Showing posts with label Zoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zoo. Show all posts

Friday, December 10, 2010

Baby elephant

The Jakarta Post, The Associated Press, Singapore | Fri, 12/10/2010

Baby elephant: A 2-week old male baby elephant explores next to his 25-year old mother, Nandong, at the Singapore Zoo's Night Safari on Friday in Singapore. This baby is the first baby to be born in the enclosure after 9 years and had a birth weight of 151-kilograms. The Singapore Zoo and Night Safari ensures that its animals in captivity have habitats as close to that of the wild as part of its wildlife conservation efforts. Elephants are listed as endangered on International Union for Conservation of Nature.(AP/Wong Maye-E)

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Rare tiger cubs born in Rotterdam

RNW, 1 September 2010 - 11:46am | By Junito Drias

Giovanni van Bronckhorst (R) and caretaker Stefan Timmermans.
(Photo:
Blijdorp Zoo Rotterdam
)


Two rare tiger cubs have been born in Blijdorp Zoo in Rotterdam. They have been named after a Dutch footballer.

The cubs belong to the Sumatran tiger family, of which there are only around 300 worldwide. The World Wildlife Fund says the species could become extinct within ten years.

The cubs were born on 21 May, at first there were three, but one died shortly after birth. The two tigers are another success story for the breeding programmes for rare species at Dutch zoos.

Godfather

The two cubs have been named Gio and Vanni – the first name of Dutch-Moluccan footballer Giovanni van Bronckhorst. The captain of the Dutch Squad in the World Cup last summer in South Africa has become their godfather.

The zoo says the cubs have a lot in common with the footballer. They are born in the Netherlands but have their roots in Indonesia, a former Dutch colony.


Saturday, August 14, 2010

All animals at Indonesian zoo in danger

The Jakarta Post, Associated Press, Jakarta | Sat, 08/14/2010 2:54 PM | Headlines


Health check: In this file photo veterinarians examine a female Sumatran tiger at a rehabilitation center at a zoo in Jambi in July, 2009. -- AP


The animals at Indonesia's largest zoo - many of them critically endangered - all could be dead within five years unless strong action is taken to change the culture of neglect and corruption that permeates the facility, a zoo official said Saturday.

Hundreds of animals die every year at the Surabaya Zoo, and others suffer from hunger, stress and overcrowding, according to Tonny Sumampouw, the chairman of the country's zoo association who has been tasked with overseeing the facility after the government took it over earlier this year.

Sumampouw said the 94-year-old facility, built under Dutch colonial rule on a 37-acre (15-hectare) plot of land that currently holds 4,200 animals, has tallied 300 deaths a year over the past decade, including dozens of Komodo dragons, jaguars, bisons and Bali starlings.

In recent days alone, a17-year-old African lion and 6-year-old Australian kangaroo died, he said. Also at great risk are 14 rare Sumatran tigers being kept in dirty, cramped cages and 20 Komodo babies in intensive care.

Sumampouw, who is running the zoo as a caretaker until a new director is named, blamed bad management and corruption for the problems.

"My assumption is that all those animals will definitely disappear in the next five years unless there are efforts to reorganize how the zoo is managed," Sumampouw said.

Many employees have been caught stealing meat intended for the animals and sometimes, in the case of rare species, stealing the animals themselves, he said.

He said fixing the problems "will be a big challenge" for the new boss.

A spokesman for the zoo's old management team, Agus Supangkat, said while an average of 25 animals die at the facility every month, most succumb to old age or other natural causes. He said the animals are properly fed and cared for and that hygiene is well-maintained, but acknowledged that some animals die from stress, especially the big cats.

"This zoo is very old and its cages outdated," he said. "They are like prison cells, putting stress especially on the big mammals."


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