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For second year, group says Safari isn't good to elephants

Posted in : Land Mammals

(added 13 days ago)

For the second year in a row, the Wildlife Safari has made an animal protection organization's list of the top ten worst zoos for elephants, but officials at the park say the group is just looking for attention.

Last year, the group 'In Defense of Animals' listed the Wildlife Safari as number eight on their list of the top ten worst zoos for elephants. Officials say the park made the list last year because of the elephant car wash.

This year, the Wildlife Safari comes in at number nine. Officials with IDA said the park made it on the list this year because of events that featured Alice and George dancing, wearing costumes and putting on performances. "Basically, it's using the elephants more like circus clowns than treating them in a more dignified manor that actually would send a positive conservation message," said Catherine Doyle, the elephant campaign director for IDA.

The Safari's executive director says the performances are part of the animal's enrichment programs, and George and Alice truly enjoy the activities. Dan Van Slyke told KPIC News, "It's really fun for the elephants, their eyes get really big and they really enjoy it."

The Wildlife Safari is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, a standard that less than 10% of animal parks in the nation achieve. Part of the requirements to get the nod by the AZA is enrichment programs, which are small games and activities that keep the animals entertained.

So, Van Slyke says it may look like a performance, but it's actually fun for the animals. "If you can have them participate in activities, it really enriches their lives. They're not just laying around, sleeping, bored," he said. "And so, all of these activities, including the little presentation we put together with the elephants, it's all about enrichment."

Doyle disagrees, calling the acts undignified. "Many zoos actually do use enrichments for elephants, but they don't use elephants in ways in which they have them dancing, they have them wearing silly berets, holding up flags. And, you know, basically using this to entertain the public," she said.

Van Slyke says that he doesn't put much stock into IDA's list, and says that the Wildlife Safari will continue to let the public watch the elephant's enrichment programs.

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Back to the Endangered Species Act

Posted in : Endangered Species

(added 15 days ago)

Back to the Endangered Species ActChris Clarke over at Coyote Crossing has an amazing post discussing the recent attempt of 10 environmental organizations[1] to remove the gray wolf from Montana and Idaho’s endangered species list. These same groups were part of a coalition that secured the gray wolf’s endangered status in Wyoming, Washington, Oregon, Montana and Idaho only two years ago. Judge Donald Molloy who presided over the case had ruled that “if the wolves in the northern Wyoming part of Yellowstone were endangered, then wolves a hundred yards away in the southern Montana portion of Yellowstone must necessarily be as well” (from Chris). The implications of this ruling are that a species cannot be defined as endangered along political lines but, instead, federal courts must follow scientific evaluation of the species’ recovery. This recent attempt, on the part of the 10 EOs, would subvert that distinction.

The EOs are claiming that this is a strategic move to delay legislative de-listing in congress. Anyway, Chris explains the situation a lot better than I do so check out his post. I do want to quote him though, as his concluding remarks are particularly powerful:

I know a handful of people that could benefit from taking that last sentence seriously. So quick are they to condemn the SUV and OHV-ers that they pay scant attention to their own imperialistic tendencies, the sense that they know what’s best for the world and its entities, that their desires speak for all desires.  We are not shepherds. We are not saviors.
 

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(added 15 days ago) / 20 views

North Carolina Zoo Announces a Baby Chimpanzee Birth

Posted in : Zoo News

(added 17 days ago)

North Carolina Zoo Announces a Baby Chimpanzee BirthAsheboro, NC - A baby chimpanzee was born at the North Carolina Zoo Monday evening, marking the 12th chimp birth at the park since its opening in 1974 and the second since August 2010. Ebi, as the infant female has been named, was born to Tammy, a 41-year-old female who had previously given birth to Maki in March 1994.

Both mother and daughter are doing fine, and the mother is caring for the infant without any intervention from zoo staff members. The two are not on exhibit and will not be in the foreseeable future due to the cold weather and the infant-rearing process. According to General Curator Ken Reininger, it will be at least summer before the two will be on exhibit.

Seventeenth-month-old Nori, the zoo's youngest chimp before Ebi's arrival Monday, can be seen on exhibit daily--weather permitting. Monday's birth brings the number of chimps in the N.C. Zoo to 12 and keeps the zoo's chimp troop as one of the largest in U.S. zoos. The zoo is an agency of the N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Dee A. Freeman, Secretary; Beverly E. Perdue, Governor.

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City zoo ropes in students to keep a watch on visitors

Posted in : Zoo News

(added 19 days ago)

CHENNAI: Kaanum pongal usually attracts lakhs of visitors to the city's lone zoological park in Vandalur, 32 km south of Chennai, creating a logistical nightmare for animal keepers and unsettling the beasts in their cages all day long. But this time, the zoo officials have roped in the services of hundreds of foresters and college students to put an elaborate security management system in place.

