Wednesday, July 25, 2007

UNCW Professor Using Penguin Remains to Measure Antarctic Ice Movement


Adelie Penguins in Antarctica


July 19, 2007

Wilmington, N.C.--Climate change is nothing new. For thousands, perhaps millions of years, Antarctica's massive ice sheet - 5.5 million square miles - has advanced and retreated as the earth's atmosphere cooled and warmed. Yet, until recently, there was no precise way to measure the shifting interface between ice and open water.

By estimating the age of Adélie penguin remains using radiocarbon dating, UNCW Professor Steven D. Emslie has determined a history of penguin colony locations that spans the last 45,000 years, the longest record now known for any species of penguin. He has charted the ancient penguin colonies' population shifts with climate change data and sea-ice extent to create a new and reliable method of dating ice movement.

Adélie penguins return to the same nesting site year after year and leave behind a wealth of debris, including bone, tissue, feathers, feces and eggshells, almost perfectly preserved in Antarctica's frigid, dry atmosphere. Emslie, a marine ornithologist in the Department of Biology and Marine Biology, has even found an entirely mummified penguin in the debris that dates to ~1000 years old. These penguin remains are the focus of two recent articles by Emslie, the second of which appeared as the cover story in the July 10 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a leading scientific journal in the U.S.

The first article describes the method Emslie developed to measure the advance and retreat of the Ross Ice Shelf, part of a large glacier that extends into the Ross Sea, by locating and dating the presence of Adélie penguin colonies. Published with Larry Coats and Kathy Licht in the January 2007 edition of Geology, and entitled "A 45,000 year record of Adélie penguins and climate change in the Ross Sea, Antarctica," the article examines the effects of climate change on Adélie penguins over millennia.

Adélie penguins are the smallest and most widely distributed penguins in Antarctica. They nest in ice-free areas along the coast of the open sea, their historical colonies marking the edge of the sea and its advancing and retreating ice sheets with the debris they leave behind. Using the locations of these ancestral colonies, Emslie determined that the Ross Ice Shelf advanced northward in the Ross Sea until about 13,000 years ago, when it began retreating at the end of the last ice age.

The Antarctic ice sheet plays a critical role in global climate control by reflecting sunlight into space and cooling the earth's temperatures and oceans.

The second article, published July 10, is a companion to the one published in Geology, and documents an apparent dietary shift in penguins that occurred 200 years ago in conjunction with the historic depletion of krill-eating seals and whales in the Southern Ocean. Adélie penguins are known to feed primarily on krill in Antarctica today. However, Emslie's research indicates that this krill diet is a recent adaptation to changing marine conditions, in this case brought about by humans. The former diet of penguins, prior to seal and whale depletions, was based on fish, a food resource also now depleted in the Southern Ocean. With krill biomass now undergoing large decreases as well, mainly due to the effects of human-induced climate warming and krill fisheries combined, the penguins are rapidly losing their options for prey.

Emslie's research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Geographic Society and NASA.


Media contacts:

Steven Emslie, professor of biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, 910.616.9494 or emslies@uncw.edu.

Dana Fischetti, manager of news and media relations, University of North Carolina Wilmington, 910.962.7259 or fischettid@uncw.edu.

Mixed Feelings about What's Ahead for Chaffee Zoo



...Zoo Director Lewis Greene used charts and slides to highlight the plans to expand and improve the zoo, and says it's about more than just adding animals.

Greene says, "One of the probably more common misconceptions is that you just simply put all your money into animal exhibits. Quite frankly, if you do that, any zoo would go bankrupt."
To attract more visitors, the zoo plans to add animals gradually, and to build a restaurant, concession areas, and other amenities.


Zoo Board Member Sharon Levy says, "It's just going to be so magnificent. Everyone's going to be very proud of the tax dollars they've put forth for this."

The improvements are being financed by the voter approved tax increase known as Measure Z. The tenth of a cent sales tax will pump $120M into the zoo over the next ten years. The plans presented here are just the first step....

ZOOS ARE ABOUT ANIMALS. Wild animals. All the 'fluff' that seems to be a focus of some zoo improvements seems superfluous to the purpose and definition of the zoo. It has been my experience that people frequenting the zoo have paid handsomely to get in and aren't interested in spending more once inside. The zoos need to provide places for souvenirs, hats, sunscreen, bottled water and waterless hand cleaner. But, to believe that cafes and luncheon areas are going to save the zoo from financial ruin for supporting the animals is an error. I think the planning of the Chafee Zoo has gotten carried away.

If these plans aren't preceded by studies of 'market share' then they are better off putting their 'food vending' areas and events area at the periphery of the zoo and open the opportunity to frequent those areas to the public without having to access the zoo. By doing so that opens more income to the zoo while containing the 'invasion of space occupation' of facilities that have nothing to do with the animals.

When I go to the zoo, I go in anticipation of seeing animals and plenty of them. Different species and an education of each one. I don't anticipate walking miles to go from one animal venue to another. I expect good venues with animals well cared for. I go to the zoo with my own camera and bottled water and snacks to 'afford' the trip. I believe the facilities for the animals are far more important than my creature comforts and I expect them to eat better than I when I come to visit. I think all the renovations that provide for consumerism will eventually consume the zoo as superfulous expenses most zoo goers circumvent for the economy of entertaining and educating children.

Millions of dollar is a lot dollars. Many improvements can be made for the animals to create a happy, healthy environment. It is that and the opporunity to view new members of the zoo either through acquisition or birth that will bring zoo enthusiasts back over and over again. These animals become part of the family for decades when citizens can see them frequently without emptying bank accounts and watch them grow.

Visiting the zoo should not be like a visit to McDonalds where children are rewarded for eating with toys in their meal box. The zoo is an experience, not a tug of war between parents and children. All should be enjoying their experience including the animals.
Zoos

65M zoo bond moves closer to ballot
By Jeremiah Stettler
The Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated: 07/19/2007 06:25:56 PM MDT
Posted: 6:29 PM- Hogle Zoo is about as risky to taxpayers as a stroll through its east-side park, financial analysts say.
That's the conclusion of Salt Lake County's Debt Review Committee, which determined Thursday that the zoo is a safe financial investment if voters decide to feed $65 million into it for remodeling and expansion.
Zoo officials now need the County Council's nod to put its tax request - which will pay for the largest makeover in Hogle history - on the November ballot.
If approved, property taxes would rise about $10 a year on a $250,000 home over the next two decades.
"It is clear to me that it is a viable plan," said Jon Bronson, a committee member and manager of public finance at Zions Bank. "The zoo's past performance is a good indication of future performance."
Hogle Zoo plans to transform its 41-acre park at the mouth of Emigration Canyon, trading concrete enclosures for

http://www.sltrib.com/ci_6415696


Zoo board OKs master plan
Chaffee Zoo proposes expansions, new exhibits.
By Marc Benjamin / The Fresno Bee
07/24/07 04:34:19
Fresno Chaffee Zoo board members unanimously voted Monday to approve the zoo's new master plan, which will incorporate $80 million in improvements by 2014.
The plan will be forwarded Wednesday to the Fresno County Zoo Authority for approval.
Before construction can begin, the zoo must prepare an environmental impact report to look at the effects the project will have on Roeding Park and nearby neighborhoods. The document is expected to be done next year, and its approval is subject to community input.
Although some audience members at a meeting last week said they were concerned about how the zoo's expansion would affect Roeding Park, there was no public opposition to the plan Monday night.
For 2008 and 2009, the zoo will open a temporary attraction similar to this year's Stingray Bay.

http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/93779.html



Baby joins zoo's expanding giraffe herd
A better job awaits
2007 is the year of the giraffe at the Indianapolis Zoo.
Taji, the Indianapolis Zoo's newest reticulated giraffe, was born Sunday.
Steve Schanez / The Star
The zoo's second reticulated giraffe calf of the year was born Sunday.
Keepers have named the male Taji, (TAH'-GEE) an African name that means "crown," the zoo said in a news release. He is about 6 feet 2 inches and weighs in at 158 pounds.
Taji was born to mother Takasa (TA-KAH'-SA). The sire is the zoo's adult male giraffe, Eddie.
Later this week, the new calf should be visible to the public in the small giraffe transition yard, which is next to the tracks used for the zoo train ride. If all introductions go as planned, mother and baby should be on exhibit with the rest of the giraffe herd by the end of July.
The new calf joins, Elon, who was born on April 23 to Elena, who is also Takasa's mother.

http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070718/LOCAL/707180505



Newborn giraffe at Indianapolis Zoo
INDIANAPOLIS, July 19 (UPI) -- The most recent giraffe born at the
Indianapolis Zoo made his public debut this week at the age of 4 days.
The newborn was named
Taji, or Crown, by his keepers after his birth Sunday, The Indianapolis Star reported. He was the second giraffe born at the zoo this year.
Taji was a super-sized newborn, weighing 158 pounds and measuring 6 feet, 2 inches, from hooves to head. He is expected to be 17 feet tall when he is full-grown.
Reporters, photographers and camera crews were allowed a glimpse of Taji Wednesday. He may be visible to the public this weekend in the giraffe transition area.
Takasa, Taji's mother, has given birth twice before. Her first calf died within a few days but the second, named Jakobi, is 2 years old and living in the Blank Park Zoo in
Des Moines, Iowa.

http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/Quirks/2007/07/19/newborn_giraffe_at_indianapolis_zoo/7796/



Baby giraffe for Auckland Zoo
Jul 25, 2007
Keepers at Auckland Zoo arrived at work on Wednesday morning to find a new addition - a baby giraffe.
The calf is the first female giraffe born at the zoo in 15 years and is the third off-spring of 21-year-old mum Kay and nine-year-old dad Zabulu.
Auckland Zoo Pridelands team leader, Michael Batty, says it was a wonderful surprise to get to work and find the healthy baby.
"We knew the birth was imminent and had been monitoring Kay carefully," Batty says. "As with all her other deliveries, she took it all in her stride. She is a great mum, bonding really well with her calf, and doing all the right things."

