Tables of Contents
Tables of Contents
Wednesday, January 31, 2024
Tuesday, January 30, 2024
You've Got to Let Me Know - Should I Stay (away) or Should I Go (to the zoo)?
Sunday, January 28, 2024
Saturday, January 27, 2024
Rumble in the Jungle II
"Once there was a madman in Australia who was a black belt in karate. He wanted to prove himself against the lions. He lost. Badly. The keepers found only half his body in the morning."
- Yann Martel, The Life of Pi
It can be dangerous to believe your own press. In the 1980's, star boxer Mike Tyson (he of ear-biting fame) believed himself to be unstoppable and unbeatable. As such, he once offered a zookeeper $10,000 to let him into a gorilla exhibit to box a gorilla. The offer was declined (which now that I think about it, is actually pretty impressive considering zookeeper salaries. 10K is a lot of money to a keeper now, let alone in the 80's).
How would Mr. Tyson have fared against the gorilla? Assuming that the animal actually wanted to fight and didn't ignore or evade him, I suspect the answer is "poorly." Mike Tyson would have left that enclosure in several black trash bags.
Which doesn't mean that I haven't heard a fair share of people (many of whom probably have a lot less reason to be cocky about their fighting abilities than Mike Tyson. They generally feel safe to talk smack about the animals because they know that their bluff will never be called (though I could use $10,000). There's times I've been tempted to pretend to go along with it - just to see how close we can get to the door of the bear/ape/big cat exhibit before they make their excuses.
Fun tip, from someone who's had to wrangle a wide variety of animals, not always successfully, and sometimes against animals that you wouldn't think of as scary. If you're asking a keeper if you could win in a fight with ____ animal, the answer is usually, "no."
Thursday, January 25, 2024
Different and Delicate
Wednesday, January 24, 2024
Species Fact Profile: Vulturine Guineafowl (Acryllium vulturinum)
Vulturine Guineafowl
Acryllium vulturinum (GR Gray, 1840)
- Largest of the guineafowl species. Measures 61-71 centimeters long, with a round body and small head. Weigh 1-1.6 kilograms. Males are slightly larger than the females. Wings, neck, legs, and tail are longer than those of other guineafowl species
- Sexes look alike. Body plumage is black with fine white speckles, except for the breast, which is bright blue. The face and neck are bare; the face is blue, darkening to black, with a small ruff of brownish feathers at the back of the neck. There is a cape of long, glossy blue and white feathers around the neck. Juveniles similar to adults, but duller
- Very terrestrial, if confronted with danger with run rather than fly (speeds up to 35 kilometers per hour). Roosts in trees at night for safety
- Males can be very aggressive not only to one another (sometimes fatally so) but to females; even though the sexes look alike, they can often be distinguished by behavior and posture
- Genus name translates to "small peak," (absent the crest seen in many guineafowl), species name means "vulture-like" in reference to naked head and neck
- Hunted locally for food, but population is considered secure in wild
Monday, January 22, 2024
The Brainless Bunch
Among the most popular of animals in many zoos are, ironically, one of the least endangered and (for the keepers) most aggravating. Free-roaming peafowl (especially the males, with their beautiful colors and long trains) are the delight of many zoo visitors, and the ultimate headache for many zookeepers. Peafowl, however, aren't the only birds that can sometimes be encountered free-roaming at your local zoo. You might see chickens, for example, or perhaps waterfowl, either wild or, more commonly, domestic.
You might also spy something out of the corner of your eye that resembles a bowling ball with a tiny little head, hurtling across the path. More likely than not, you'll hear it before you see it, with its creaky, cackling call ringing loud.
If there's one bird that's caused me more headaches over my career than the free-roaming peafowl, it's been the free-roaming guineas. The birds are the domesticated strain of Numida meleagris, the helmeted guineafowl. Native to sub-Saharan Africa, the species has been introduced across the globe as a farm animal, from Australia to the West Indies to Europe. Growing up, I'd occasionally see one darting across the main road near my house, as if hoping to see if they could cause a car to swerve and crash.
Domestic guineas look reasonably like their wild-counterparts, though, as with all domestics, they are more prone to color morphs, such as pied or pearled. Primarily raised for meat, it has the added advantage of being an excellent consumer of pests, especially known as devourers of ticks, including those that spread Lyme disease. They also are used as sentries to warn chickens to predators.
Unfortunately, I never was able to witness that keen sense of self-preservation for which guineas are supposedly kept. In my experience, they've been some of the most bumbling, hapless animals ever, always getting in trouble and needing to be saved from predators, both wild and managed (just because you can go anywhere in the zoo doesn't mean that you should... such as, say, a big cat enclosure). They would get chased by visitors and not figure out how to get away, or wander into open buildings and not figured out how to get out, or stand stupidly in the middle of foul weather and completely ignore the shelter that they used just the night before. They seem absolutely, almost deliberately, brainless.
Of course, the only "danger" that they ever showed much real cunning in avoiding was... well, me. Whenever I needed to catch them up for something, suddenly evolution and instinct kicked back in and they became masters of evasive maneuvering again. Once I even resorted to trying the old Wile E. Coyote routine and leaving food underneath a box propped up with a stick and tied to some string. It didn't work in real life any better than it did in the cartoons.