The outer ring of the cover, zoo officials said, would comprise two student-volunteers. The middle-ring would have forest officials. The third and final layer of protection would be the zoo officials themselves, including animal keepers. The three-tier system is an effort to prevent unruly visitors from making noise in front of enclosures or chucking objects at the animals. At present, the zoo has around 1,500 wild species including 46 endangered species in its 160 enclosures. "Visitors can enjoy watching wild species and take pictures in front of enclosures but they would be advised not to disturb animals and birds," zoo director and chief conservator of forests, KSSVP Reddy told TOI.

Apart from the existing 250-odd zoo staff, officials have roped in around 150 forest officials including range officers from neighbouring districts like Kancheepuram, Tiruvallur and Vellore to implement the plan. Besides, around 150 student-volunteers from colleges like MCC and Loyola College would be deployed in front of enclosures. The volunteers would issue tickets at 20 additional counters. They would also screen baggage for disposable plastic products. Visitors are not allowed to carry plastic products inside the zoo.

Officials also intend to advise visitors to behave themselves using a public address system every ten minutes. CCTV cameras have been installed at spots where visitors are expected to gather including the more popular enclosures which house white tigers and lions and at the food courts. "We were given day-long training on the dos and don'ts that should be passed on to visitors. We are also told to keep an eye on children, who often go missing due to such rush. Above all, we too get a chance to watch wild species in close quarters," said K Sekar, a student-volunteer.

The zoo has witnessed a rise in number of visitors and revenue over the past few years, recording an average annual % rise of 15% in number of tickets sold. Cost of the ticket has increased from Rs three for children between five and 12 years to Rs 10 while for adults, the price has gone up from Rs five to Rs 20. "During Kannum pongal in 2011, around 58,000 visitors came to the zoo and over Rs 10 lakh was earned through ticket collection on that day alone. We expect more visitors on Tuesday," Reddy noted.

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Crowds greet giant pandas

Posted in : Zoo News

(added 20 days ago)

Crowds greet giant pandasTWO giant pandas have been greeted by a crowd of thousands as they arrived at the world-renowned Beauval Zoo in the heart of the chateaux of the Loire.

Hours earlier Yuan Zi et Huan Huan had touched down at Paris Charles-de-Gaulle airport after an 11-hour flight from China.

Chinese ambassador Kong Quan said the two three-year-old pandas had had a "pleasant flight" and added: "They appreciated the transport, they ate a lot and they have started to learn French..."

They are the first pandas to arrive in France since China presented two to President Pompidou in 1973. They are on a 10-year loan to France and follow top-level discussions between President Sarkozy and Chinese leader Hu Jintao.

They will live at Beauval - in the Loir-et-Cher town of Saint-Aignan between Tours and Vierzon - which has a reputation for conservancy and working with endangered species. The zoo will be working closely with Chinese specialists to investigate the animals' reproduction - Huan Huan, the female, is only fertile for two or three days in a year.

Beauval - classed by Forbes Traveler as one of the 15 most beautiful zoos in the world - contains around 4,600 animals. It has separate zones for its collection of endangered species and has white tigers and white lions, rhinos, chimpanzees, gorillas and orang-utans, manatees and koalas as well as one of Europe's biggest sea lion pools.

The last census in 2005 found only 1,600 giant pandas living in the wild and Beauval is one of just 16 zoos outside China to have pandas. The other European zoos with giant pandas are Berlin, Edinburgh, Madrid and Vienna.

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(added 20 days ago) / 21 views

Zoo's Tropical Rainforest Closes For Construction

Posted in : Zoo News

(added 25 days ago)

Thursday, January 12, the Tropical Rainforest at the Topeka Zoo will temporarily close to the public. The rainforest is undergoing several construction projects that will expand and repair the facility.

The first of these construction projects, which began last December, will expand the holding area at the back of the building. Once the holding area is completed, the rainforest animals will be transferred to this area and construction on the rainforest roof will begin. The glass triangular panels that make up the roof surface have become cracked over time. These panels will be replaced and other repairs will be done as necessary.

Construction is expected to be completed by the beginning of summer 2012. "We are sorry to have to close the rainforest to the public, but the construction is necessary for the safety of the animals and visitors," said Brendan Wiley, zoo director.

The Topeka Zoo's rainforest is currently home to nearly 100 different species of plants, birds, reptiles and mammals. Many of the animal species are native to South America, while many of the birds are Neotropical. The wide variety of plant life in the rainforest is representative of many parts of the world.

For more than 35 years, the Topeka Zoo's rainforest has been a major tourist attraction in Kansas. Opening in 1974, it was the first and largest rainforest building of its kind. Designed as a Crystogon dome, the building won an award from the Association of Zoo and Aquariums (AZA). The award was for outstanding achievement in the area of exotic animal display, exhibit technique and design innovation.