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/411365/1254235



Woodland Park Zoo's endangered Malayan tapir gives birth
07/18/2007
SEATTLE - A watermelon on four legs was born just before the Fourth of July at Woodland Park. The 26-pound, female, Malayan tapir calf marks the fourth birth for her 12-year-old parents. The unnamed calf will remain off exhibit, in the tapir barn, for the time being, while staff closely monitor her and her mother. Thanks to a "tapir cam," zoo-goers may view the baby tapir real time on a closed-circuit monitor at the tapir shelter in the Trail of Vines exhibit. Images will soon be available on the zoo's Web site
www.zoo.org.
"The birth of this tapir is significant because they are endangered and her genetic line is underrepresented in the North American population," said zoo general curator Dr. Nancy Hawkes. She noted that there weren't any other Malayan tapir births in North American zoos in the last year. Woodland Park's birth brings the total number of Malayan tapirs to 54 in North America; an estimated 900 to 3,000 remain in the wild.

http://www.pacificpublishingcompany.com/site/tab3.cfm?newsid=18601720&BRD=855&PAG=461&dept_id=515262&rfi=6



Woodland Park Zoo's endangered Malayan tapir gives birth
07/18/2007
SEATTLE - A watermelon on four legs was born just before the Fourth of July at Woodland Park. The 26-pound, female, Malayan tapir calf marks the fourth birth for her 12-year-old parents. The unnamed calf will remain off exhibit, in the tapir barn, for the time being, while staff closely monitor her and her mother. Thanks to a "tapir cam," zoo-goers may view the baby tapir real time on a closed-circuit monitor at the tapir shelter in the Trail of Vines exhibit. Images will soon be available on the zoo's Web site
www.zoo.org.

http://www.pacificpublishingcompany.com/site/tab3.cfm?newsid=18601720&BRD=855&PAG=461&dept_id=515262&rfi=6



Haven of hidden treasures needs a well-kept zoo
Shareen Han
BRUNEI-MUARA
19-Jul-07
A PROPER zoo should be set up in Brunei as an alternative tourist attraction, but relevant authorities must consider the aspect of long-term maintenance to avoid mismanagement of funds and facilities, said animal lovers.
The Brunei Times spoke to some Bruneians, who said that a zoo is a feasible idea to lure tourists and would bring educational benefits to students, in terms of enriching their learning experiences by observing animals.
"I went to the zoo in Temburong but found out that most of the animals were dead," Hjh Fatimah Ali said.
The mother of three said that the establishment of a zoo in the Brunei-Muara district would be useful for her children, because they are curious to know how animals interact, rather than depending on television channels alone.
"In general, children like animals and if (we) were to visit a country, the zoo would always be included in my itinerary," she said.
She said that proper planning as well as animal experts such as veterinarians are needed before a zoo is opened to the public.

http://www.bruneitimes.com.bn/details.php?shape_ID=36975



Zoo Will Move Ahead With Fundraising
Funds Go Toward Expansion Plan
POSTED: 4:38 pm CDT July 18, 2007
UPDATED: 4:55 pm CDT July 18, 2007
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Blank Park Zoo plans to move forward with its fundraising plans for expansion, its foundation board announced Wednesday.
The Blank Park Zoo needs to raise $25 million in order to expand into the lake area of the Fort Des Moines Park.
Under the plan, the zoo will take over about half of the Fort Des Moines Park, including the lake area.
In exchange, the zoo would spend $5 million to buy a wooded area just south of Southridge Mall and make it a new park. It would also pay to connect it across Southeast Fifth Street with a tunnel to the remaining area of the Fort Des Moines Park.
On July 10, a referendum called Project Destiny that was aimed at providing tax relief and funds for local attractions such as the zoo was overwhelmingly struck down by voters.
"The zoo's popularity is at an all-time high with what appears to be the biggest summer attendance in its history,” said Jim Hourigan, the zoo foundation’s chairman in a statement. "Our board has unanimously endorsed the pledge to move forward with earlier plans to grow with or without Project Destiny."

http://www.kcci.com/news/13708004/detail.html



THIS IS THE SECOND TIME !!! WHAT GOES ON WITH OPEN DOORWAYS?

Gates not closed before tiger attack at San Antonio Zoo
Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO - A zookeeper attacked by a tiger at the San Antonio Zoo had forgotten to close and lock a series of gates behind him before releasing the large cat into the exhibit yard, a zoo official said Wednesday.
The 244-pound tiger named Berani knocked down Jeff Tierney, bit him in the head several times and dragged him into a service hallway Saturday, said Steve McCusker, the zoo's executive director.
When the Sumatran tiger released Tierney, he was able to grab pepper spray to corral the 5-year-old tiger.
Tierney, 28, was hospitalized in stable condition.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/4979884.html


Tiger feared on the loose in France
New 1:30PM Friday July 20, 2007
BORDEAUX, France - Police in southwestern France are searching for a big cat, possibly a young tiger, that has been spotted prowling in a village near the city of Bordeaux, the village's mayor said.
Officials from the National Hunting Office have also laid traps for the animal after a woman and her daughter saw it repeatedly in their garden.
"At first they didn't believe it, but the third time the animal was 10 metres away from them," Pierre Soubabere, mayor of Saint-Louis-de-Montferrand, told Reuters.
Another resident has seen the cat roaming the countryside, and its tracks suggest it is a young tiger, though it could be a jaguar or a leopard.
Soubabere said no such animal had been reported missing in the area, not even by circuses that spend part of the year in a neighbouring town.
- REUTERS

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452779


Thiruvananthapuram zoo reopens post-FMD outbreak
From our ANI Correspondent
Thiruvananthapuram, July 24: A zoo here reopened on Tuesday after 16 days of quarantine, following an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) among animals.
The city zoo was closed on July 8 for the visitors after it lost its entire stock of Indian Gaur (Bos Gaurus or a look alike of Indian bison) and 12 blackbucks in a week to the killer disease.
The zoo confirmed that FMD virus of strain 'O' had caused the deaths.
Although officials claim that everything is normal, the zoo is taking precautions against the highly contagious disease by restricting visitors inside the zoo.

http://www.dailyindia.com/show/159929.php/Thiruvananthapuram-zoo-reopens-post-FMD-outbreak



Zoo's siamang gets playmate
Third Asian ape also on the way
By Justin Hesser
The Courier-Journal
Zoli, a baby siamang at the Louisville Zoo who was orphaned after his parents unexpectedly died in April, is getting to know a new playmate and has another on the way.
Training supervisor Jane Anne Franklin said it's important to give Zoli a companion so he can grow up understanding what it's like to be a siamang, a tree-dwelling ape native to Southeast Asia.

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070724/NEWS01/707240447/1008/NEWS01



D.M. zoo finances move out of the red
Special events have helped the facility attract more visitors, officials say.
By MELISSA WALKER
July 24, 2007
Officials at Blank Park Zoo in Des Moines say they have seen finances move out of the red behind a multimillion-dollar land gift, donations and special events designed to boost attendance.
Director Terry Rich said the zoo "could not be in a better position financially" since the nonprofit foundation took over management from the city in 2003. Revenue for the 16-month period that ended Oct. 31, 2006, was $7.4 million, according to financial statements made public Monday. Expenses totaled $6.15 million.
The foundation's assets totaled $11.8 million, which includes an endowment, investments, and land worth $2 million, a gift from developer William Knapp.

http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070724/NEWS05/707240387/1007



Boo at the Zoo Tickets on Sale Starting August 6
Halloween may seem a ways off, but those friendly little ghosts and goblins will be back before you know it. So Cleveland Metroparks Zoo will start selling discounted tickets for its hugely popular Boo at the Zoo event on Monday, August 6.
Tickets will be $6 per person through September 30. (Price is $7 per person starting October 1.) Kids under 2 get into Boo at the Zoo for free, and Cleveland Zoo members get a $1 discount for anyone covered by their membership.
Boo at the Zoo tickets will be available at the Zoo Box Office and at clemetzoo.com.
This year's Boo at the Zoo, promising eight nights of not-too-scary fun, is scheduled to run from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. October 18 to 21 and 25 to 28. The family-friendly Halloween celebration is the biggest in Cleveland, with most nights selling out in 2006. This year's Boo will offer nightly Creepy Crawly Critter Shows, Get Close Animal Encounters, children's crafts, costumed characters, clowns, magic shows and, of course, plenty of candy.
Celebrating its 125th anniversary in 2007, Cleveland Metroparks Zoo is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, with hours extended to 7 p.m. on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays from Memorial Day to Labor Day. Admission is $10 per person, $5 for kids ages 2 to 11 and free for children under 2 and Zoo members. Parking is free. Located at 3900 Wildlife Way, the Zoo is easily accessible from Interstates 71, 77, 90 and 480. To learn more, visit clemetzoo.com or call (216) 661-6500.

http://www.clemetzoo.com/pressroom/index.asp?action=details&pressrelease_id=1256



Zoo's panda Mei Sheng heads for China in October
By Jeanette Steele
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
11:34 a.m. July 24, 2007
SAN DIEGO – Mei Sheng, the San Diego Zoo's second American-born panda, will be headed to China in October.
Born in 2003 in San Diego, the male panda's name means “Born in the USA” or “Beautiful Life,” according to the zoo.
“We have watched Mei Sheng grow up at the San Diego Zoo, gaining important knowledge about giant panda biology, but it is time for him to take the next step into adulthood and join a breeding population of pandas,' said Carmi Penny, curator of mammals and co-head of the zoo's Giant Panda Conservation Unit.
“Mei Sheng is a valuable addition to the giant panda breeding program because he is the first offspring of a male giant panda not yet genetically represented in the Chinese panda population,” Penny said. Mei Sheng's mother, Bai Yun, gave birth to her first cub, Hua Mei, in 1999 at the San Diego Zoo, creating a national sensation as the first surviving panda born in the United States. Hua Mei went to China in 2004 and since has given birth to three sets of twins.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20070724-1134-bn24panda.html



Cincinnati Zoo Expecting a World's First
July 23, 2007 12:13 PM EDT
(CINCINNATI) -- The Cincinnati Zoo is expecting after the worlds first successful artificial insemination procedure in an Indian Rhino. The zoo says that the achievement is important for the captive population of Indian rhinos and the scientific achievement is represents.
Fifteen-year-old Nikki is one of only 60 Indian Rhinos in captivity in North America. There are approximately 2,000 remaining in the wild. They once ranged over large parts of Africa, the Middle East and southern Asia. Of the five rhino species alive today, the Indian rhino is the second largest, weighing in at about 6,000 pounds. Its current habitat is the floodplain grasslands of northern India and southern Nepal.
Nikki is currently at month 11 of a 16 month gestation period.

http://www.fox19.com/Global/story.asp?S=6826261&nav=0zHF



Officials approve $80 million to give Fresno zoo a facelift
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
(07-24) 10:58 PDT Fresno, Calif. (AP) --
Chaffee Zoo officials have approved $80 million to upgrade Fresno's zoo by 2014.
The master plan the board approved Monday — which includes new grasslands, a sea lion exhibit and habitat space for lions and hippos — was designed by the same planning firm that remodeled the Denver Zoo.
New highlights will include a climate-controlled animal building, a predators exhibit that could feature lions and hyenas and a new restaurant overlooking the grasslands project.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2007/07/24/state/n105848D07.DTL&type=politics



Dairy Farmers sponsor 'Moo at the Zoo' Aug. 18
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
PORTLAND - How many glasses of milk can a cow produce in one day? Find out the answer at Moo at the Zoo. Come to the Oregon Zoo's Trillium Creek Family Farm from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 18, to learn all about life on a farm.
Sponsored by the Dairy Farmers of Oregon, Moo at the Zoo is an entertaining and educational event for the whole family. Visitors discover a host of fun facts through interactive exhibits, puppet shows and displays.
Oregon dairy farmers are on hand to describe the life of their cows and the daily workings of a dairy farm. Visitors may test their dairy knowledge, win prizes during random drawings and have their milk-mustache pictures taken with the Oregon Dairy Princess. Guests can also view pygora goats and Shetland sheep in the zoo's hands-on area.

