4,000-Pound Rhinoceros Escapes From His Cage

Workers at the Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens spent about five hours trying to get a 4,000-pound rhinoceros back in his cage.

Archie was out of his overnight stall when employees showed up for work Thursday morning. He had escaped once before, years ago, and was lured back to his cage with food.

Craig Miller, the zoo’s curator of mammals, said the food didn’t work this time.

About 20 zoo workers corralled Archie in the elephant compound and sedated him. Then he was led down a service road back to his own area.

The 41-year-old white rhino never left zoo property, and there was a fence keeping him from public areas. It appeared the animal was able to escape because someone did not secure the gate.

Published in: on May 10, 2010 at 7:18 am  Leave a Comment  
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Penguin Parents Adopt Another Zoo’s Chick

African penguins have adopted a chick that had trouble hatching, then wasn’t being cared for by its biological parents at another Colorado zoo.

Officials at the Denver Zoo, the chick’s new home, say it’s doing well.

The baby African penguin emerged from its shell at the Pueblo Zoo on March 20, but it was four days overdue and needed help from a staff worker to get out.

When the biological parents appeared unable to care for the hatchling, it was taken to Denver and placed with surrogate parents, who immediately began to feed it and keep it warm.

African penguins once came close to extinction and are listed as “vulnerable” by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.

Published in: on April 11, 2010 at 5:23 pm  Leave a Comment  
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Duchess The Orangutan Turns 50

The Phoenix Zoo is used to hosting birthday parties, but this one was a little different.

Duchess the orangutan turned 50 on Saturday, and the zoo treated her to gifts, an ice cake filled with fruit and a rendition of “Happy Birthday” by hundreds of zoo visitors.

Her keeper, Bob Keesecker, said Duchess didn’t seem too stressed about the milestone.

“I told her it was her birthday today and she didn’t seem to be overly concerned about it,” he said. “I made sure her hair looked good before she went out.”

Keesecker said Duchess has quite a sweet tooth and worked pretty hard to get to the fruit in the ice cake.

Zoo officials say Duchess is the nation’s oldest captive Bornean orangutan, and is now 10 years older than the 40-year life expectancy of orangutans in the wild.

(more…)

Published in: on March 29, 2010 at 6:07 am  Leave a Comment  
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Pack Of Dogs Attack Bulgarian Zoo

A pack of stray dogs leapt the fence of Sofia’s zoo and killed 13 rare animals last week, the zoo director said on Saturday.

Six dogs, probably driven by hunger in temperatures that fell to minus 15 degrees last Saturday, tore to pieces five deer and eight mouflon, zoo director Ivan Ivanov said. Two fallow deer fought the dogs and survived.

Ivanov said the zoo’s fences had since been reinforced and gas pistols issued to security guards.

The Bulgarian capital, home to some two million people, has been plagued by stray dogs for years.

City council officials put their number at about 9,000, and say it has grown since economic crisis hit the European Union’s poorest member state and some people abandoned their pets.

Published in: on February 1, 2010 at 7:08 am  Leave a Comment  
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Snap-Happy Orangutan Opens Facebook Gallery

A 33-year-old furry photographer is winning fans on social networking website Facebook for pictures of her daily life as an orangutan in a Vienna zoo.

Orangutan Nonja’s photos, taken with a camera that dispenses raisins as she snaps, have won over 500 fans on Facebook since the zoo launched an online photo album.

Although the slightly blurry images of Nonja’s climbing rope, food and companion’s shaggy red-brown fur have won lots of admiring comments from fans, the photographer herself is not so interested.

“Of course the apes don’t care about the pictures, they are just an accidental side product,” zoo spokesman Gerhard Kasbauer told Reuters. “They just know that when they press the button, a raisin pops out.”

The Vienna Tiergarten set up the project to help keep Nonja and her three hairy ape friends entertained in their enclosure.

The album is online at: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nonja/190010092116

Published in: on December 3, 2009 at 6:49 am  Leave a Comment  
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‘Cavemen’ Go On Display At Warsaw Zoo

Visitors to Warsaw’s zoo are being greeted by two “Homo sapiens” peering out from a cage — humans in animal skins trying to spark interest in man’s caveman ancestors.

Two volunteers in a former monkey cage and dressed as cavemen, ...

Organizer Maria Mastalerz says the weeklong “performance” aims to attract interest in a play, “Caveman,” showing in the Polish capital. But she says it also carries a message that humans today are not all that different from their prehistoric ancestors.

Dressed in furs and animal skins, the young woman and man smoked a fish over a fire, poking it with a stick, or stared from behind bars at startled zoo visitors.

