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Privacy Policy

The Prescott Animal Park Association D.B.A. Heritage Park Zoological Sanctuary, respects the privacy of our visitors, members, and donors. The purpose of this statement is to define our policy with regard to the collection and use of personally identifiable information via our website, www.heritageparkzoo.org.

Information Collected:

This website collects two kinds of information: anonymous information and personally identifiable information.

Anonymous information does not indentify specific individuals and is automatically transmitted by your browser.  This information can consist of: the URL (Uniform Resource Locator or address) of the web page your previously visited; the domain names and/or IP addresses of the computer you are using; and your browser software and operating system.  This information is used to monitor site usage and traffic patterns of our customers in order to improve our website.  This information is always devoid of any personally identifying information.

Personally Identifiable Information could include: name, address, e-mail address, telephone number and payment information.  By sending us an email e-mail or filling out an online form, you are sending us personal information.  We store this information in order to respond to or process your request.  We may use your information to send you futher information about our organization.  You may always opt-out of future mailings.

If you are purchasing a membership, making a donation, signing up for a fee-based event or program, or making a similar financial transaction through www.heritageparkzoo.org, we need to know your name, e-mail address, billing and shipping address, and payment information in order to process and fulfill your order.  All personal informatio we receive is kept secure.

Sharing Information:

Personal information obtained through the website will not be sold or given to third parties for marketing purposes.

Links:

Our website contains to websites maintained by other oarganizations.  Once you access an individual document on another website, you are subject to the provacy policy of the website containing that document.

Use of Text and Images:

Anyone wishing to publish information found on our website must send a request to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

On Zoo Grounds and Commercial Photography:

Heritage Park Zoological Sanctuary reserves the right to photograph, videotape, or film our visitors, on Sanctuary grounds, for promotional purposes.  The commerical use of photographs, video, and film taken during your visit is strictly prohibited without the written consent of Heritage Park Zoological Sanctuary.

Contact Us:

If you have any questions regarding the website or this policy, please contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Large Mammals

Mountain Lion

jade jumpingJade the Mountain Lion   

Jade arrived at HPZS in 2008. She had been confiscated by AZGFD Officials from private ownership.

  • Mountain Lions range from North America to Central and South America. They have long hind legs to help them leap through the rocky outcrops that are their preferred habitat.
  • The mountain Lion is the largest of the "small cats" and can purr loudly. They also make a chirping sound and a loud scream, but they don't roar.
  • They have large retractable claws to help them catch food in the wild. They usually eat deer and elk, but will also eat rodents and other small mammals and birds. We feed "Jade" a special exotic feline diet, as well as deer, elk, beef, and other meat scraps.
  • Mountain Lions keep deer populations healthy by culling the sick and weak ones. Without predators, deer populations would expand beyond food supplies, causing overgrazing and starvation of deer populations
  • They are gone from much of their historical range due to hunting and habitat destruction. A subspecies, the Florida Panther, is endangered but begining to recover with help from the Fish & Wildlife Service.

 

Black Bear

   shash

Augustus ("Gus")

Gus arrived in 2012 with his sister after their mother had been hit by a car. The sister now lives in the Navajo Nation Zoo in Window Rock, AZ.

American Black Bears have been restricted by the inroads of "civilization" to the more remote, less accessible mountainous areas or to the nearly impenetrable thickets along watercourses. Only in places that have a low human population or an enlightened public have black bears been able to cope successfully with humans.

Largely creatures of woodland and forested areas, black bears are more at home on the ground than they are in the trees. They are expert climbers, however, and, especially when young, often seek refuge in trees. Ordinarily they are shy and seldom are seen. They appear to use regular travelways or runs, a habit that is frequently taken advantage of by hunters.

Their food is extremely varied as reflected by the crushing type of molar teeth. They are known to feed upon nest contents of wild bees, carpenter ants and other insects berries, fruits, nuts, fish, carrion, and garbage about camps. Occasional animals become killers of livestock and young deer.

Mexican Wolf

2 wolves-min1 wolf-min

Status: ENDANGERED

  • Mexican wolves are the smallest subspecies of the North American gray wolf and once roamed over a large part of Arizona, New Mexico, southern Texas, and Mexico.
  • Intensive hunting in the late 1800s through the mid 1900s to eliminate "threats to livestock" drove them to the brink of extinction.
  • Mexican Gray Wolves were declared Endangered in 1976. Five wolves were captured in Mexico between 1977 and 1980. These were the last wild mexican wolves. Bred with captive Mexican wolves at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum and the St Louis Zoo , the first pups were born in 1978.
  • The first 11 captive-bred wolves were released in April of 1998 in the Apache National Forest in southeastern Arizona.
  • Wolves have a complex social structure. They live in packs, which usually consist of a breeding (alpha pair), their current pups, a few yearlings and other young wolves, and occasionally some adult subordinate wolves (brothers and sisters of the alpha pair).
  • In the wild, their diet consists of small rodents to prey the size deer and elk. We feed them a commercially prepared exotic canine kibble, as well as a variety of wild game meat.
  • Removal of a top predator like the wolf has a domino effect on the entire ecosystem. Without a predator to cull plant eaters, vegetation is depleted and animals starve. Some plant populations die out, while less edible plants take over. Birds and insects, dependant on certain plants, are also affected.

Canadian Lynx

(Lnyx canadensis)

lynx shrink  Dave Lipchen 9 shrunk   
Memphis & Foxy

Canadian Lynx are solitary and territorial animals in the wild. The majority of their diet in the wild is made up of snowshoe hares. Lynx are dependent upon hare populations and a decrease in this population will cause the lynx to move to a different area. Lynx have been historically hunted for their fur, but due to dwindling numbers, it is now illegal to trap or shoot Canadian Lynx in the United States.

Their natural habitats are in the northern parts of North America, populating thick, coniferous forests. Their extremely large paws make them excellent at walking on snow and climing up trees. They do well in almost any climate, but prefer cooler temperatures.

Memphis & Foxy came to HPZS on loan in 2012.

Clouded Leopard

Clouded Leopard   Clouded Leopards 1

Status: Threatened

CLICK HERE to visit the Clouded Leopard Species Survival Plan page.

Suree & Malee

Clouded Leopards are extremely elusive by nature. Little is known about them in the wild because they are so rare to come by. They are mostly crepuscular (most active during dawn and dusk), though they appear to be incredibly adaptable to whatever their habitat and diet allow.

Clouded Leopards are unique among the cat family for a couple of reasons. They hold the distinction of being a link between the "big cats" and "small cats". The most general difference between the two is that big cats can roar but not purr, while small cats can purr but not roar. Clouded Leopards can kind of do both. They're the only cat species known the be able to do both.

Another unique thing about Clouded Leopards is the size of their canines and tails. Their canines are about 2" in length, the same size as a Bengal Tiger. That is unique because Clouded Leoaprds are one-tenth the body size of a Tiger. Proportionately, their canines are the same size as those on a Sabertooth Tiger. Their tails are also the longest (proportionately) of any species in the cat family. Clouded  Leopards are exceptional climbers, and use their tail length for balance and clinging to branches.

Suree & Malee were born in March of 2015 at an organization in Florida. They came to us in December 2015.

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Are you interested in learning about new animals as they arrive and special events that we hold here at the park? If so, then sign-up for our free monthly e-newsletter! Each month, you'll receive an email detailing all of the latest happenings here at the Sanctuary. Most of the time, you're getting information like this before we share it with anyone else! Simply enter your email address below and we'll add you to the list. And if you're not happy with what you're getting, you can unsubscribe anytime.