel
- Neon tetra
- Rummy-nose tetra
- Black neon tetra
- Serpae tetra
- Ram cichlid
- Panda corydoras
- Dwarf sucker
- Blue discus
- Leopard catfish
- Freshwater angelfish
- Black ghost knife fish
- Cardinal tetra
- Bushymouth catfish
- Golden nugget pleco
- Cockatoo cichlid
- Red phantom tetra
- Royal tetra
- Red-bellied piranha
- Redtail catfish
- Tambaqui
- Atlantic tarpon
- Arapaima
- West Indian manatee
- Royal pleco
- Thorny catfish
Attractions[]
The park boasts a tropical rainforest setting[10] along with as river theme with various animal attractions, theme park rides and other major exhibits.
Giant pandas[]
One of the main attractions is a pair of male and female giant pandas – Kai Kai (凯凯) and Jia Jia (嘉嘉)[11] – which are housed in a specially constructed climate-controlled enclosure which change throughout the four seasons emulating their original environment.[12] The zoo grows its own 8,000-square-metre (86,000 sq ft) plantation of special bamboo specially for the feeding of the giant pandas. These pandas are a sign of the twentieth anniversary of friendly Sino-Singapore relations. The park also received a conservation donation from CapitaLand.[13] The names of the two pandas were selected from entries of a public naming competition organised in 2010.[14] The pandas, which arrived in September 2012, are on a ten-year loan from China.[15]
On 14 August 2021, the first panda cub was born to Kai Kai and Jia Jia with the gender of the cub not determined yet. This came after seven breeding rounds since 2015, which did not yield any cubs. The pandas conceived via artificial insemination.[16]
Theme park rides[]
The park features a boat ride called the Amazon River Quest. It features over 30 wildlife species from the Amazon River, such as Brazilian tapirs, capybaras, guanacos, brown-headed spider monkeys, brown capuchins, black howler monkeys, red howler monkeys, collared peccaries, jaguars, maned wolves, giant anteaters, two-toed sloths, Caribbean flamingos, common rheas, scarlet ibis, and green iguanas.[17] It was opened to visitors on 7 December 2013.[18]
A 15-minute Reservoir Cruise on the Upper Seletar Reservoir, will travel along the outskirts of Singapore Zoo and the Night Safari compound, which border on the reservoir, giving visitors a chance to spot animals including giraffes and Asian elephants. Tickets are priced at S$5 for adults and S$3 for children aged three to 12, on top of River Safari admission. Each cruise can take up to 40 passengers and runs at 15-minute intervals from 10.30am to 6.00pm daily. The boats are wheelchair-friendly. The ride opened on 1 August 2014.[19]
Transportation[]
Public transportation[]
River Safari is not served directly by any MRT line with the nearest station being the upcoming Springleaf MRT station.
There are three bus services operated by SBS Transit and SMRT Buses which calls at the bus stop near to the Zoo.[20]
Service | Destination | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SBS Transit Services | |||||
138 | Ang Mo Kio Bus Interchange | ||||
SMRT Buses Services | |||||
926 | Woodlands Temporary Bus Interchange | Suspended till further notice | |||
927 | Choa Chu Kang Bus Interchange |
Bus[]
A shuttle service, known as the Mandai Khatib Shuttle, plies daily between Khatib MRT station and the Zoo. A one-way trip cost $1 for everyone above the age of three.[21] A separate service, known as the Mandai Express, operates on weekends and holidays to and from three locations in Bedok, Sengkang, and Tampines. A one-way trip cost between $1 and $3 for everyone above the age of three.[22]
See also[]
- Underwater World, Singapore
- Marine Life Park
External links[]
References[]
- ^ "WILDLIFE RESERVES SINGAPORE BUILDS RIVER SAFARI" (PDF) (Press release). Wildlife Reserves Singapore. 11 February 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 May 2009. Retrieved 12 October 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Park Experience". Wildlife Reserves Singapore. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Wildlife Reserves Singapore Club (20 March 2013). "About River Safari" (PDF). Wildlife Reserves Singapore Club. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
- ^ "WRS Yearbook 2018/2019" (PDF). Wildlife Reserves Singapore.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Grace Chua (21 May 2010). "Pandas, polars at new Safari". The Straits Times. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
- ^ "Kai Kai and Jia Jia to make public debut on Nov 29". The Straits Times. 29 October 2012. Archived from the original on 29 October 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
- ^ "River Safari opens to public during soft launch". Channel NewsAsia. 3 April 2013. Archived from the original on 5 April 2013.
- ^ "More than 1.1 million visited River Safari since opening last April". Channel NewsAsia. 28 February 2014.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Grace Chua (11 February 2009). "River Safari in 2011". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 21 October 2010. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Mustafa Shafawi, Hetty Musfira (21 May 2010). "Attractions of Asia's first river-themed park River Safari unveiled". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
- ^ Relax – S'pore's giant pandas named Kai Kai and Jia Jia
- ^ Wildlife Reserves Singapore Staff. "River Safari – Official Page". Wildlife Reserves Singapore. Archived from the original on 10 September 2010. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
- ^ "WILDLIFE RESERVES SINGAPORE TO RECEIVE TWO GIANT PANDAS FROM CHINA" (PDF) (Press release). Wildlife Reserves Singapore. 11 November 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2010.
- ^ Channel NewsAsia
- ^ Channel NewsAsia
- ^ Ng, Keng Gene (15 August 2021). "Singapore gets first panda cub, born to Kai Kai and Jia Jia at River Safari". The Straits Times. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
- ^ "Amazon River Quest". Wildlife Reserves Singapore Group. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
- ^ "River Safari launches boat ride, marking completion of wildlife park". Channel NewsAsia. 7 December 2013. Archived from the original on 10 December 2013.
- ^ "Launching This Friday: New River Safari Cruise". Channel NewsAsia. 30 July 2014. Archived from the original on 2 August 2014.
- ^ "Getting here". wrs.com.sg.
- ^ Chew, Hui Min (9 March 2017). "New daily express bus from Khatib to Mandai wildlife parks". The Straits Times. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
- ^ "Mandai Express". form.jotform.com.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to River Safari, Singapore. |
- 2012 establishments in Singapore
- Safari parks
- Tourist attractions in Singapore
- Zoos in Singapore