http://www.oregonlive.com/news/argus/index.ssf?/base/news/118529597228800.xml&coll=6



Zoo not ready for Maggie's send-off
OPTIONS: Destinations narrowing; vets to decide if the elephant can travel.
By LESLIE ANNE JONES
ljones@adn.com
Published: July 24, 2007
Last Modified: July 24, 2007 at 12:24 PM
Alaska Zoo officials say they continue to narrow down possible new homes for Maggie. They won't name the contenders, but one sanctuary run by the PAWS foundation and known to be under consideration has offered to foot the shipping bill for the zoo's only elephant.

http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/anchorage/story/9158738p-9075316c.html



Fourth Highest Attendance in 33 Year History at Riverbanks Zoo
(Columbia) - Over 900,000 visitors walked through the gates of Riverbanks Zoo and Garden this fiscal year, making 2006-2007 the fourth highest attended year in the zoo's history.
In addition, 30,000 individuals attended wedding receptions, corporate events and after-hours business functions at the Zoo and Garden.
"Riverbanks attributes the record breaking attendance this year to a high quality guest experience along with rising gas prices, good weather and an aggressive marketing and public relations approach," said Satch Krantz, executive director for Riverbanks.

http://www.wltx.com/news/story.aspx?storyid=51826



Zoo gift shop needs volunteers
Volunteers are needed to work the “zoovenier” shop at the Charles Paddock Zoo in Atascadero.
Volunteers should have some cashiering experience, have an extra few hours per week and like working with children, zoo officials said.
The zoo is located at Atascadero Lake Park, and is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a week. The gift shop opens a half-hour later and closes a half-hour earlier.
Proceeds from the non-profit zoo, which has been open since 1963, go to the Zoological Society of San Luis Obispo County.
For more information on the position, call gift shop manager Kirby Price at 461-7602.

http://www.sanluisobispo.com/breakingnews/story/100088.html



Hepatitis E
Posted at 11:21 am July 24, 2007 by Bethan Morgan
The Central Africa Program in Cameroon recently welcomed Jennifer Glavis, a Master’s student in Veterinary Medicine at the University of California, Davis. Jennifer will be with us until the end of August and is investigating the incidence of Hepatitis E in the primates of the Ebo forest. (Jennifer is pictured here with Ekwoge Abwe as they head off into the Ebo forest.)
Hepatitis E is a relatively little-known virus and was not recognized as a distinct human disease until 1980. Although the disease appears to be present globally, it may be endemic in many parts of northern and subSaharan Africa, including Cameroon. The primary “host” for Hepatitis E (the species with whom the virus has evolved to rely on for its survival) is currently considered to be humans, although antibodies to the virus (showing us that the individual has been exposed to the virus) have been found in a variety of animals, including rodents and pigs.

http://www.sandiegozoo.org/wordpress/default/hepatitis-e/



Bindi becomes zookeeper
What do you give a child for her ninth birthday who already has the run of a zoo?
If you're Bindi Irwin's mum, you make her a keeper at the family's world-famous Australia Zoo.
Bindi celebrated her ninth birthday today in rock star-style at the wildlife park on Queensland's Sunshine Coast.
Bindi's favourite singers and "best friends in the whole world" The Veronicas helped celebrate the big event, rocking out at the Crocoseum with thousands of pint-sized fans.
Terri Irwin said she had given her daughter a hand-held walkie talkie for her birthday, making the youngster an official Australia Zoo staff member.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/people/bindi-the-zookeeper/2007/07/25/1185043153584.html



Cleveland zoo facing loss of elephants
Posted : Tue, 24 Jul 2007 20:50:53 GMT
Author : General News Editor
CLEVELAND, July 24 Three female elephants at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo will soon be living elsewhere due to a planned renovation of the pachyderm facility.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer said Tuesday elephants Martika, Moshi and Jo must be moved by early 2008 at the latest.
The relocation of the massive beasts could potentially be a permanent move.

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/86304.html



RFID Helped Monkey Zoo Ease Crowding
To help determine where, when and why pedestrian traffic jams occurred, the Netherlands' Apenheul Primate Park gave tagged "monkey bags" to a percentage of its visitors.
By Mary Catherine O'Connor
July 24, 2007—The
Apenheul Primate Park offers visitors a unique, intimate experience.Located in the Netherlands, the 32-acre park houses 35 species of monkeys, apes and lemurs, many of which roam the grounds freely and often come into close contact with visitors.
This new zoo concept proved extremely successful following the park's opening in 1971, but by the time it reached its 30th birthday, the zoo had become a little too popular. "We were having 'traffic jams' in the park," says Bert Smit, the park's head of marketing and education, explaining that throughout the day, clusters of visitors often formed at various areas inside the park, making it difficult for people to pass.

http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/3503/1/1/



Red panda joins feline pals at zoo
LINCOLN PARK Cute and furry, he's in upgraded exhibit with pumas, leopards
July 25, 2007
BY CYNDI LOZA Staff Reporter/cloza@suntimes.com
To the Lincoln Park Zoo, the raccoon-like red panda has the heart of a lion.
The fury creature joined its feline friends Tuesday in a $1.75 million upgraded exhibit at the Kovler Lion House.
"I think that they're really cute," 7-year-old Hadley McCarthy said, admiring the panda and his new roommates: two puma cubs, a trio of long-haired Pallas' cats, a baronial snow leopard and an Afghan leopard.

http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/482467,CST-NWS-zoo25.article



Stefani and son visit the zoo
Jul 25, 2007
There was more than one surprise arrival at Auckland Zoo on Wednesday.
Gwen Stefani was spotted at the zoo with her son Kingston just hours after the birth of a female giraffe.
The pop star is in Auckland for a concert on Thursday at Vector Arena.
Stefani is married to British rocker Gavin Rossdale.
The couple met in 1995 when Stefani's band No Doubt opened for Rossdale's former band, Bush. The couple married in September 2002 in ceremonies in London and Los Angeles and their son was born last May.

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/411319/1254320



Plastics, styrofoam ban at Zoo
Kota Kinabalu: Plastics and styrofoam food packets will be banned from the Sabah Zoo in future, State Culture, Tourism and Environment Minister, Datuk Masidi Manjun (pic), told Daily Express.
"I have instructed Sabah Zoo to take immediate steps to ban plastics and styrofoam food containers after receiving complaints from an Australian tourist who saw a tiger chewing plastics thrown into its arena by some unknown visitors," Masid said.
" I think we should tell the people that plastics can kill animals and that plastics are going to endanger the tigers and all other animals as well," said Masidi.
He received the complaint through the SMS from an Australian tourist who noted that the Sabah Zoo was, otherwise, on par with Australian zoo standards.

http://www.dailyexpress.com.my/news.cfm?NewsID=51582



Children learn about caring for animals through Zoo Crew program
By HUEY FREEMAN - H&R Staff Writer
DECATUR - After food hidden in a plastic container was placed into Larry the Lemur's cage, the young students gathered outside the cage were asked why zookeepers would want to make it tough on the animals.
"Because in the wild he'd have to dig for his food," said Evan Slunder, 11, a sixth-grader at Mount Zion Intermediate School.
In the middle of a two-week Zoo Crew session, all the fifth- and sixth-graders seem deeply engaged in the various activities, which include feeding animals, cleaning their living spaces and learning about their daily lives.
"It is an education program with a curriculum," said Sarah Reining, the zoo's education coordinator. "They are learning about habitats and ecosystems."

http://www.herald-review.com/articles/2007/07/25/news/local_news/1025193.txt



Simple Mistake Caused Tiger Attack At Zoo
Last Update: Jul 20, 2007 10:59 AM
Posted By:
Vickie Jean Summers
The San Antonio Zoo held a press conference Wednesday to discuss how a tiger was able to maul one of its zookeepers.
The zookeeper, 27-year-old keeper Jeff Tierney, was attacked Saturday by Berani, a 250-pound Sumatran tiger. Tierney managed to free himself from the Tiger, but was seriously injured.
"He didn't close those doors," said Zoo Director Steve McCusker.
It was a gate Tierney forgot to close. By the time he realized what he'd done, it was too late.

http://www.woai.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=1015a2f5-1e97-40aa-af2c-1049b1ad7080



Zoo loses Sammy the giraffe
Sean Dugas
sdugas@pnj.com
Less than two weeks after the death of Niles, a baby hippopotamus, The Zoo Northwest Florida near Gulf Breeze has lost another major attraction.
Sammy, The Zoo's 10-year-old giraffe, was found dead Tuesday about 8 a.m. in the exhibit where he had lived for eight years.
Zoo officials said Sammy appeared healthy when he was last seen alive about 9:30 p.m. Monday.
The Zoo's veterinarian, Dr. Gus Mueller, performed a necropsy on the giraffe Tuesday and found evidence of trauma to the upper neck. Mueller said the neck was not broken.

http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070719/NEWS01/707190324/1006



Flora focus of new zoo exhibit
By DINAH VOYLES PULVER
Environment Writer
SANFORD -- Steve DeCresie barely noticed a difference when he switched from taking care of birds at the Central Florida Zoo to taking care of plants.
"They still need food, water and tender loving care," says DeCresie, the zoo's horticulturist.
Zoo visitors, however, have seen a big difference in the four years since he became the zoo's first horticulturist.
Lush gardens frame animal enclosures. Hundreds of colorful bromeliads flank the entrance gates. Edible plants that keepers can snip for tasty animal treats, like hibiscus flowers, roses and green bamboo shoots, are popping up everywhere.

http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/News/Headlines/frtHEAD03071907.htm



Awesome Avilon Zoo in Montalban
I went to Avilon Zoo in Montalban. It’s awesome! I felt so at home with my animal relatives, I didn’t want to go back to the city!
I can compare
Avilon Zoo to Sydney Aquarium and Featherdale Wildlife Park in Australia, compare it to Underwater World in Singapore. I can say Avilon Zoo is a world-class zoo and the best in the Philippines! (if you know of a better one in the Philippines, do share!)
Avilon is a 7.5 hectare zoo that hosts hundreds of exotic animals in a clean environment that kids and adults will enjoy.

http://www.pinoytravelblog.com/travel-destinations/622/awesome-avilon-zoo-in-montalban



Zoo unveils vision for expansion, improvement
By Marc Benjamin / The Fresno Bee
07/19/07 04:24:10
All Job Categories – Accounting Admin & Clerical Automotive1 Banking1 Biotech1 Broadcast - Journalism1 Business Development Construction Consultant Customer Service Design Distribution - Shipping Education Engineering Entry Level Executive Facilities Finance General Business General Labor Government Health Care Hotel - Hospitality Human Resources Information Technology Insurance Inventory Legal Legal Admin Management Manufacturing Marketing Nurse Other Pharmaceutical Professional Services Purchasing - Procurement QA - Quality Control Research Restaurant - Food Service Retail - Grocery Sales Science Skilled Labor - Trades Strategy - Planning Supply Chain Telecommunications Training Transportation Warehouse
Fresno Chaffee Zoo's expansion went under the microscope Wednesday night at Fresno High School.
The zoo's master plan, which is part of a larger plan for Roeding Park and Storyland & Playland, was viewed by about 50 residents.
Lewis Greene, the zoo's director, outlined the plan for the audience, pointing out new exhibits to be undertaken during the next six years and beyond.