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(added 25 days ago) / 32 views

Stray dogs kill four chinkaras at zoo

Posted in : Zoo News

(added a month ago!)

Delhi Zoo lost four chinkaras (Indian gazelle) on Tuesday night after stray dogs entered the premises and attacked the animals. The dogs were later captured by the zoo authorities.

“These dogs seem to have entered from the Sunder Nagar area. We have formed a team of officials to conduct a search of vulnerable areas in the zoo from where these dogs could have entered. We plan to block these areas and increase surveillance and security in the premises,” said a zoo official.

“The chinkaras that died were found bitten in the neck, head and shoulders. According to the post-mortem report, all four died of shock. The carcasses were discovered on Wednesday morning. We have lost one male, two females and a calf in the attack. We have had problems with stray dogs in the zoo for some time now and caught over 10 dogs last year,” he added.

According to the zoo officials, the dogs could also have entered from several entry points including the Purana Quila side or through the fencing separating the staff area and the zoo.

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(added a month ago!) / 28 views

Naples Zoo Welcomed 326,435 Guests in 2011

Posted in : Zoo News

(added a month ago!)

Naples, FL - The nonprofit Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens is celebrating the new year with the announcement that the Zoo welcomed 326,435 guests in 2011 – an 8.4 % increase over last year and the highest attendance in its long history. In addition, Naples Zoo now has over 23,000 Zoo Members – a 9% increase over last year.

Naples Zoo Executive Director David Tetzlaff attributes much of the increase to all the exciting changes happening at the Zoo. "Thanks to our board, donors, visitors, members, and other supporters, we’ve opened six feature exhibits in six years.” This year the Zoo premiered the Giraffe Feeding Experience so guests can get face-to-face and hand-feed the world’s tallest animals. And Naples Zoo is now one of only four zoos in the nation where guests can see the wildly popular, fierce African honey badgers. The viral video which rocketed this formerly obscure mammal has reached over thirty millions views. Randall, the creator of that video, even did a custom video about the Zoo’s honey badgers.

"We're so thankful," said Tetzlaff. "An unseasonably warm February had us going into summer behind last year’s attendance. We were not at all confident we would reach another record year. I can’t thank the locals enough for supporting their zoo and recommending a visit to their family and friends."

Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit 43-acre historic tropical garden founded in 1919 that is home to a nationally accredited zoo cooperating in conservation programs both in and outside the wild for endangered species. Naples Zoo offers a full day of family fun and educational programs. For saving their Zoo in 2004, Collier County residents enjoy special benefits.

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Why Diving Marine Mammals Resist Brain Damage From Low Oxygen

Posted in : Marine Mammals

(added a month ago!)

No human can survive longer than a few minutes underwater, and even a well-trained Olympic swimmer needs frequent gulps of air. Our brains need a constant supply of oxygen, particularly during exercise. Contrast that with Weddell seals, animals that dive and hunt under the Antarctic sea ice. They hold their breath for as long as 90 minutes, and remain active and mentally alert the whole time. The seals aren't fazed at all by low levels of oxygen that would cause humans to black out. What's their secret?

Why Diving Marine Mammals Resist Brain Damage From Low Oxygen

Certain animals--including dolphins, whales and sea otters--appear to be protected by elevated levels of oxygen-carrying proteins in their brains, according to a study by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, led by Terrie Williams, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology. The team measured and compared the amounts of these complex oxygen-carrying proteins--called globins--in the cerebral cortex of 16 different mammalian species. The results suggest that some species have evolved the capacity to protect their brains from conditions of low oxygen, also called hypoxia.

"What was remarkable was the level of variability we found," said Williams. "Some animals had three to 10 times more neuroprotecting type globins than others. These wild species may hold many clues about how to turn on protective mechanisms in the mammalian brain."

The discovery could have important implications for understanding stroke and aging in humans, according to Williams. It's not yet clear whether animals of a particular species are born with high amounts of brain globins, or whether their behavior and environment stimulate the production of globins. But in either case, the amounts appear to be malleable. That's promising, she said, because if globin production could be boosted in humans, then brain damage due to disease or aging could potentially be minimized.

"The mammalian brain appears to have a remarkable capacity for increasing neuroprotective globins--we're seeing that in a comparative way in animals," Williams explained. "Could we take advantage of that" Could we retrain the human brain to improve our own survival" We don't know yet, but it's certainly intriguing and worth investigating."

Scientists have long wondered why marine mammals are so tolerant of hypoxia. The conventional wisdom was that they had evolved physiological adaptations that increased the delivery of oxygen to the brain--for example, higher capillary density and blood flow that could be shunted preferentially to the brain. But despite such adaptations, blood oxygen levels still plummet after just a few minutes underwater, according to recent studies by Williams's group and others. How marine mammals could keep their vital organs alive on such low levels of oxygen remained a mystery.

