The Niagara Falls Review

Toronto Zoo attendance up due to baby animal boom and good weather

- The Canadian Press

TORONTO — The Toronto Zoo is citing a baby animal boom as one of the main reasons for its first attendance increase in several years.

In an annual review presented to its board, the city-owned facility said more than 1.3 million people visited the zoo in 2016, an increase of nearly 170,000 people compared to those who came to the zoo the previous year.

“It was a very good year,” said zoo spokeswoma­n Jennifer Tracey.

Attendance had been declining at the zoo since 2013, when the facility had seen a boost due to the arrival of two pandas from China.

For 2016, the zoo cited several cubs — two pandas, four white lions and a polar bear — along with a rhinoceros calf as among main reasons for its attendance bump.

The new panda cubs, named Jia Panpan and Jia Yueyue, even drew Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other politician­s for a cuddle session at the zoo last spring.

According to results of the zoo’s 2016 on-site visitor survey, 37.7 per cent of respondent­s said they visited the facility because of the panda exhibit, 31 per cent said they went explicitly to see the panda cubs and a further 17 per cent said baby animals in general drew them there. The remaining respondent­s said they visited the zoo for other attraction­s.

Babies weren’t the only reason for the boost in attendance.

“The weather is also a huge factor,” Tracey said. “We had great fall weather.”

The zoo had its third-highest October attendance since it opened in 1974 when 93,145 people visited, according to the report. And the following month was its best November on record when 46,638 came out.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A journalist takes a selfie with Alice, a 20-year-old Bactrian Camel native to Mongolia, before a naming ceremony at the Toronto Zoo for two panda cubs last year. The Toronto Zoo says attendance is up for the first time in several years, which it...
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS A journalist takes a selfie with Alice, a 20-year-old Bactrian Camel native to Mongolia, before a naming ceremony at the Toronto Zoo for two panda cubs last year. The Toronto Zoo says attendance is up for the first time in several years, which it...

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