Published in: on November 30, 2009 at 6:51 am  Leave a Comment  
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Zoo Draws Crowds With Zebra-Colored Donkeys

Gaza City zookeepers have found a creative way of drawing crowds to their dilapidated zoo — by painting their donkeys.

Palestinian children visiting the Marah Land Zoo outside Gaza ...

The Marah Land Zoo’s only two zebras died of hunger earlier this year when they were neglected during the Israel-Hamas war.

The popular animals were too expensive to replace, so the keepers decided to design a pair of donkeys with black and white patterns instead.

Ahmad Barghouti says a professional painter used French-manufactured hair coloring to make the donkeys look like zebras.

Hasan Yaseen said since his three children have never seen a real zebra, they enjoy the Gaza version.

Aside from the two ‘zebras,’ the zoo also flaunts an aging tigress, two monkeys, and a selection of birds, rabbits and cats.

Published in: on October 9, 2009 at 5:59 am  Leave a Comment  
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Woman Sues Zoo Over Splashing Dolphins

A woman is suing a Chicago-area zoo for a 2008 fall near a dolphin exhibit, accusing zookeepers of encouraging the mammals to splash water and then failing to protect spectators from wet surfaces.

A dolphin plays with a basketball underwater at the Nuremberg ...

In her suit filed earlier this week, Allecyn Edwards said she was injured while walking near an exhibit at Brookfield Zoo, where a group of Atlantic bottlenose dolphins were performing, media said.

Officials “recklessly and willfully trained and encouraged the dolphins to throw water at the spectators in the stands, making the floor wet and slippery,” but failed to post warning signs or lay down protective mats or strips, the suit said, according to the reports.

Edwards is demanding more than $50,000 for lost wages, medical expenses and emotional trauma from the Chicago Zoological Society and the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, which operate the zoo in Chicago’s southwest suburbs.

Published in: on August 26, 2009 at 6:50 am  Leave a Comment  
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Free At Last! Afghanistan’s Only Pig Is Released From Quarantine

Afghanistan’s only known pig trotted out of quarantine, two months after he was locked away because of swine flu fears, to bask again in the mud at the Kabul Zoo.

Afghans look at Afghanistan's only known pig in Kabul Zoo ...

The pig, a curiosity in Muslim Afghanistan where pork and pig products are illegal because they are considered irreligious, was quarantined because visitors to the zoo were worried it could spread the new H1N1 flu strain, commonly known as swine flu.

“Our people did not understand that the disease only passes from person to person and felt that the swine influenza might even be spread from the zoo because we have a pig here,” zoo manager Aziz Gul Saqib told Reuters.

“Other zoos abroad told us not to worry … when people began to realize the disease doesn’t come from the pig itself we decided to release the pig,” he said.

“Khanzir” — Pashto for pig — appeared unperturbed as a team of zoo workers used sticks to gently prod him out of his temporary concrete home into his usual enclosure of lush green shrubs and a mud puddle.

Unsuspecting zoo visitors scattered as Khanzir dashed through the center of the zoo toward his enclosure.

One visitor, 17-year-old-Razaa, covered his nose and mouth with his t-shirt as the animal trotted past.

“It’s a pig, it’s the dirtiest thing, it might give me a disease,” he said.

Shabby and run-down, Kabul Zoo suffered badly during Afghanistan‘s three decades of war but is slowly improving.

Mujahideen fighters ate the deer and rabbits and shot dead the zoo’s sole elephant during the 1992-94 civil war. Incoming shells shattered the aquarium.

Khanzir, who is about eight or nine years old according to Saqib, was one of a pair given to the zoo by China in 2002. His partner died about two years ago.

Afghanistan has reported no cases of the H1N1 flu virus.

Published in: on July 10, 2009 at 6:03 am  Leave a Comment  
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Army Of Chimps Go Out For Lunch

Chester Zoo, Britain’s most popular wildlife attraction, was evacuated after 30 chimpanzees escaped from their enclosure.

A Chimpanzee sucks on a giant ice cube during hot weather at ...

The animals made their escape at lunchtime and found their way into a keeper area where their food is normally prepared.

Visitors were asked to leave the 110-acre zoo as keepers rounded up the chimps.

“We had an army of chimps eating their way through the keeper’s kitchen and the decision was taken, quite rightly, to evacuate,” a spokeswoman said.

“By around 4 pm we had managed to get all the chimps back in their enclosure, some of them with very full bellies.”

There were no injuries to members of the public or staff and the zoo said the decision to evacuate was taken as a precautionary measure. It apologized for the incident and an investigation was underway into how the animals escaped.

Chester Zoo, in Cheshire, north west England, is home to more than 7,000 animals and attracts more than a million visitors each year.

Published in: on July 9, 2009 at 6:20 am  Leave a Comment  
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