http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/89650.html



Lion Cubs Form New Pride
Posted at 7:58 am July 19, 2007 by Marcia Redding
It’s high time for a “pride progress report” from
Lion Camp. There have been some important changes in the last few months, beginning with Oshana and Izu’s cubs, Abena and Bakari. The girls celebrated their first birthday on May 17 and are becoming very independent young ladies. They have grown quite a bit, too: as of July 7, Abena weighed 88.4 kilograms (194.5 pounds), and Bakari weighed in at 74.8 kilograms (164.5 pounds).

http://www.sandiegozoo.org/wordpress/default/lion-cubs-form-new-pride/




German Zoo Embroiled in Scandal Over Illegal Meat
It all started when an eagle-eyed employee noticed declining animal stocks at Erfurt Zoo. It ended with a scandal, sackings and a criminal investigation into an illegal meat operation.
Some zoos aren't as lucky as the one in Berlin. Most don't have superstar polar bear cubs and the potential to exploit cuteness through marketing deals and promotions which would make even David Beckham seem like a media-shy hermit with no business sense.
There are no tie-ins, no plush toys flying off the shelves, no hordes of expectant children and insatiable paparazzi stampeding through the turnstiles.
For those zoos lacking star-quality, life is bleak. The future is under-funded and the staff and animals suffer accordingly.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,2697999,00.html



Baby Jag Born At Brevard Zoo (video)
Thursday, July 19, 2007 11:12:48 AM
The Brevard County Zoo has welcomed a new bundle of joy -- a bouncing baby jaguar.
The jaguar was born to firs- time mother Masaya, and is also the first jaguar cub to be born at the Brevard Zoo.
The zoo said the cub is doing well, but they don't know the sex of the baby yet.
Experts said it is best to let the cub bond with the mother for the first two weeks before making human contact.
The cub could make its first debut to the public sometime in September.

http://www.cfnews13.com/News/Local/2007/7/19/baby_jag_born_at_brevard_zoo.html

continued...

Temple to the Elephants - View through subaquatic glass


Zoo creates a special temple with a pool for their elephants
By Kevin Turner
THIS big dipper is making a splash at a new jumbo-sized pool for elephants.
Animal lovers are flocking to Leipzig Zoo to watch the massive beasts cool off.
The German zoo's elephant enclosure is designed to look more like a temple than a cage and includes a 135-square-metre swimming pool for the creatures.
Yesterday, Trinh the elephant happily swam in the 370,000 litre pool to avoid the 30C (86F) heat.
The zoo claims the elephant enclosure is the most modern in the world. Visitors are able to watch through super-strength, glass panels as the animals swim under water.
The enclosure, named Ganesha Mandir by the zoo, also includes a huge shower area.
The big beasts were clearly enjoying being able to go for a splash.
And they never need to worry about packing their trunks.
Zoos - continued

Another top zoo official resigns
By Katherine Crowell
Staff Writer
SALISBURY — Salisbury Zoo Education Curator Carrie Samis is latest in a chain of resignations at the local tourist attraction.
Zoo Director Jim Rapp’s resignation at the end of May was followed by Public Works Director John Jacobs’ resignation last month. The zoo’s veterinary technician Steve Sarro has also given his notice.
Mayor Barrie Parsons Tilghman said the Zoo Commission will play a vital role during this interim period while the city finds replacements for the top zoo positions.
“We’ll probably be working more closely for awhile,” said Tilghman of the city and the zoo. “I think this does present an interesting opportunity. There are no reorganization plans at this point. It is a challenge when we have to lose one talented employee let alone several.”

http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070719/NEWS03/70719022/1002/NEWS01



Top Salisbury Zoo Instructor Resigns
(Photo: WBOC)
07/19/20072:30 PM ET
SALISBURY, Md. (AP)- The top instructor at the Salisbury Zoo will resign, joining the former director and other top officials in leaving the zoo in recent weeks.
Education Curator Carrie Samis said she is leaving to become education coordinator for the Maryland Coastal Bays Program in Worcester County.
Former director Jim Rapp resigned in May, and zoo public works director John Jacobs resigned last month. The zoo's veterinary technician, Steve Sarro, has also quit.
Mayor Barrie Parsons Tilghman said the Salisbury Zoo Commission will work to replace Rapp first, then the rest of the staff.
"There are no reorganization plans at this point. It is a challenge when we have to lose one talented employee, let alone several," Tilghman said.

http://www.wboc.com/Global/story.asp?S=6813276&nav=Losm




Griffin shines through rainy zoo gig
By Charles R. Cross
Special to The Seattle Times
Wednesday night, Woodland Park Zoo
Patty Griffin's Woodland Park Zoo show had the misfortune to occur on the rainiest Seattle day in more than a month. Griffin, like many summer Northwest visitors, assumed this was typical weather. "Do y'all even notice it anymore?" she teased the crowd.
A little drizzle certainly wasn't going to stop the sold-out ZooTunes audience from enjoying what has become Seattle's most popular outdoor concert series, or from appreciating Griffin, who was playing her third zoo show in five years. In many ways, the cloudy skies were a perfect backdrop to Griffin's noirish ballads, which favor minor chords and melancholy themes. She even dressed the part: Wearing a black patent-leather raincoat, and sporting a mop of frizzled hair, she looked remarkably like the actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus might appear caught on a rainy New York City street.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/entertainment/2003796543_patty20.html



Jackson Zoo to discount tickets for Disneymania event
The Clarion-Ledger
The Jackson Zoo will discount tickets for its Sunday Disneymania Concert for Conservation by $2 to attract the largest possible crowd. But the discounted tickets can be purchased for $10 Saturday and Sunday only at the zoo admissions office.
The Disneymania ticket will allow admission to both the zoo and the concert on Sunday.

http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070719/NEWS/70719037



Corporation team visits zoo (This is the entire article there are a lot of pop-ups at this site)
Friday July 20 2007 11:45 IST
T’PURAM: The corporation health committee members visited the city zoo on Thursday to review the situation following the FMD outbreak. Corporation health committee chairman G R Anil led the team comprising the corporation veterinary officer, health officers and ward councillors.
The team that analysed the healthcare and sanitation activities inside the zoo expressed concern over the waste disposal mechanism in the zoo. “The issue of garbage disposal inside the zoo needs to be addressed immediately. We will be cooperating with zoo officials to find out better methods of waste disposal,” G R Anil said.
He added that the issue of space constraint in some enclosures, including that of the black bucks, was also raised during the visit.
The zoo officials said that the Zoo and Museum Directorate had moved papers seeking a government recommendation to appoint contractors to remove waste from the zoo.
A review meeting of the technical committee of veterinarians and officials will be held on Friday. The Animal Husbandry Department director will convene the meeting that will decide on the future course of action to be taken. Decision on a possible date to reopen the zoo is also expected to be taken at the meeting.



Visit the Zoo, at their peril
Monday July 23 2007 11:41 IST
T'PURAM: A fortnight after it closed its doors to visitors, following a Foot-and-Mouth Disease (FMD) outbreak, the city zoo will be reopened on Tuesday.
The technical committee headed by Animal Husbandry Department director R Vijayakumar gave the nod for reopening the zoo after re-evaluating the health and sanitary situation in the zoo on Sunday. However, visitor movement along the infected area will remain restricted.

http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItems.asp?ID=IEO20070723012018&Page=O&Title=Thiruvananthapuram&Topic=0



Zoo lets you do its dirty work
by Brian Brus
The Journal Record July 20, 2007
OKLAHOMA CITY – Oklahoma City Zoo Executive Director Bert Castro believes offering the public the opportunity to perform a little sweaty work is an excellent way for people to appreciate what it takes to keep their zoo operating.

http://www.journalrecord.com/article.cfm?recid=80236



KHAO KEAW OPEN ZOO SPECIAL PROMOTION (questionable pop-ups)
Open Zoo Khao Keaw, Sriracha, is giving a special promotion to all tourists and visitors. For any guests who came to visit Day Time open zoo will be able to buy Night Safari open zoo ticket for only 70 Baht instead of 100 Baht. The ticket for children is only 30 Baht, starting from now on.
The Night Safari Open Zoo has been popular among tourists for more than 10 years. The Zoo has maintained the beauty of the sceneries and animals around the Zoo, including the Zoo lecturer who will give the full knowledge about the animals along the 7 kilometers of routing. All the visitors have always been happy and excited with the scene of animals in the night time atmosphere. There are hundreds of animal to be watched such as; Brow-antlered dear, Elephants herd, Giraffes, Zebras, Gaurs, Barking deer, Camels, Bears and many of Tiger species.

http://www.pattayadailynews.com/shownews.php?IDNEWS=0000003472



One of world's oldest chimps dies in Australia
The Associated Press
Published: July 19, 2007
SYDNEY, Australia: One of the world's oldest chimps, Fifi, has died in Australia, zoo officials said Friday.
Fifi was the matriarch of the 18 chimpanzees at Sydney's Taronga Zoo, and celebrated her 60th birthday in May with sugar-free cupcakes and coconuts among four generations of her family.
But Fifi, who suffered arthritis and had taken to sipping from a cup of chamomile tea each morning in her later years, stayed in bed Thursday morning, raising suspicions among the keepers that she was unwell, the zoo said in a statement.
Keepers provided her with fresh bedding and her favorite foods, while other chimps in the group visited her throughout the day, the zoo said. She died peacefully in the afternoon.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/07/20/asia/AS-GEN-Australia-Old-Chimp-Dies.php



Prodigal bird returns to Dallas Zoo
08:23 PM CDT on Friday, July 20, 2007
By KATIE MENZER / The Dallas Morning News
kmenzer@dallasnews.com
A South American hyacinth macaw that spent its day on the lam after escaping its enclosure at the Dallas Zoo Friday morning was captured later in the day thanks to some gentle coaxing and a little corn.
A South American hyacinth macaw
“Yoohoo!” said an excited Chuck Siegel, the zoo’s deputy director for animal management. “I’m very happy. All the zoo staff, we’re all really happy.”
Officials are still unsure how the bird, named Archie, escaped its enclosure in the zoo’s Bird Valley exhibit, but the male macaw spent the day in the tree tops on zoo grounds. His best friend — another macaw that did not escape — called to him from the cage throughout the day. The two birds have been friends for more than 20 years.
“We want him back but we’re not overly concerned because he’s been with his buddy so long, he’s not going anywhere,” Mr. Siegel said earlier in the day before the bird was caught.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/stories/072107dnmetbird.93d0af57.html



