On August 28, 2023, one of the most remarkable zoo veterinarians passed away in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Mike Cranfield, former vet of The Baltimore Zoo, had a career spanning decades. Some of his earliest years in the field were marked by his groundbreaking work studying assisted reproduction, embryo transfers, and cryogenics in endangered nonhuman primates, helping to pave the way for reproductive technologies that are still used to help save wildlife. More recently, he spent decades serving as leader of the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project, providing expert vet care for one of the world's rarest species (the project later expanded its purview to cover other endangered gorillas elsewhere in Africa). Besides his scientific and veterinary accomplishments, Dr. Cranfield left behind a vast network of colleagues, students, mentees, and friends. He will be missed.
Tables of Contents
Tables of Contents
Wednesday, August 30, 2023
Dr. Mike Cranfield, the Gorilla Doctor
On August 28, 2023, one of the most remarkable zoo veterinarians passed away in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Mike Cranfield, former vet of The Baltimore Zoo, had a career spanning decades. Some of his earliest years in the field were marked by his groundbreaking work studying assisted reproduction, embryo transfers, and cryogenics in endangered nonhuman primates, helping to pave the way for reproductive technologies that are still used to help save wildlife. More recently, he spent decades serving as leader of the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project, providing expert vet care for one of the world's rarest species (the project later expanded its purview to cover other endangered gorillas elsewhere in Africa). Besides his scientific and veterinary accomplishments, Dr. Cranfield left behind a vast network of colleagues, students, mentees, and friends. He will be missed.
Tuesday, August 29, 2023
Only Chance to See
Coming fresh off the news of the closure of the Delbridge Museum at the Great Plains Zoo...
The other day, I took a break from a non-zoo trip to Boston to visit one of my favorite places in the city, the stuffily-named Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University. The Museum is a fairly small, old-fashioned cabinet of curiosities compared to the fancier, glitzier natural history museums out there, which might be why its my favorite. There isn't really room for fancy dioramas, but I swear, every inch of the space is stuffed with specimens, sometimes almost jumbled as a heap.
The back few rooms are home to an amazing assortment of taxidermized mammals, and it was there that I spent 90% of my all-too-brief visit.
I think what I love the most about these old galleries is that they provide me with the only chance I will likely have of seeing many of these animals in the flesh - even if the flesh isn't actually there, and the skins aren't moving. Other guests may have been enraptured by the gaping maw of the hippo or the snarling visage of the tiger. I was spellbound by the extremely rare animals which are not found in any zoos in the country, if not the world.
I was admiring a Sumatran rhino - itself a rhino I've only ever seen once in real life, and doubt I ever will again - when right next to it I was gobsmacked to see the fifth member of the rhino family, one that numbers in the double-digits in the wild and may very well be extinct in my lifetime, the Javan rhino. Also on display were an indri - the world's largest lemur which has proven extremely difficult to keep alive in zoos -, the giant otter shrew (which I only know from reading Gerald Durrell's first book of animal collecting, The Overloaded Ark), and the quirky little marsupial anteater, the numbat (which, now that I've seen a platypus, is the Australian mammal that I'm most desperate to see in person).
And that, of course, doesn't count the extinct animals there, whether they be relatively recent losses (ivory-billed woodpecker, thylacine) or long gone (prehistoric reptiles and mammals).
Seeing wild animals in the wild has always been one of my biggest pleasures in life. I've always loved zoos for giving me the chance to experience animals that I may not be able to see in the wild. And, I've come to discover, I love natural history museums for giving me the chance to experience animals that I may not be able to see in the zoo.
