Australia's 1st Wildlife Teaching Hospital at Taronga

NSW Gov

Construction has now started on Australia's first ever wildlife specialist teaching veterinary hospital, at Taronga Zoo in Sydney.

This $80 million state-of-the-art facility will replace the current hospital, which has played a critical role in wildlife care since the 1970's.

The new Taronga Wildlife Hospital will expand the zoo's critical rescue and rehabilitation work by delivering new surgical, rehabilitation and recovery facilities to cater for hundreds of animals per year.

As a dedicated specialist teaching hospital, it will also enable widespread training and upskilling of wildlife carers, students and veterinary practitioners - further protecting Australia's unique biodiversity against ever increasing natural disasters.

The 2019-2020 Black Summer bushfires affected billions of animals, including koalas, wallabies, platypus and critically endangered amphibians which Taronga's hospital team was instrumental in treating. The devastation of these fires demonstrated a national need for a new, state-of-the-art wildlife hospital.

Taronga's new multipurpose facility will feature:

  • Modern surgical facilities and specialised rehabilitation and recovery spaces for species such as marine turtles, reptiles and amphibians before they return to the wild.
  • Increased quarantine facilities for animals confiscated in illegal wildlife trade seizures and for those transferred from other zoos as part of global conservation breeding programs.
  • Australia's first Zoo Nutrition Centre dedicated to managing the diets of the zoo's animals.
  • A pathology lab for onsite analysis and testing.
  • Public viewing galleries through which zoo guests can safely watch animal health checks and veterinary procedures.

The new Taronga Wildlife Hospital is funded by the NSW Government through an investment of $40.7 million. A further $40 million is being raised through philanthropic donations.

This facility will support the important role of volunteer wildlife carers, by educating and sharing knowledge with volunteers. This will improve the state's capacity to respond to wildlife crises through wildlife first aid.

The NSW Government is undergoing state-wide consultation on the wildlife rehabilitation sector to gain a detailed understanding of how NSW can improve the way we care for our native animals.

Quote attributable to Premier Chris Minns:

"Taronga's new wildlife hospital will be a truly unique facility as Australia's first wildlife specialist teaching hospital.

"Once opened, this new hospital will allow specialist vets to deliver treatments, surgeries, and rehabilitation for our native species - and families will be able to come to watch them in action doing what they do best.

"Our country is fortunate to have so many unique species and this facility will enable us to protect even more of our Australian wildlife for generations to come."

Quote attributable to Minister for the Environment, Penny Sharpe:

"As natural disasters become more common, veterinarians and vet nurses are increasingly being called upon to rescue and rehabilitate severely impacted wildlife.

"This facility will not only give us the tools we need to rehabilitate our wildlife, it will also allow for us to share critical knowledge with wildlife carers all over the state."

Quote attributable to Taronga Conservation Society Australia Chief Executive, Cameron Kerr AO:

"Taronga's Wildlife Hospitals in Sydney and Dubbo treat approximately 1,500 sick, injured or orphaned native animals for treatment and rehabilitation a year, caring for a range of wildlife from marine turtles to echidnas, possums, sea birds, snakes and everything in between.

"Every year, we see first-hand the increasing need to treat and care for wildlife. At Taronga, we are driven by our purpose to secure a shared future for wildlife and people. We knew we had a duty to forge the next step. The new Taronga Wildlife Hospital will allow our expert veterinary team to care for and protect even more of our precious, native animals, and inspire future conservationists and veterinary practitioners to protect Australia's unique species."

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