New Hamadryas Baboons at Riverbanks Zoo
(Columbia) - Three new hamadryas baboons have joined the existing baboon troop at Riverbanks Zoo and Garden.
Officials say the baboons were introduced to their new exhibit on July 17, and are busy exploring their new habitat located near the front of the zoo.
"Riverbanks has been anticipating the arrival of these baboons for over a year," said John Davis, curator of mammals. "We expect with the acquisition of the new baboons that the exhibit will become very active. Their youth makes them curious, and they have extensive social experience with other baboons."

http://www.wltx.com/FYI/story.aspx?storyid=51713




Zoo Pictures Contest Winners Announced
POSTED: 10:24 am EDT July 20, 2007
UPDATED: 12:40 pm EDT July 23, 2007
ATLANTA -- The wsbtv.com Zoo Atlanta photo contest brought out the shutterbug in almost 200 viewers.
Entrants sent pictures of Pandas, gorillas, elephants, meerkats and warthogs.
It was tough to pick the winners, but we narrowed it down to four top photos. The winners each received a gift pack of tickets from Zoo Atlanta.
Jan Hoffman of Athens was the winner in the Panda division. She sent a sweet picture of a Panda peering around a tree.
Ron Freeman of Marietta won the gorilla division with a great picture of a baby gorilla playing with a leaf.

http://www.wsbtv.com/news/13721111/detail.html



Asian geckoes hatched at Belgian zoo
www.chinaview.cn
2007-07-21 08:03:32
BRUSSELS, July 20 (Xinhua) -- Two tiny wonder geckoes hatched out at the Antwerp Zoo in Belgium on Friday, the first time that a European zoo has succeeded in breeding this genus of reptiles.
Wonder geckoes, or Teratoscincus, are extremely difficult to breed and they have never before hatched outside the Arab Emirates, Belgian public broadcaster VRT reported.
Last year, Antwerp Zoo was given five wonder geckoes by the Emirates Sharjah Breeding Center. The two males and three females were specially selected to take part in a relocation and breeding program.
The tiny animals are on show every day at the reptile nursery of Antwerp zoo.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-07/21/content_6408720.htm



Baby Penguins at Tautphaus Park Zoo
July 22, 2007 08:47 PM EDT
Six record-breakers put on their formal attire today, to show off at the Tautphaus Park Zoo.
The six new penguin chicks double the record of baby African penguins raised at the zoo set last year.
Four of the six penguins took their first swim in deep water without an animal keeper today. The two younger chicks will join the rest in about a week for their first unattended dip in the pool.
The adorable penguins are a part of the African Penguin Species Survival Plan, and will be sent to other zoos or institutions.

http://www.kpvi.com/Global/story.asp?S=6820221



ROYAL OAK
Stance on Wanda and Winky brought trouble for Kagan
July 21, 2007
BY TINA LAM
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Wanda and Winky didn't just strike a nerve with their adoring public.
The debate in 2004 over where the Detroit Zoo's aging elephants belonged got zoo Director Ron Kagan -- who said elephants shouldn't be kept in cold-weather zoos -- into trouble with a national zoo organization and with a colleague from another zoo who hit him during a professional meeting, according to documents obtained by the Free Press.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070721/NEWS03/707210334/1118/RSS



Zoo boosting flamingo flock
By Nathan Altadonna
Staff Writer
Forget about over-easy, scrambled or sunny side up.
Mary McFarland likes her eggs to talk.
"This is my favorite stage — the talking egg,” the birdkeeper said as she checked on the
Oklahoma City Zoo's future flamingo flock.
A faint peeping came from an egg about the size of a baseball, signaling it was time to head to the "hatcher.”
McFarland placed the egg in a warm, humid compartment. Within 24 hours after it "pips,” the tiny flamingo should be out of its shell.
"They come out all wet and sticky like a baby,”
McFarland said.
The recent hatch at the zoo was the third since zookeepers brought in 20 flamingo eggs from Florida earlier this month. They hope to use the eggs to increase the size and productivity of the zoo's
Caribbean flamingo flock, said Darcy Henthorn, curator of birds.
"They do a lot of courtship,”
Henthorn said. "If you can get the numbers up — which we are going to do — we're going to have more productivity.”
Henthorn and McFarland traveled to Miami, Fla., to get the eggs as part of a project with the national Association of Zoos and Aquariums. The eggs are harvested from a semi-wild flock at Hialeah Race Track. Keepers from Miami Metrozoo collect about half the eggs laid by the flock and give them to member zoos. The Oklahoma City Zoo had been on a waiting list since 2003.

http://newsok.com/article/3087985



Seven Mexico zoo kangaroos die in four weeks
Zoo officials believe the animals were distressed by thunderstorms
Updated: 12:39 p.m. ET July 21, 2007
MEXICO CITY - Violent thunderstorms have driven seven distressed kangaroos to death at a Mexican zoo, say veterinarians who are now pampering the remaining three mothers and their babies.
The zoo in the western city of Guadalajara brought the kangaroos from Texas in April and all went smoothly until last month when the rainy season began.
Seven kangaroos died over a period of four weeks, most soon after harsh rain storms.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19887543/



Zoo volunteer enjoys summer in Salina
April Middleton
Laticia White's family has friends in Salina, but she'd never been here before this summer.
And if she wouldn't have been selected to be one of the 28 Zoo Teen volunteers chosen by Rolling Hill Wildlife Refuge, she wouldn't be here now.
In fact, she might never have seen Salina.
"I came just for this," Laticia, 16, Fountain City, Wis., said. "I heard about the summer program here and really wanted to do it."
Working at a zoo was important to Laticia, who will be a junior when school resumes next month. She wants to study zoology or marine biology.
But why not find a zoo closer to home?
"There isn't one real close to where I live," Laticia said. "And the zoos that are there aren't as big and aren't as nice as this."

http://www.saljournal.com/Story/zovolunteer072107



Rare gibbon survives at Perth Zoo
By Graeme Powell
Posted Wed Jul 18, 2007 4:33pm AEST
Updated Wed Jul 18, 2007 4:52pm AEST
Li-Lian was abandoned by its mother and has survived thanks to around-the-clock care by veterinary staff at Perth Zoo. (AAP Image: Tony McDonoough)
A rare baby gibbon born at Perth Zoo seven weeks ago and abandoned by its mother has survived thanks to around-the-clock care by veterinary staff.
The tiny White-cheeked Gibbon, weighing 500 grams at birth, has been named Li-Lian, which is Chinese for clever and free.
Li-Lian is being bottle fed baby milk formula eight times a day and now weights 800 grams.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/07/18/1981895.htm



Zoo elephant changes nationwide
The Associated Press
Article Launched: 07/21/2007 10:55:20 AM PDT
A look at some changes zoos around the country have made to their elephant exhibits:
Zoos that have eliminated elephant exhibits since 2000:
Gladys Porter Zoo, Brownsville, Texas
Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago
Detroit Zoo, Detroit
San Francisco Zoo, San Francisco
Chehaw Wild Animal Park, Albany, Ga.
Henry Vilas Zoo, Madison, Wis.
Zoos eliminating elephant exhibits:
Lion County Safari, Loxahatchee, Fla., and Philadelphia Zoo - Looking for a new home for its two remaining elephants.

http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_6432934?nclick_check=1



Zoo set to expand
By Christian Martell/The Brownsville Herald
July 21, 2007 - 11:19PM
The question of expanding Gladys Porter Zoo was more of a formality than a discussion item at the last City Commissioner meeting.
Mayor Pat Ahumada claimed “we’ll do it” at the July 3 meeting, before even hearing future plans for the land — the building of a new educational facility.
Zoo Director Patrick Burchfield and Assistant City Manager Carlos Ayala showed the area to be an abandoned Southern Pacific railroad track that ran in back of the zoo.
“It’s not a huge amount, but it would be valuable to them,” said City Manager Charlie Cabler.
The zoo asked for authorization to use the land and for the city to close off the E. 6th Street and S. Old Alice ends of the track.

http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/zoo_78557___article.html/city_land.html



Visitors get view of the wild life
Zoo's weekend activities spark animal instincts
Crowds watch chimpanzees at the Maryland Zoo, which is showcasing activities this weekend that encourage the zoo's animals to exercise their natural instincts.
By Melissa Harris sun reporter
July 22, 2007
When a keeper at The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore draped a dead chick on a fallen tree inside the leopard den yesterday, 8-year-old Jahrea Reynolds shuddered and turned away. "Gross," he told his mother.
But a few minutes later - after the keepers planted all of the bait, left the cage and released the leopards Amari and Hobbes - Jahrea stood on the railing to get the best view of the hunt.
"That's the first time I've ever seen a leopard act like that," the boy said. "But I have seen my cat at home act like that."

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.zoo22jul22,0,5325661.story



For the city's sake, it's time to clean up the zoo of government
John DiMambro
Nevada Appeal Publisher,
jdimambro@nevadaappeal.com
July 22, 2007
Animal Farm revisited. All that's missing is the big barn and the farm animals. George Orwell's setting for his fairytale of political discourse and hierarchical revolt disguising personal gain has found a contemporary home in Carson City Hall - our own version of Manor Farm as depicted by Orwell. In his novel, though, animals acted like people.
I am not picking sides as to who in City Hall is right or wrong in the recent battle of opinion versus fact between Mayor Marv Teixeira and City Manager Linda Ritter. Not yet anyway. When the time is right. And don't kid yourself. There are other players. The game of politics is not fun unless it becomes a party of many. That's why politics are divided by "parties." The party to which I make reference started off as an office party. But the party needed more players, so it campaigned for more participants. Then, the game leaders still weren't satisfied, so even more players were sought - this time outside of the office. In order to be a player, you have to take a side. And to take a side means you must be a believer in the cause. Right? Wrong! Some of the additional players are just screening their rear ends for fear of getting them burned while playing their game in the sun too long.

http://www.nevadaappeal.com/article/20070722/OPINION/107220103/-1/rss04



Junior Zoo Keepers get hands-on experience
By
BRITTONY LUND
The Lufkin Daily News
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Out of hundreds of young animal lovers, only 20 make the cut to become Junior Zoo Keepers at the Ellen Trout Zoo each summer.
For the past 10 years, Charlotte Henley, administrator with the zoo, has headed up the Junior Zoo Keepers program.

http://www.lufkindailynews.com/news/content/news/stories/2006/07/22/jr_zoo_keepers.html

continued...

Are the charges against Michael Vick actually a victory for Animal Welfare? Not exactly.


Michael Vick and Pit Bull puppy

While the crimes that occurred on the properties of Michael Vick are considerable the media has lost sight of 'the bigger picture' and why the 'dog operation' of this Sports Superstar was literally a 'side line' to a drug crime.

My initial reaction was not so much surprise but realization. I consider these little understood 'hobby farms' a potential passion of an inner city kid now Sports' Superstar. Not really the case. Evidently, the dogs (primarily pitbulls) were more or less neglected and abused. This is a matter of amusement rather than an 'groomed' international dog fighting ring. I believe the 'focus' on the crimes of Michael Vick allows a larger question to be circumvented to the elation of animal lovers without their consent.

