A capybara that had gone missing after Fridayβs fierce monsoon storms has been found and is in good condition, but thereβs still no sign of a missing kangaroo, say the owners of Maranaβs Ghost Ranch Exotics petting zoo.
There was also a sighting of one of two missing African crested porcupines in an area nearby, said co-owner Geordi Davisson.
βWe know the general area that they were headed towards, which happens to be a good area thatβs got lots of water and munchy things. So we ... have a crew that will be out here very shortly, and theyβre going to go look for them,β Davisson said Monday afternoon.
The petting zooβs sole kangaroo remains missing.
βNo sighting of the kangaroo. No updates on him, unfortunately,β Davisson said Monday afternoon.
On Sunday, Davisson seemed confident the missing animals were likely in the nearby area.
βWe canβt imagine theyβve gone too far, but in this heat, theyβre hunkered down in shady spots, looking for water and hiding from the sun,β he told the Star then. βItβs hard to look for animals that are the color of the desert.β
The owners ask that anyone who comes upon one of the missing animals call animal control and contact Ghost Ranch Exotics at 520-276-4469.
While most of the zooβs animals were found on the property after the storm, some enclosures were damaged, leading to temporary wanderings of other animals that have since been found, including the Patagonian mara and various bird species.
The storm killed a few of the smaller birds at the facility, the owners said.
Currently, most of the animals remain onsite behind improvised temporary fencing and under shade, according to Davisson, with some of the birds being housed in the facilityβs office and others at Davissonβs house.
Davisson and fellow co-owner Kenneth MacNeil reported significant damage to the facility, at 9027 Ghost Ranch Trail, resulting in extensive losses to animal enclosures, aviaries and other structures.
The strong winds ripped apart animal houses and damaged nearly every fence and shade awning on the property.
βMy 5,000-pound aviary took flight and ended up spread across four acres. It damaged all of our fences, animal shade awnings, and destroyed half of our animal houses. It was a bad storm,β Davisson said, estimating the damages to be around $50,000. βEverything is brand new. We just built it ourselves, and now itβs all destroyed.β