Sunday, August 27, 2023
Species Fact Profile: Pere David's Deer (Elaphurus davidianus)
Pere David's Deer (Milu)
Elaphurus davidianus (A. Milne-Edwards, 1866)
- Length 183-216 centimeters, with an additional 22-35 centimeters tail (pretty long for a deer). About 1.2 meters tall at the shoulder. Males weigh 215 kilograms, females 160. Males differ from females in having shaggier throats. The tail is relatively long. The skin between the hooves is naked. Hooves make a clicking noise with the animal in walking
- Pelage is red to red-brown in the summer, with a black medial stripe on the shoulders, turning to a gray-brown with dark flanks and throat in the winter. Fawns have white spotting
- Males have antlers that shed annual in December or January, with new ones starting to grow in immediately after shedding, reaching full size in May. Antlers are 55-80 centimeters long on the curve, fork close to the skin. The long prong is very straight, the front prong branches off with the prongs facing backwards
- Males compete for access to females during rut, both through displays and actual combat (biting, using antlers, rearing onto hind legs and boxing). Males maintain harems of females, but often have trouble holding them for too long because they do not eat while defending a harem and as such lose body condition quickly (once leaving the harem, they resume feeding and often put weight back on quickly
- Very fond of water, swim well and often wade up to their shoulders.
- Unknown what the natural predators were due to centuries of semi-captivity before being reintroduced, but presumably were tigers and leopards
- Only member of the genus Elaphurus (but some taxonomists feel it should be part of Cervus). Genus name comes from the Greek for “Deer-tail,” species name honors Armand David
- Also called milu. Chinese nickname for the species was sze pu shiang, or “the four unlikes,” as the animal supposedly had the neck of a camel, the tail of a donkey, the antlers of a deer, and the hooves of a cow (sometimes different animals or body parts are mentioned, like the head of a horse). In legend, the animal helped the sage Jiang Ziya found the Zhou Dynasty
- Species came to the attention of the west in 1865 when Père Armand David, a French missionary, peered over the wall of the Imperial Hunting Park near Peking and saw the deer, which at this point were likely already extinct in the wild. After securing skin and bones for science, a dozen individuals from the herd were later sent to Europe (History detailed here)
- In 1894, a flood destroyed the Imperial Hunting Park, killing many of the deer; those that survived were eaten during the Boxer Rebellion of 1900. Species was extinct in China by 1939
- The surviving deer in Europe (18 in total, 11 of which bred) were gathered by the 11th Duke of Bedford, Herbrand Russell, and allowed to breed in safety on his estate at Woburn Abbey.
- · Zoo-bred deer were sent back to China in 1956. In 1985, a herd was reintroduced to Beijing Milu Park, with another herd being formed in 1986 at Dafeng Milu Park, bulk of animals coming from Whipsnade Wild Animal Park (Zoological Society of London). By the end of the millennium, there were hundreds in the wild in China, numbering nearly 3000 by 2020.
- Has been introduced to New Zealand for farming and hunting, sometimes hybridized with red deer, producing fertile offspring
Friday, August 25, 2023
So Long, Elon
The Monterey Bay Aquarium has announced that, for reasons I can only speculate about, they are leaving X, the social media platform previously known as Twitter. Normally I wouldn't call this particularly newsworthy, but I did love their sign-off (if you know, you know!). Be funnier if they did have dolphins, though...
Thursday, August 24, 2023
The Burning Basket
Tuesday, August 22, 2023
From the News: Spotless Giraffe Born
Spotless Giraffe Born at Tennessee Zoo, Believed To Be Only One in the World
Giraffes are one of the most popular, widely-kept zoo animals in the world, and are bred with considerable frequency. As many as are housed and born in zoos, it's not surprising that an occasional unique calf in born. Recently, Brights Zoo in Limestone, Tennessee, welcomed an extraordinary calf - one that, instead of the usual net-like pattern for which giraffes are known, was born one solid color (instead of being spotless, it could almost be said that the animal is one giant spot). The female calf is believed to be the first solid-color giraffe born in over fifty years.
The ancients named the giraffe Camelopard, or "camel leopard", referring to an animal shaped like a camel but spotted like a leopard. I wonder what they would have made of this baby.
Monday, August 21, 2023
Sioux Falls and the Motionless Zoo
In the 1980s, Dr. Theodore Reed, Director of the Smithsonian National Zoo, popularized his concept of the BioPark. The BioPark would be the combination of a zoo, aquarium, botanical garden, and natural history museum, so basically my four favorite things in the world all wrapped up in one place. The concept has always enchanted me, but never really seems to have caught on. There are some zoos which are combined with aquariums, or botanical gardens, but in most of these cases, the aquatic or botanical collection seems small and tacked on, sort of an afterthought. And I've rarely seen a zoo lean into the natural history side of the concept.