Michael Vick's woes highlight sordid world of dog fighting (click here)

...found 54 pit bulls on the property and uncovered the graves of seven other pit bulls that investigators said had been killed after their fighting instincts had been tested. The conclusion: The animals' cruel masters found their feroci-ty wanting and dispatched them. The documents say some animals were starved to make them more ferocious. Most fights were to the death, but some dogs simply gave up. Those, prosecutors said, were then killed; some were drowned, some electrocuted, others shot and still others strangled....

That is not a dog breeding operation so much as a dog access operation to what might be a drug oriented network by a Vick family member. The lack of focus on the drug charges of Mr. Vick's cousin allows Mr. Vick 'an out' as a victim to others bad behavior. As noted on this 'timeline' the drug crime disappears as soon as a charge is leveled again Michael Vick.

Michael Vick timeline (click here)

April 24: Michael Vick’s cousin Davon Boddie is arrested in Hampton, Va., on drug charges. According to court papers, he gives his address as 1915 Moonlight Road in rural Surry, Va., and police obtain a warrant to search his home for other drugs and paraphernalia.

April 25: Police serve the warrant in Surry and find numerous dogs and what looks like a dog-training complex of dark-painted buildings in the woods just behind the house, which is owned by Vick. They call animal-control officers, who count 66 dogs (55 pit bulls) and see what they say is evidence that dogfights had taken place there. Police obtain another warrant and seize the dogs and various items.

May 8: Vick loses his sponsorship deal with AirTran Airways.

May 23: Investigators obtain a third warrant, this one to search the property for buried dog carcasses. But the local prosecutor decides not to execute it, saying he is worried the dogfighting warrants are tainted because the animal-control officers might have been overzealous in their searches.

June 4: Reports surface that Vick’s house was broken into in early to mid-May.

June 7: More than a dozen representatives of the U.S. attorney’s office in Richmond, U.S. Department of Agriculture and Virginia State Police converge on the home, executing a sealed federal search warrant....

My concern is this. With such focus on Michael Vick and the abuse of animals, is there a larger involvement in a drug network or not by this man? Or. Is the drug involvement simply a cousin's addiction. I believe the enthusiasm regarding animal welfare causes a chance that there is more here than a dog fighting operation. How extensive was the 'drug issue' because evidently it was huge enough to cause police authorities to invest a lot of time and effort to uncover it?
Zoos (continued)

Prices Going Up
By Christa Smith
If you plan to go to the Ellen Trout Zoo next week, you better bring some extra money. Starting Tuesday prices will go up two dollars for adults and a dollar for children. Group rates will be going up as well. The zoo has been adding on many new animals and a new learning center is in the works. It's seems prices on everything have been going up lately. Local residents say they don't mind the higher price if the zoo is expanding and making things better. They just hope they can keep going as much as they normally do.

http://www.ktre.com/Global/story.asp?S=6822150&nav=2FH5



Zoo animals to visit Jordan Creek event
July 22, 2007
Jordan Creek Town Center will host its weekly free Family Festival from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesday in its lake district.
The event will feature representatives and several small animals from the Blank Park Zoo in the amphitheater at 101 Jordan Creek Parkway, West Des Moines.
There will also be inflatable rides, clowns, face painting, balloons, games and crafts.

http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070722/NEWS/70720023/1001/NEWS



Elephant celebrates 1st birthday at zoo
Party, crafts and other fun mark Dickerson Park's first ZooFest.
Dirk VanderHart
News-Leader
It was a birthday party anyone would wish for.
There were magicians, a clown, balloon animals and real animals. The parking lot was filled with the cars of well-wishers by noon.

http://www.news-leader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070722/NEWS01/707220403/1007



Tigers destined for Tasmanian zoo
Posted Mon Jul 23, 2007 5:45am AEST
A southern Tasmanian wildlife park is defending plans to house two Bengal tigers at its Richmond property.
Operators of Zoo Doo say their enclosures will meet stringent regulations.
However, the organisation Against Animal Cruelty Tasmania yesterday staged a protest at the park entrance.
They says keeping tigers in enclosures is unnatural.
But the Zoo owner, Trevor Cuttriss says every capital city zoo in Australia has Bengal tigers.
THe Department of Primary Industry says the plans exceed national standards and a permit will be issued if the enclosures are completed according to these plans.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/07/23/1985077.htm



Cincinnati Zoo achieves artificial insemination of Indian rhino
The Associated Press
Published: July 22, 2007
CINCINNATI: The world's first Indian rhino baby to be conceived by artificial insemination is due in December at the Cincinnati Zoo.
"I think it's a remarkable achievement, an incredibly important success," said Dr. Evan Blumer, a board member of the International Rhino Foundation, on Sunday. "The next step is where it becomes really important. The first is to be successful, the second is to be reliable and repeatable."
Nikki, the mother, is 15 and has a life expectancy well into her 40s, so if all goes well, she could produce several more offspring.
In the 20th century, the Indian rhino — native to northern India and southern Nepal — was nearly wiped out. About 200 remained before tough preservation laws began to be stringently enforced, experts say.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/07/23/america/NA-GEN-US-Rhino-Breeding.php



Tigers destined for Tasmanian zoo
July 23, 2007 05:45:00
A southern Tasmanian wildlife park is defending plans to house two Bengal tigers at its Richmond property.
Operators of Zoo Doo say their enclosures will meet stringent regulations.
However, the organisation Against Animal Cruelty Tasmania yesterday staged a protest at the park entrance.
They says keeping tigers in enclosures is unnatural.
But the Zoo owner, Trevor Cuttriss says every capital city zoo in Australia has Bengal tigers.
THe Department of Primary Industry says the plans exceed national standards and a permit will be issued if the enclosures are completed according to these plans.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/07/23/1985077.htm?site=idx-tas



Zoo forced to split up otters in new exhibit
Male and female just not getting along
GALEN EAGLE
Local News - Sunday, July 22, 2007 Updated @ 8:52:32 PM
It seems an arranged marriage between two of the zoo’s most recent additions is not exactly marital bliss.
A domestic dispute has forced the Riverview Park and Zoo to split up the new river otters, whose display officially opened Thursday.
Hundreds of eager parents and children flocked to see the pair this weekend, only to find one on display.
To put it simply, zookeeper Bruce Reed said the male and female just aren’t getting along.

http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/webapp/sitepages/content.asp?contentid=622486&catname=Local%20News&classif=News%20Live



Zoo chimps ‘cool’ without cigarettes
Sunday, July 22 2007
The Emperor Valley Zoo would not have to invest in nicotine patches to curb the chimpanzees’ cravings for cigarettes because the monkeys do not seem to mind the no-smoking rule.
The two chimps “Sudi” — meaning “good girl” and “Nujo” — meaning “clown” have been at the zoo for almost 30 years. They are well known for taking their occasional “smoke” since they developed the habit from their original owners.
Officials at the zoo revealed since the decision was made to ban smoking at the zoo the chimps have not shown any withdrawal symptoms.

http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,61040.html



Boggie at the zoo
Review by Blast reporter Tim Joyce
The staff of Bristol Zoo Gardens are a hardy bunch. Whilst almost everyone else in the South West furiously ran for cover as the clouds gathered and the rain fell, they were busy staging their annual festival, Boogie for Brizzle.
With big-name Bristol natives such as The Scrub, Kid Carpet and Glitzy Baghags all on parade, as well a whole host of other activities to enjoy, the 2007 event, held in aid of the Mad for Madagascar campaign, looked certain to get Bristol back in its festival stride.
Even the dismal weather in Bristol on Friday couldn't dampen the party atmosphere, and after a slow start, the event started to warm up, thanks to something just a touch on the wild side.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/bristol/content/articles/2007/07/23/boogiebrizzle_feature.shtml



Valley Zoo targets young environmentalists
By ISHA THOMPSON, SPECIAL TO SUN MEDIA
When it comes to endangered wildlife and the threats posed by environmental pollutants, the Valley Zoo is using a hands-on approach to educate some of its youngest visitors.
"It is very important to have hands-on demonstrations and crafts that the kids can actively participate in so you can hold their attention," said Kim Chung, an environmental expert hired to help with events at the zoo.
Yesterday the facility, which houses more than 50 animals, hosted an event called Creatures in Crisis: On the Edge of Extinction.
Designed for children under 12, it focused on how the most vulnerable creatures are harmed by environmental damage.

http://www.edmontonsun.com/News/Edmonton/2007/07/23/4361058-sun.html



Test time approaches for Mill Mountain Zoo
The zoo was given a year to pass its accreditation review. The zoo staff and volunteers have been fundraising and tackling a hefty to-do list.
By
Pete Dybdahl
Last summer, two inspectors went up Mill Mountain and surveyed the zoo.
There was a lone prairie dog in the prairie dog pit. The barnyard exhibit was past its prime. The zoo's budget didn't look strong enough to make the improvements.
These were some of the reasons why Mill Mountain Zoo didn't pass its requisite five-year review to maintain accreditation from the Association of Zoos and Aquariums.

http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke/wb/125285



Midsummer's Night for the Zoo
The Pocatello Zoo continues to raise money as they host their biggest fundraiser of the year tonight.
This is the fourth annual "Midsummer's Night for the Zoo".
The theme this year is "75 Years- Honoring our Wildlife Heritage."
The evening provided hot appetizers and delicious desserts by the Bistro, fine wine tasting, and music by David Wise and dancing to US Bluez.
Our very own Matt Davenport was the Emcee and took some time to enjoy that music.
All of the proceeds will go back into the zoo and towards their major renovations coming soon- including a new bear exhibit for Charlie.
The name for the new Zoo Mascot was announced also.
He is now known as HuckleBeary.

http://www.kpvi.com/Global/story.asp?S=6822389



Zoos kill healthy tigers for the skin trade
Daniel Foggo
ZOOS are killing healthy tigers and other endangered species and selling their skins to be stuffed and mounted as trophies for private collectors, an investigation has found.
The skins are sold by the zoos to taxidermists who prepare them for clients in defiance of attempts by the government to stifle the trade in tiger products.
Last week undercover reporters from The Sunday Times were offered the skins from two zoo tigers, which were both only a few years old when they died, for £6,000. “There are too many of them and if they are not put down they will die of old age, get incinerated and thrown away,” Andre Brandwood, a Hertford-shire taxidermist, told them.
He said zoos had recognised there was a market and were placing a “shelf life” on animals to cash in by having them stuffed before they got old, suffered illness and then cost them money. “What’s happening is that various zoos . . . [have] realised there’s a market, hence . . . there is a fixed price on tigers.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2116179.ece



Berlin Zoo under fire from animal rights group over Knut
Berlin (dpa) - The Berlin Zoo came under fire Monday from an animal rights group for allowing a keeper to raise polar bear cub Knut after he was rejected by his mother.
"The socialization project has failed, Knut has become too much like a human," said Wolfgang Apel, president of the German Society for the Protection of Animals.
Speaking at the opening of an animal protection centre in the German capital, Apel said polar bears did not belong in zoos and that breeding cubs like Knut should not set an example to others.
Knut, now seven months old and weighing more than 50 kilograms, attracted worldwide attention when his keeper started raising him by bottle after his mother rejected him as a newborn on December 5.
Zoo director Bernhard Blaszkiewitz dismissed Apel's criticism, saying that raising polar bears in zoos "was one of the most important methods of breeding such an endangered species."

http://www.eux.tv/article.aspx?articleId=11761



At the zoo, every picture tells a story
Published by
ImagingInsider.com July 23rd, 2007 in NewsStream
There’s a common misconception that wildlife photographers must spend hours or even days sitting in the bush waiting for just the right shot. It doesn’t have to be like that, says Michael Wilhelm, a professional wildlife photographer. Especially if you’re working from inside the zoo. “Wildlife photography is a lot like photojournalism,” says Wilhelm, who teaches workshops using the Oregon Zoo in Portland as a classroom.

http://www.imaginginsider.com/?p=43674



Friday is open night at the zoo
By Mark Prigg, Evening Standard 23.07.07
London Zoo is to stay open until 10pm in a bid to lure more visitors.
The attraction will have its first late-night opening on 27 July and bosses say the event could be repeated regularly if it is a success.
The zoo will be serving drinks all evening and has hired a troupe of circus performers to entertain visitors, as well as opening all its normal exhibits, including the new Gorilla Kingdom enclosure.
The move follows recent late-night openings by a host of London museums.
Tate Modern, the V&A and the British Museum all now regularly stay open late to make them more accessible to Londoners.
James Bailey, marketing manager of the Zoological Society of London, said: "As the sun sets over the city, Zoo Nights will give visitors the opportunity to spend an exciting and unique evening at the zoo. We plan to make Zoo Nights an annual event and a key date in any Londoner's social calendar."