Some unknown factor seemed to be involved, and Williams's attention recently turned to new types of globins that were discovered in 2000. Called neuroglobins and cytoglobins, these oxygen-carrying proteins reside in the brain tissue. That distinguishes them from hemoglobin, a similar iron-containing protein complex that carries oxygen in the blood and circulates throughout the body. Another molecular relative, myoglobin, facilitates oxygen delivery only in muscle tissue.

Scientists are still investigating the physical chemistry of these brain globins. So far, the evidence suggests that cytoglobins could play a role in efficiently moving oxygen out of the blood and into the brain, even when oxygen levels are extremely low, Williams said. The brain's neuroglobins, on the other hand, appear to be able to grab reactive oxygen and prevent the formation of destructive free radicals. Together, she said, these two resident neuroglobins could help keep the brain functioning and well-protected against damage during hypoxia.

To test this hypothesis, Williams brought together a team that included molecular biologists, biochemists, and wildlife veterinarians. The researchers wanted to find out if the amounts and kinds of globins in the brain correlated with the physical activity patterns of various wild mammals. They collected brain tissue from 41 terrestrial mammals and 23 marine mammals representing 15 wild species and one laboratory species. These came from state animal control programs or were "found" animals that had died from roadkill, fisheries bycatch, or stranding.

For each brain sample, the team measured hemoglobin and resident neuroglobins--the neuroglobins and cytoglobins--in the cerebral cortex. In the laboratory of coauthor David Kliger, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry at UCSC, the researchers used a technique called spectrophotometry to identify and quantify the minute quantities of brain globins that were present at the time of the animal's death.
They found a striking difference in globin levels depending on whether the species was a terrestrial, swimming, or diving specialist, according to Williams. Compared to terrestrial mammals, marine species had higher amounts of hemoglobin--and their brain tissues were darker in color due to an abundance of iron.

But the study results weren't entirely as expected: the shallow-swimming and highly active dolphins, sea lions, and sea otters had higher amounts of resident neuroglobins than did the deep-diving whales. And then there was the bobcat. Unlike the dog-related species--foxes and coyotes--three bobcat individuals had surprisingly high amounts of resident brain globins. "Maybe it's not just breath-holding that stimulates these globins, but high levels of activity, such as sprinting," Williams said.

The research hasn't completely solved the mystery, but it's a first step, said Mary Zavanelli, a lecturer in molecular, cell, and developmental biology at UCSC. Zavanelli developed the laboratory techniques for measuring the amounts and kinds of globins in brain tissue by analyzing gene expression. In this way, she confirmed the species differences.

"There won't be a quick answer because this is complicated biology," said Zavanelli. "But the techniques are straightforward and simple, so it's just a matter of focusing on our questions. The big problem is getting enough brain tissue that's in good shape, especially from found wild animals."As this research project continues, it might expand to include an investigation of whether high levels of brain globins are correlated with long lifespans in certain species. Bowhead whales have been known to live as long as 211 years, Williams noted. That makes her wonder how their brains are protected and whether whales ever suffer from strokes.

"These animals may have solved the aging brain problem," she noted. "Neuroglobins might give us some clues as to how."The study appears online December 18th in the Proceedings of The Royal Society B. Williams is lead author of the paper, entitled "Running, swimming and diving modifies neuroprotecting globins in the mammalian brain."

Other UCSC researchers involved in the study included graduate student Lucas Cantin and staff researcher Robert Goldbeck in Kliger's lab; campus veterinarian David Casper; and undergraduate Michael Morledge in Zavanelli's lab. The study's coauthors also include Melissa Miller of the California Department of Fish and Game's Marine Wildlife Veterinary Care and Research Center, and Ann Pabst and William McLellan of the University of North Carolina, Wilmington.

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Ohio zoo: African black rhino dies after illness

Posted in : Zoo News

(added a month ago!)

POWELL, Ohio -- An Ohio zoo says an African black rhinoceros has died after being treated for an often fatal disease that's commonly found in the species.The Columbus Zoo and Aquarium says the 18-year-old rhino was named Kijito and died early Wednesday after a two-day illness. It says the rhino had repeatedly suffered bouts of a condition known as black rhino syndrome but its cause of death is being investigated.The zoo says there were about 65,000 black rhinos in Africa four decades ago but the population declined sharply to around 2,300 in the wild by the 1990s. It says conservation and anti-poaching efforts have helped increase the population to about 4,200 black rhinos today. The rhinos are called black but actually have a grayish-brown color.

Ohio zoo African black rhino dies after illness

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