One such facility, which has always intrigued me and which I'd been very excited to visit, is the Great Plains Zoo in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. To give it its proper name, it's actually the Great Plains Zoo and Delbridge Museum of Natural History... but I guess that's slated to change soon. For the past forty years, the zoo has housed over 150 mounted specimens, originally collected by hunter-businessman Henry Brockhouse ("Delbridge" was the lawyer who bought the collection at an estate sale and deonated it to the city to enjoy). As was common in that era, specimens were preserved using toxic chemicals, which can be hazardous to humans. The decision has been made to close the Delbridge Museum and ship out the collection in the near future.
Many local residents are sad to see the collection go - as am I. While I greatly prefer seeing live animals, both in the zoo and in their natural environment, seeing preserved specimens also has great educational value. The museum also gives visitors the chance to see animals that the zoo does not/never will have, such as giant panda and walrus, in an educational setting. I still hope to visit the zoo at some point in the future, but I'll admit, I'm a fair bit less excited now. I feel like it's about to lose something that truly made this a unique facility. Sort of like how I felt when the National Zoo closed its unique, incredible Invertebrate House. Granted, the fate of each, individual specimen hasn't been decided yet - maybe a few can be saved for historical/legacy purposes in Sioux Falls, while others could find new homes at other museums?
The BioPark concept won't be completely lost at Great Plains, however - the zoo will be adding an aquarium and insectarium in the near future. Lots of places have done that, though - how many zoos have had something like the Delbridge Museum? I'm sorry to see it go.
Saturday, August 19, 2023
The Passing of Toki
Yesterday, the Miami Seaquarium announced the death of Tokitae/Lolita, the orca who had been at the center of so much controversy over her life. Toki had been slated for relocation to a sea pen in her birth waters off the Pacific Northwest, a move which delighted some, happy to see her restored to (close enough to) her natural habitat, and enraging others, who were sure that the move would kill the elderly, change-averse animal.
We’ll never know, at any rate.
I know that this animal touched the lives of a lot of people over the past several years, from the indigenous communities who felt bound to her to the keepers and trainers who were with her day in and out. Her passing closes a major chapter in the lives of many people. It also closes a chapter for the Seaquarium, which has almost been defined by this animal (often in a negative light) for so long.
My condolences to all who knew her, cared for her, and wanted what was best for her - even if they couldn’t agree as to what that was.
Friday, August 18, 2023
Documentary Review: Tiger 24 - The Making of a Man-Eater
Warren Pereira set out to make a straightforward nature documentary about tigers. Little did he know that his star subject was about to hijack the plot and steer it towards the true crime genre.
For years, the undisputed king of India's Ranthambhore National Park was Tiger- 24. Known to the rangers and local people as Ustad, the male Bengal tiger occupied a swath of territory that bordered the park and included a trail which local people used to access a temple for worship. A tiger is an intimidating animal under any circumstance, but park rangers and villagers alike had good reason to be extra fearful of Ustad. The animal had already been implicated in the deaths of three humans.
After Ustad was deemed to be responsible for the killing of a fourth human in five years, park guard Rampal Saini, the local authorities decided enough was enough. Historically, this would have been the point at which a hunter was drafted to go out and slay the tiger. Mindful of the tiger's status as both an endangered species and as the national animal of India, a different approach was taken. Ustad was instead captured and relocated to a zoo in India. If he had been shot and killed, the story, while upsetting, would have ended then and there. With the animal still alive, however, there remained the possibility of undoing his removal. A vocal group of activists dedicated themselves to having the tiger returned to Ranthambhore.
Tiger 24: The Making of a Man-Eater is a fascinating case study of man's relationship with apex predators. On the one hand you have idealistic folks who want this individual tiger to have the quality of life that he always had, who argue that fatalities such as that of Rampal Saini are the price of living alongside large carnivores, or who question whether Ustad could be definitively pinned to the attack. On the other hand, you have local people who wonder how many times that they are expected to sacrifice friends or family to the same cat (note: I did feel slightly icky with the scenes of Pereira interviewing the family of the latest victim - it just felt somewhat exploitative).