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/events/article-23405433-details/Friday+is+open+night+at+the+zoo/article.do



Zoo gets another baby siamang
Business First of Louisville - 1:26 PM EDT Monday, July 23, 2007
The Louisville Zoo has acquired another baby male siamang, a small primate that originates from Southeast Asia.
The zoo acquired 8-week-old Zain from Albuquerque Biological Park in Albuquerque, N.M., to be a companion to 4-month-old Zoli, who was orphaned in April.

http://louisville.bizjournals.com/louisville/stories/2007/07/23/daily8.html?jst=b_ln_hl



Peacock eggs shattered by Hillcrest Zoo patrons
By Sharna Johnson: Freedom Newspapers
July 23 2007 9:32 PM
Mother peacocks herd a community brood of young Monday at the Hillcrest Zoo. Zoo officials said a select few of the birds are allowed to hatch young in an effort to control the bird’s population numbers at the park.
Teen visitors disturbed a peacock nest and destroyed eggs Friday afternoon, Hillcrest Zoo officials said.
Police were called to the park but were unable to locate the youth, zoo director Herschel Arnold said.
The incident was reported by a zoo visitor who said she had seen two teens wreck the nest, according to Arnold. He said the witness reported the teens had an adult with them.
Zookeepers found remnants of a shattered egg but couldn’t find the nest or the remainder of the eggs.

http://www.cnjonline.com/news/zoo_22369___article.html/arnold_eggs.html



Food, Live Jazz, Exclusive Tours of the John Ball Zoo – It’s Saturday Night Alive!
Join WGVU and The John Ball Zoo for Saturday Night Alive, featuring a taste of Grand Rapids restaurants, live jazz music, zoo tours, performances by GR Improv and more!
Date Released: 07/24/2007
When: Saturday, August 18, 7 – 10 p.m.
Where: John Ball Zoo in downtown Grand Rapids
What: Taste the best from Grand Rapids dining, with samples from:
Bono’s Pit Bar-B-Q Celebration Banquets and Catering Charley's Crab Marie Catrib’s McFadden's The Press Box Deli and Catering Company Tap's Sports Bar W.g. Grinders Zoup! Fresh Soup Company
More restaurants are being added, so visit wgvu.org for a complete list.
As you enjoy the food, exclusive zoo tours, rides on the zip line and selections from the cash bar by International Beverage, stop to listen in on two of Grand Rapids' finest jazz acts, The Carlos Melendez Trio with Randy Marsh and Dr. John Hair and New Connections. Between bands, the GR Improv will perform throughout the zoo.
Tickets are $25 per person and are available by calling 616-336-3309. Proceeds benefit WGVU and The John Ball Zoo. Attendees must be 21 years of age or older. For more information, visit wgvu.org.
WGVU's continued mission is to provide educational, informative, and entertaining programs and events to the West Michigan community as a service of Grand Valley State University.

http://www.fastpitchnetworking.com/pressrelease.cfm?PRID=13996



Look Ma, No Leash
The Cleveland Metroparks Zoo turned to Total Systems Integration of Galion, Ohio. TSI's solution was to install a Polycom videoconferencing platform on a portable cart, one rugged enough to roll around the grounds. To get the signal out to the world, TSI installed Cisco Aironet 1500 outdoor WiFi access gateways around the zoo's 168 acres.
"We put a Cisco wireless LAN controller and 20 WiFi access points in particular locations throughout the zoo," explained Bob Lynch, TSI's director of sales and marketing. "Because the Cisco system uses mesh technology, all of the access points provide the same degree of speed and reliability connected back to the zoo's LAN, and from there to the outside world." (Note: In a mesh wireless network, any access point can communicate with the wired LAN, thus providing users with the most robust and redundant signals paths.)

http://governmentvideo.com/articles/publish/article_1196.shtml



Trouble in the Panhandle
July 19th, 2007 by admin
Last week, The Zoo in Gulf Breeze announced that it may have to close if it doesn’t raise $3 million by the end of the year. The zoo is struggling to recover from hurricane damage and poor attendance.
Today’s news probably won’t help their fundraising efforts.
“Sammy,” a 10-year-old giraffe, was found dead at the zoo after suffering a neck injury. Zoo officials guess that the animal was startled and ran into something. The incident is sad, but not surprising. The giraffe enclosure is next to busy Highway 98; a noisy truck could easily have startled the animal.
It’s been a horrible few months for The Zoo. Earlier this month, a young hippo died after being injured by one of her parents. Last December, four kangaroos at the zoo died from a bacterial infection. In November, visitors were rushed out of the zoo after two cougars escaped from their enclosure. The day before that incident, a zoo employee was clawed by a leopard.

http://www.blog.animalrightsflorida.org/?p=269



Appeals court allows horse slaughter plant to stay open
Associated Press - July 19, 2007 5:44 PM ET
CHICAGO (AP) - A federal appellate court is allowing a horse slaughter plant in northern Illinois to reopen.
The Cavel International plant in DeKalb is the last plant in the United States where horses are slaughtered for human consumption.
A state law signed in May bans horse slaughtering and forced the plant to shut down.
But a Chicago-based appeals court yesterday ruled that the plant can stay open while the company challenges the state law in federal court.

http://www.wqad.com/Global/story.asp?S=6814524&nav=1sW7



Giraffe could make a move
By Brent Killackey
Journal Times
RACINE — Twiga, the female Masai giraffe at the Racine Zoo, may be making a move in the coming months, according to zoo officials.
Racine Zoo officials currently are talking with three other zoos — all members of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums — about moving Twiga into a breeding situation at another zoo and bringing in a “bachelor’s herd” of two young male giraffes to Racine, according to Eric Hileman, director of conservation, education and animal welfare.
Twiga came to the Racine Zoo in June 2002 from the San Diego Zoo.

http://www.journaltimes.com/nucleus/index.php?itemid=14382



Cohanzick Zoo seeks national accreditation
By JOHN MARTINS Staff Writer, (856) 794-5114
Published: Saturday, July 21, 2007
BRIDGETON — The Cohanzick Zoo in Bridgeton City Park, the state’s oldest menagerie, is embarking on a years-long journey toward getting accredited by a national organization.
Mayor Jim Begley said Friday that officials hope to gain the certification, which is administered by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, before 2010.
“We have a series of projects for the next few years,” Begley said. “The city is committed to getting accreditation for the zoo.”
According to zoo curator Kelly Shaw, the work that needs to be done to earn the accreditation ranges from normal maintenance and upkeep to beefing up the zoo’s master plan.
“There’s a lot to do,” Shaw said. “It’ll be a lot of work and it’ll take the concerted effort of the administration, the (Cohanzick Zoological) Society and the community as a whole.”

http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/local/cumberland/story/7492235p-7387876c.html



Elephants benefit from fight between zoos and activists
ANNIE FLANZRAICH
Associated Press Writer
SEATTLE — On a sunny July day, Chai the elephant browses on grass and branches in the one-acre elephant exhibit at Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo. Children lean over the metal barriers, trying to reach the enormous charismatic creature.
In the nearby elephant barn, Watoto stretches her trunk to a net filled with vegetation and munches on her lunch before wandering back to the outdoor exhibit. Teenagers watch her, mimicking the movements of her trunk.

http://www.theolympian.com/northwest/story/168927.html



Mayor Martin Chavez travels to China to work on getting a panda
By
Erik Siemers (Contact)
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Mayor Martin Chavez, fresh off a nine-day visit to China, sees a land ripe with opportunity for forging business relationships.
But China's roaring economy might make it difficult to accomplish another of Chavez's stated goals - securing a giant panda for the Rio Grande Zoo.
Four U.S. zoos have negotiated deals with China to host pairs of pandas for an average price of about $1 million a year.
But with China's robust economy, the lure of the dollar isn't what it used to be, said David Towne, president of the Giant Panda Conservation Foundation and the United States' chief negotiator with China over pandas.

http://www.abqtrib.com/news/2007/jul/21/mayor-martin-chavez-travels-china-work-getting-pan/



‘For a price I can get you any animal’
Daniel Foggo and Hala Jaber
JEAN-PIERRE GERARD walked between the ranks of elk antlers stacked neatly against the walls of his taxidermy warehouse, past the folded skin of an elephant and the remains of a crocodile before stopping next to the mounted body of a gigantic roaring lion.
In front of him, spread out upon the floor under the baleful gaze of a stuffed vulture on a nearby pedestal, was an array of beautiful animal skins.
Three tigers, a cheetah and two lynx had recently died to provide the colourful spectacle that Gerard now proudly unveiled to his British guests.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2116207.ece



Zoos kill healthy tigers for the skin trade
Daniel Foggo
ZOOS are killing healthy tigers and other endangered species and selling their skins to be stuffed and mounted as trophies for private collectors, an investigation has found.
The skins are sold by the zoos to taxidermists who prepare them for clients in defiance of attempts by the government to stifle the trade in tiger products.
Last week undercover reporters from The Sunday Times were offered the skins from two zoo tigers, which were both only a few years old when they died, for £6,000. “There are too many of them and if they are not put down they will die of old age, get incinerated and thrown away,” Andre Brandwood, a Hertford-shire taxidermist, told them.
He said zoos had recognised there was a market and were placing a “shelf life” on animals to cash in by having them stuffed before they got old, suffered illness and then cost them money. “What’s happening is that various zoos . . . [have] realised there’s a market, hence . . . there is a fixed price on tigers.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2116179.ece



