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LA PALMYRE ZOO

Zoo
4.1/5
82 review
Closed - Open to 09h00 Opening hours

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Carte de l'emplacement de l'établissement
6, avenue de Royan, 17570La Palmyre, France
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05.46.22.46.06
2024
Recommended
2024

Park with the possibility of visiting in a wheelchair, which also envisages a reception for deaf and visually impaired visitors

Every year, La Palmyre Zoo welcomes over 600,000 visitors. This success story began with Claude Caillé, a man with a passion for animals, who set up his park at La Palmyre, on a magnificent site in the heart of a maritime pine forest. At Easter 1966, the zoo opened its doors for the first time, presenting 60 animals over 3 hectares. From then on, the Caillé family adopted a lifestyle entirely devoted to animals. Year after year, the zoo grew and grew... Today, after 55 years, the park has 55 permanent employees, including some 40 animal caretakers and two veterinarians.

Asian elephants, orangutans, gorillas, lemurs, marmosets, giant otters, giraffes, hippos, rhinoceroses, zebras, Chilean flamingos, ibises, hornbills - in all, the zoo boasts almost 110 species. It plays an active role in safeguarding endangered species by taking part in over 60 European Ex-situ Breeding Programs (EEP), and by supporting a number of local players working at the heart of fragile natural ecosystems. The zoo's endowment fund, Palmyra Conservation, establishes long-term partnerships with programs seeking to protect animals whose survival is directly threatened by habitat destruction, poaching, trafficking for illegal trade, pollution or the expansion of human activities. Collaboration can take the form of an annual grant, technical or logistical support, funding for the purchase of equipment, or the creation of media to raise awareness among local populations of the need to preserve their biodiversity and environment. Palmyre Conservation, the Palmyre Zoo's endowment fund, currently finances some twenty organizations around the world. These include the Hutan program in Borneo, which preserves orangutans and elephants; the J.A.C.K association in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which rescues and rehabilitates trafficked chimpanzees; the Helpsimus association in Madagascar, which preserves the great hapalemur (one of the rarest lemurs in the world!); and Proyecto Titi, which protects the pinched tamarin, a small Colombian primate classified as critically endangered. Faced with today's environmental challenges and the accelerating erosion of biodiversity, the Palmyre Conservation endowment fund is strengthening and extending its action to safeguard endangered fauna and ecosystems in France and around the world.


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Members' reviews on LA PALMYRE ZOO

4.1/5
82 reviews
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Visited in april 2024
Pas le meilleur zoo de France mais sympathique. Les paiements en carte bancaire sont à éviter. Je me suis fait débiter 3 euros sur ma carte sans explication. J'ai envoyé des mails mais la conversation traînant en longueur, j'ai laissé tombé. Grosse déception sur ce point.
Visited in april 2024
Je l'ai visité, il est magnifique
Visited in march 2024
Très jolie zoo à visiter
Visited in march 2024
.la panthère a moins d'espace que mon lapin...cest un zoo? Les enclos/cages sont ridiculement petits... beaucoup de stéréotypies surtout chez les elephants qui se balancent tellement l'ennui et la petitesse de leurs enclos les rendent fous..triste visite..les oiseaux aux ailes clipsees sur une branche...les singent qui appellent au secours dans leurs cages miniatures....
UN CENTRE DE TORTURE PSYCHOLOGIQUE ET PHYSIQUE POUR ANIMAUX pour le plaisir des yeux des enfants qui ne comprennent pas...
Visited in march 2024
C'est un très beau parc, on se sent proche des animaux.
Cependant, je ne pense pas revenir, car payer plein tarif alors que nous n'avons pas pu voir tous les animaux... en effet, le parc ferme à 18h et certains animaux sont restrés bien avant, du coup le temps de faire le tour on a pas pu voir le gorille qui est en fin de parcour!! L'organisation des horaires est à revoir en fonction du sens de la visite..

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