I will give Pereira credit for trying to balance the documentary by bringing in both sides for (heated) discussions, though I do feel that he is somewhat biased towards the pro-release side. Maybe it's the zookeeper in me being a little defensive, but I did find the pro-release side to be somewhat lacking in their arguments, showing a considerable amount of naivety. I got something of a chuckle when one tiger biologist, upon hearing that the activists were upset that a full forensic analysis wasn't done of Rampal Saini's remains to 100% conclusively prove that Ustad was the killer, went on an irate tirade about the ridiculousness of expecting such a thing from the underfunded, understaffed Forest Department. More irritatingly, it just didn't seem like they really understood tiger biology. To me, when I heard that another male tiger had moved into Ustad's territory and paired up with his mate, that was the end of the matter. The longer that Ustad was out of his habitat, the less likely he would have a place to return to.
Pereira is correct, in the end, when he states that it is possible for different people to look at the same information and come to different conclusions, all while wanting what is best both for Ustad, Ranthambhore, and the local peoples. Conservation, animal rights, and human safety are all very emotional topics, and it can be impossible to leave emotion out of any discussions pertaining to them. I'm not surprised that things got heated.
Wednesday, August 16, 2023
Patience is a Virtue
Well, someone is angling for the title of "favorite child." The Rosamond Gifford Zoo in Syracuse, NY shared this video of one of their Amur tiger cubs trying to show off to mom "Zeya" just how fierce he is. After a while of watching mom indulge in these shenanigans, the cub's twin sister decided it was time to come to the defense. Behaviors like this are pretty cute to watch, but they also have practical purposes, allowing cubs to practice pouncing, swatting, and chasing skills that they will need later in life, either to secure prey or to defend territories. It's good to have a patient audience to practice with...
Tuesday, August 15, 2023
Small Town, ZooSA
Sunday, August 13, 2023
Zoo Review: Lehigh Valley Zoo
Saturday, August 12, 2023
Flight of the Sihek
Zoos and aquariums do a lot of great conservation work, but historically there's been a struggle to convey those stories to the greater public. I think that a major part of the challenge has been that some of the most critical conservation stories have involved species which might not be as familiar to the general public as lions, tigers, and pandas. Take the story of the sihek, or Micronesian kingfisher. It's one of the rarest birds in the world, driven to extinction in the wild by the invasive brown tree snake and only still in existence because of zoos and other breeding facilities. Now, we are standing on the cusp of seeing that species restored to living wild.
Sharing this story is more than a feel-good PR piece for zoos. It's a reminder that we have a chance to save even the most imperiled of creatures - and that we have a responsibility to do so as well.
Thursday, August 10, 2023
Raised by the Zoo
Wednesday, August 9, 2023
The Flamingo Impression
Monday, August 7, 2023
Species Fact Profile: African Wild Dog (Lycaon pictus)
African Wild Dog/African Painted Wolf/Cape Hunting Dog
Lycaon pictus (Temminck, 1820)
- Largest African canid. Head to body length 84-130 meters, 31-43 centimeters of tail. Weight 18-28 kilograms. Lightly built with long, slim legs and large, rounded ears. Males are slightly heavier (3-7%) than females.
- Coloration is a patchwork of irregular black, yellow, brown, and white blotches. Almost all individuals have a yellow-brown head with a black mask, black ears, as well as a white tip to the tail. Other than that, coat pattern varies widely and can be used to identify individual dogs
- Hunt in packs, running down prey until a first dog is able to seize it. A chase can last for several kilometers, with the dogs running 55 kilometers per hour. Then, the rest of the pack grabs a hold and brings the prey animal to the ground, where it is disemboweled. Packs sometimes split up to pursue multiple individual prey animals when hunting. Hunting success is relatively high; 70% success, versus less than 25% for lions
- Lone wild dogs have extremely difficult time capturing their normal prey and an almost impossible time defending kills from other carnivores
- Packs form when small, same-sex groups (usually siblings) break off from their natal groups and merge with a same-sex group from another natal group. Sometimes, two smaller mixed-sex packs merge.