Chinese border police seize 270 smuggled crocodiles
23 Jul 2007, 1836 hrs IST
BEIJING: Police in southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region have seized 270 crocodiles smuggled from Vietnam for apparently making fashion accessories, the state media reported on Monday.
The seizure was the largest this year in Guangxi, where 25 illegally captured crocodiles were discovered in the first six months.
Border police noticed the iron-hulled boat trying to land on the Chinese side of the Beilun River, which marks the border with Vietnam, on Saturday evening.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/China/Chinese_border_police_seize_270_smuggled_crocodiles/articleshow/2227689.cms



Learning to listen to elephants
By Diane Carman
Denver Post Staff Columnist
Article Last Updated: 07/24/2007 09:01:42 AM MDT
Even at 10 acres and $52 million, the Asian Tropics exhibit at the Denver Zoo won't satisfy all the critics.
It won't be Namibia, Tanzania or Sumatra, after all. The elephants won't be free to travel miles in herds that communicate through distinctive rumbles across the landscape. They won't be able to teach their young how to distinguish friendly herds from enemies or how to find medicinal plants to cure their illnesses or how to protect their babies from hungry lions.
It won't be perfect.
Dale Leeds is tired of trying to persuade those who will settle for nothing less than a pristine wild habitat that is increasingly endangered.

http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_6446997



Protecting Endangered Species: San Diego Zoo
Posted by jen_chan as Eco-Friendly, Features, Education, United States, Nature, Travelogger
Did you know that in the United States alone, there are 496 species of endangered animals listed? And that worldwide, there are about a thousand more animals whose lives are in danger? These are not just numbers, mind you. These are issues that affect every living being on this planet, whether we are conscious of it or not. Perhaps one of the main causes for the endangerment of these animals is habitat destruction. Over the decades, man has been a little less considerate when it comes to expanding and construction. Sure, there are new roads being paved and new infrastructures being built. Still, at what cost?
In recent years, a lot of things have been done to help the environment recover from past mistakes. Laws have been enacted to protect various wildlife. Organizations have been set up to ensure that these laws are being put into good use.
Also, there are now places where endangered species can stay in the meantime. The San Diego Zoo, for example, has its Zoological Society of San Diego’s center for Conservation and Research for Endangered Species (CRES). This is the largest zoo-based multidisciplinary research team in the world.

http://www.travelogger.net/travelogger/protecting-endangered-species-san-diego-zoo/



Four lions leave Zoo for Africa
Four lions, generally seen as tormented by the poor living conditions in the Buhusi and Bacau zoo gardens, will be released in the wild, in an African reservation.
The move was planned and pursued by the “Romanian Association for Animal Protection”, cooperating with the “Born Free” foundation in UK. The plans begun 14 months ago, negotiations taking place up to this moment.
On July 13, the lions will be released from their claustrophobic cages and will be transported via a charter plane to Frankfurt and then Johannesburg.
Within the African sanctuary, the felines will benefit from 2 hectares of natural habitat, permanent medical care and appropriate food.

http://english.hotnews.ro/Four-lions-leave-Zoo-for-Africa-articol_45565.htm



Cottonwood Christian Fellowship children take on zoo goo
Alamogordo Daily News
By Karl Anderson, Staff Writer
Article Launched: 07/25/2007 12:00:00 AM MDT
A group of children from Cottonwood Christian Fellowship in Alamogordo have been volunteering one day each month for the past three years at the Alameda Park Zoo.
Known as the "zoo crew," the children are members of the church's children's ministry, which is directed by Pastor Ben King.
The children devote one Saturday each month to helping at the zoo.
Their duties include cleaning up the zoo grounds, cleaning out cages and preparing and delivering of food to the animals.

http://www.alamogordonews.com/features/ci_6456372



Zoo closing early today for Jammin' at the Zoo
07/25/2007
The St. Louis Zoo will close early at 5 p.m. today. The early closing is to prepare for an evening program, Jammin' at the Zoo.
The Zoo will close at 5 p.m. Aug. 22 for another session of Jammin' at the Zoo.
The Infinite Scholars and The 4sho4kids Foundation will have its College/Scholarship Fair, open to everyone, from 3 to 7 p.m. Thursday at Jennings High School, 8850 Cozens Avenue.
Students should register in advance or get more information at
www.infinitescholar.com. Students should bring ACT or SAT scores, letters of recommendation, resumes and copies of their transcripts.

http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/2310447DF54797108625732300130092?OpenDocument



Indianapolis Zoo, Children's Museum Receive Gifts
InsideINdianaBusiness.com Report
The Children's Museum of Indianapolis and the Indianapolis Zoo have each received gifts of $1.4 million from the estate of the late Dr. Frances T. Brown. The Children’s Museum's gift will go into an endowment that will support a new Global Perspectives exhibit. The Zoo says its gift will go toward a fund used for urgent capital needs. Dr. Brown served as a physician in Indianapolis for 54 years.

http://www.insideindianabusiness.com/newsitem.asp?ID=24603



Sana’a Zoo: Educating the public on animal rights
By: Amel Al-Ariqi amel11ariqi@yahoo.com
A group of honey badgers put on an unusual show for onlookers this past Saturday at the Sana’a zoo. Four honey badgers began climbing a small tree and spinning in a small wheel located in their cage, attracting the attention of visitors who, upon witnessing such behavior, began clapping and whistling. Dutch zoologist Marjio Hoedemaker revealed that it was the zoo owner’s idea to place a wheel and small tree inside the honey badger cage. He clarified, “The honey badger is an active animal. It likes moving, climbing, and digging. So I put simple natural materials, such as trees, sand and rabbit excrement beside the wheel in an attempt to copy their natural environment. Such environment will motivate them to behave naturally.”

http://yementimes.com/article.shtml?i=1069&p=report&a=1



Zoo's six tips for success apply to any business
When it comes right down to it, the business of a zoo is no different than any other business. Whether we sell retail, sell financial products or sell aircraft parts, we all want our customers' experience to be one of a kind. And, most importantly, we want them to keep coming back.
It's my hope that when you visit Sedgwick County Zoo, you embark on a one-of-a-kind voyage of adventure and discovery. Through this adventure, we hope that we inspire a desire to learn more about the animals in our care and in the wild. Certainly, the experience must be a fun one -- but in everything we do, we strive to carry forth the zoo's mission: "To provide discovery, appreciation and respect for animals and nature."
Our mission invigorates our passion to be a leader among zoos in the world and certainly to be one of the best attractions the state of Kansas has to offer. It's a passion we take very seriously.
And we accomplish it through the following six steps. None are unique to us, but certainly all are crucial to the success of any business.
Keep it healthy

http://www.kansas.com/business/perspectives/story/125877.html



Squid of any variety reproduce in large numbers when the ocean waters are warm. Thailand has suffered a loss of many fisheries to these beasts. There are all kinds of recipes now for squid from Thailand and along the Indian Ocean. Curry squid is taking on the population explosion of the squid in warming oceans.

Jumbo squid invade California waters, affecting fish populations
mongabay.com
July 25, 2007
Jumbo squid (Dosidicus gigas) are invading California waters, putting commercial fish populations at risk, reports a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The cephalopods, which can measure 7-feet long and weigh 110 pounds (50 kg), seem to be expanding their range in California waters and beyond, according to researchers tracking the beasts. First spotted in 1997, Jumbo squid are now frequently found off the California coast, with periodic "mass wash-ups" of squids on beaches. No one is sure what causes Jumbo squid to end up on beaches.
Now researchers from Stanford University and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute report that the presence of squid is having an impact on marine food chain, triggering a drop in Pacific hake fish populations.

http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0725-squid.html



Dated

Akron Council regulates petting zoos
By Stephanie Kist
DOWNTOWN AKRON — In its first meeting after summer recess Sept. 11, Akron City Council approved legislation enacting regulations for petting zoos.
The regulations provide for proper licensing of petting zoos, proper hand-washing and sanitation practices, proper first aid and educational materials that advise the public of the risk for disease transmission when there is contact with animals.
The regulations also list which animals visitors are not to come in contact with (tigers, bats, bears, skunks and wolves, for example).
According to Deputy Director of Health Michael Smylie, the regulations are consistent with recommendations made by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In other business, City Council will consider at a future date whether to apply for a grant that would fund the creation of a DUI Specialty Court for the Akron Municipal Court. The court was awarded a one-year grant in the amount of almost $50,600 for fiscal year 2006 and is seeking authorization to apply for additional grant funding for the next two years.

http://www.akron.com/20060914/wsl3.ASP


Byculla, Goregaon zoos won’t be combined
Surendra Gangan
Wednesday, September 13, 2006 23:50 IST
MUMBAI: The State Government has finally dropped the idea of combining the Byculla Zoo with its ambitious Rs1,200 crore international zoo project at Goregoan.
The BMC has opposed the merger, and has announced plans to renovate of the zoo.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1052896



Animal advocates air concerns over region’s ‘sub-standard’ zoos
(13-09-2006)
HCM City — Delegates to the opening of the 15th annual Southeast Asian Zoos’ Association (SEAZA) conference in HCM City on Monday united in their concerns over the state of the region’s zoos.
The conference was appropriately titled "Zoos on the Fringe" focusing on improving shabby conditions at sub-par regional zoos. As co-operation on regional issues was discussed, Viet Nam also had a chance to elaborate on its zoo development plans.
SEAZA President Dr Jansen Manansang said that while large affluent zoos are important, the majority of the region’s animal collections are held in smaller, less-affluent zoos that are currently suffering.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=08SOC130906



Zoos Targets for Exotic Animal Thieves
European thieves are stealing exotic animals like marmosets and penguins for rich collectors
LONDON, Sep. 10, 2006
By SUE LEEMAN Associated Press Writer
(AP) Missing marmosets, abducted alligators, purloined penguins: Thieves are targeting Europe's zoos and safari parks to supply animal collectors who want to own ever more exotic species.
Conservationists say the practice is harming animals, threatening vital breeding programs, and adding to an already flourishing illegal trade in exotic birds and animals.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/09/10/ap/tech/mainD8K1S7J02.shtml



Protecting Petting Zoos and Nuclear Reactors from Terrorists
By Matt Gnaizda
Epoch Times Los Angeles Staff
Sep 14, 2006
What do Old MacDonald's Petting Zoo, the Apple and Pork Festival, and the Association for the Jewish Blind have in common?
They are all listed among the 77,069 potential terrorist targets in the Department of Homeland Security's updated National Assets Database (NADB), according to a recent report by the Inspector General.
The Inspector General's report expressed concern that "the varying presence of non-critical assets—and they are difficult to quantify—confirms that the NADB is not an accurate representation of the nation's CI/KR [critical infrastructure and key resources]."
The Database was created to help identify America's CI/KR and protect them against terrorist attacks and natural disasters. Critical infrastructure is defined as "systems or assets... so vital to the United States that the incapacity or destruction of such systems or assets would have a debilitating impact on security, national economic security, national public health or safety..."

http://en.epochtimes.com/news/6-9-14/45960.html

continued...