Healesville Sanctuary
Healesville Sanctuary, formally known as the Sir Colin MacKenzie Sanctuary, is a zoo specialising in native Australian animals. It is located at Healesville in rural Victoria, Australia, and has a history of breeding native animals. It is one of only two places to have successfully bred a platypus, the other being Sydney's Taronga Zoo. It also assists with a breeding population of the endangered helmeted honeyeater.[1]
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Date opened | 1934 |
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Location | Healesville, Victoria, Australia |
Coordinates | 37.6822°S 145.5316°E |
Website | zoo |
The zoo is set in a natural bushland environment where paths wind through different habitat areas showcasing wallabies, wombats, dingoes, kangaroos, and over 200 native bird varieties.
Guided tours, bird shows and information areas are available to visitors.
History
Dr Colin MacKenzie (knighted in 1929) set up the Institute of Anatomical Research in 1920 on 78 acres (32 ha) of land which had formerly been part of the Aboriginal reserve known as Coranderrk. The Reserve passed to the Healesville Council in 1927 and became the Sir Colin MacKenzie Sanctuary in 1934.
The first platypus bred in captivity was born in the Sanctuary in year 1943 when it was managed by David Fleay.
In 2009, the sanctuary was threatened by the Black Saturday bushfires, and the sanctuary evacuated their threatened species to Melbourne Zoo.[2]
Animals and exhibits

- General exhibits
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- Koalas
- Birds of the bush
- Orange-bellied parrot
- Swift parrot
- Rose-crowned fruit-dove
- Fan-tailed cuckoo
- Eastern whipbird
- Kangaroos
- Gang-gang Aviary
- World of the Platypus/Platypusary
- Platypus
- Water rat
- Gippsland water dragon
- Short-finned eel
- Macquarie perch
- Yabby
- Murray crayfish
- Woodland Aviary
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- Rock-wallaby
- Australian pelican
- Black swan
- Brush-tailed rock-wallaby
- Chestnut teal
- Dusky moorhen
- Magpie goose
- Pacific black duck
- Purple swamphen
- Australian white ibis
- Arid Birds
- Scarlet-chested parrot
- Princess parrot
- Budgerigar
- Rainbow bee-eater
- Variegated fairy-wren
- Gouldian finch
- Diamond firetail
- Painted finch
- Wetlands Aviary
- Wallabies
- Wombat Closeup
- Animals of the Night
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Cockatoos
- Australian brush-turkey

- Red-tailed black cockatoo
- Major Mitchell's cockatoo
- White-headed pigeon
- Brush bronzewing
- Wonga pigeon
- Pacific emerald dove
- Blue-faced honeyeater
- Black-faced cuckoo-shrike
Reptile Encounter
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- Lyrebird Forest
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- Larger Wetlands Aviary
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- Flying Foxes
- Grey-headed flying-fox
- Black-winged stilt
References
- Menkhorst P, Smales I, Quin B (2003). "Helmeted Honeyeater Recovery Plan 1999–2003". Australian Government, Department of the Environment and Water Resources. Retrieved 21 June 2007.
- Kent, Melissa (6 September 2009). "Fire and flight no turn-off for horny devils". The Age. Melbourne.
External links
Media related to Healesville Sanctuary at Wikimedia Commons- Official website