- Very vocal with a number of unique vocalizations for complex communications. Includes a bell-like cooing call, which is for contact, and a twittering birdlike call for rallying a pack
- Home range size can be as small as 50 square kilometers for a pack that is feeding young pups in a den to over 1300 square kilometers, very large for their body size. Packs will infrequently but aggressively defend their territories from other packs. Enormous home ranges, low population density, and tendency to wander out of even the largest protected areas are major conservation challenges for this species
- Mother and pups (weaning at 4 weeks, finished by 8 weeks) fed on regurgitated meat. Wild dogs will also regurgitate for sick/injured pack members, as well as for greeting ceremonies when they see each other after separation
- Wild dogs have antagonistic relationships with lions and spotted hyenas, which may steal kills and kill adults and pups. Leopards and crocodiles may also kill wild dogs and their pups. Possible that their wide-ranging behavior is meant to help avoid these rivals
- Originally considered a species of hyena. Latin name translates to “Painted Wolf.” They are also sometimes called African hunting dogs, Cape hunting dogs, painted dogs, or several other variants of these names. Some biologists are trying to rebrand the species as “painted wolf” due to the negative connotation of “wild dog”
- Historically eastern and southern subspecies were proposed, other sources proposed five (Cape, East African, West African, Chad, and Somali). Now regarded as single unit
- Small role in African folklore and culture compared to other large carnivores. San people believe the moon cursed the hare to be eternally pursued by wild dogs for thwarting the gift of immortality for all animals. San also viewed the wild dog as the ultimate hunter. The Ndebele tell the tale of a wild dog hunting zebra, impala, and other ungulates as revenge for their inadvertent role in the death of wild dog’s mate
- Primary threat is loss of habitat; even the largest national parks are too small to sustain very large populations of wild dogs, which are then penned up alongside lions, spotted hyenas, and other rivals, which outcompete them
- Very susceptible to rabies, distemper, and other diseases, which can be spread by feral dogs. Rabies is believed to have been responsible for the extinction of the species in the Serengeti
- Severely despised by European colonist, who thought wild dogs were cruel and savage. Deliberately exterminated as it was believed that otherwise they would kill all of the antelope and other game species, a belief which was officially practiced through the 1970s and still subscribed to by some game managers today
- There has been some success in reintroducing captive-bred wild dogs into the wild. Early efforts failed due to poor hunting skills and naivety towards the danger posed by lions and hyenas, but success has been achieved with mixed packs of wild and captive born animals
Sunday, August 6, 2023
Friday, August 4, 2023
The Stupid Season
Thursday, August 3, 2023
Father, Son, and Giraffe
Tuesday, August 1, 2023
Sun Bear Shenanigans
A zoo in eastern China has been forced to put our a statement confirming that yes, its bears are actually bears. As opposed to what, you may wonder? Apparently, many visitors have suspected that their sun bears are actually human actors in costumes.
Now, to be fair, there have been plenty of times that I've thought a sun bear looked like a person in a bear costume doing a lousy job of pretending to be a bear. They don't look especially bearish - more like some sort of weird pig-dog hybrid, and their movements and postures are just kind of goofy.
Also, it's not like a Chinese zoo hasn't pulled a scam like this before. A Tibetan mastiff was once passed off as a very unconvincing lion. Nor are these shenanigans all Chinese in origin. A Palestinian zoo was found to have been painting stripes on a donkey in a "build your own zebra" scheme that didn't seem to fool too many people.
Likewise, I've seen plenty of visitors to American zoos convinced that animals - especially reptiles - are fake. Visitors to my zoo one day were particularly positive that the crocodiles weren't real. At the time, the crocs were hanging out in the back corner of the exhibit, barely visible, underneath a waterfall that left them as little more than dark, blurry shapes beneath the roiling surface of the water. If they were fake, I argued back (with mixed success), wouldn't we at least have placed them somewhere were people could at least kind of see them?
Hangzhou Zoo released a statement (ostensibly written by one of the sun bears) to defend their honor and the authenticity of their bears. I don't know if that'll really convince anyone, though. After all, isn't that the exact sort of thing that a person in a bear costume would say if they were trying to trick us?