Well, what did that say about me if I couldn't outsmart the dumbest animals in the zoo?
Sunday, January 21, 2024
Zoochosis
Friday, January 19, 2024
Is It Safe?
I don't know if there is a single question which gets asked more - or causes me more dread - at work than those three words, and the more long-winded variants thereof. Is it safe? Is it safe for visitors, is it safe for staff, is it safe for animals? And what is "it"? That's the really frustrating part. "It" can be just about anything.
Is it safe for visitors to interact with wild animals (a question that we'll pretend is completely unrelated to yesterday's post)? In a walk-through exhibit? In a feeding opportunity? As an educational ambassador? Is it different if it's a small, private encounter for select VIPs, versus an experience that's open to the general public?
Is it safe for keepers to share space with an animal? Certain keepers, depending on their training an experience? Certain animals, but not others (such as it's safe to go in with the males, but not the females)? Certain times of year, such as not in breeding season/rut? Yes, but only if working in groups?
Is it safe for animals to be in a mixed species exhibit? There's a lot of factors that go into determining that. What size enclosure? What are the personalities and histories of the individuals involved? What are the sexes of the animals involved? Will you be trying to breed one or both species?
Is enrichment (including exhibit features) safe? How likely is the animal to eat it/choke on it/stab itself with it/strangle itself with it/etc? A pool can pose drowning risks, and a climbing structure can pose falling risks. Where do you draw the line between unacceptable risk and allowing the animal to express natural behaviors?
Are exhibits safe for keepers to work in? Keepers can fall from climbing structures and get hurt, for example. Even more dangerous are aquatic features, especially those exhibits that require keepers or aquarists to dive (fun fact: a surprisingly large chunk of the AZA accreditation application is dedicated to answering questions about your dive team, if you have one, and safety protocols pertaining to them).
Is it safe to work at all? Animals need care no matter what, which means that keepers must be prepared to work in extreme weather conditions, from hurricanes to blizzards. How can zoos make sure that animals are being cared for (and safe) while keepers themselves are safe in such conditions?
Safety concerns can pop up in every aspect of the job. Whenever we want to use a new cleaning material, a new paint, a new building material, whatever, it has to be rigorously screened by our vet to make sure that it's safe for the staff, the visitors, and the animals. The later are the major wildcard - we have lots of research on how safe various materials and chemicals are for people, but much less so for wild animals. Birds and amphibians are extra susceptible; exposure to the wrong cleaning chemical could be a death sentence for your animals. Also, many zoo animals are smaller than humans, so could be more impacted by doses of exposure that humans wouldn't be troubled by.
It's no surprise that innovations in the zoo and aquarium world tend to be slower and more cautious than they may have been in the past. We're as a rule much less open to experimentation, and every innovation is being (or at least should be) carefully, painstakingly thought out to make sure everyone, human and animal is safe. It can be maddeningly tedious at times, but the well-being of humans and animals should always be the top priority.
Thursday, January 18, 2024
From the News: Visitor Bitten by Shark at Atlantis Bahamas
That child I saw being bitten in the butt by a penguin at Tanganyika Wildlife Park might think that she has a story to tell when she gets older... but that's small potatoes.
10-year-old Maryland boy bitten by shark at Bahamas resort
Perhaps the title of this article doesn't strike you as too unusual. Well, it takes a sharp twist when you learn that this shark bite... wasn't in the ocean. It happened in a tank. The child was a visitor at the Atlantis Paradise Island Resort in the Bahamas, which offers many exhibits of marine life as part of the attractions guests can experience. One such opportunity available to guests is to swim with sharks.
I'm sure it goes fine 99% of the time. It's just that in this case it... didn't. A major part of the draw of doing things like this for many people is the perception of "safe danger," not unlike what draws some people (but not including me) to roller coasters.
It's hard to manage something as 100% "safe danger" - there inevitably is always that chance that, as in this case, something can go wrong, no matter how carefully you plan or manage it. I'm sure a lot of folks reading the news will think that it's insane that this was even offered as an option for visitors. The truth is, it's probably a lot safer than it seems; I'd love to know the statistics for how many visitors have participated in the program versus the number that have had any negative interaction, and whether or not something unusual happened to cause the incident here.
Thankfully, the bitten boy is expected to be ok.
Tuesday, January 16, 2024
Artificiality
There's no substitution for actual life in front of you.
Monday, January 15, 2024
Book Review: Beaverland - How One Weird Rodent Made America
Saturday, January 13, 2024
Beyond Barriers
It's occurred to me in the past (most recently during the aforementioned penguin photo-op at Tanganyika) that a zoo barrier has two jobs. One is to keep animals in. One is to keep visitors out. A barrier can do it's job 99% of the time without any problems. The other 1% can be problematic, though.
For the first job, a barrier may work to keep animals of a given species in most of the time, but there are always exceptions. Some individuals of a species may be just different enough - strong enough to break a fence, small enough to slip through a gap, tall enough to clamber over a wall - than their fellows. Some individuals may also be more inclined, for one reason or another, to try, while others will not. Likewise, just as a person might suddenly find themselves fueled with adrenaline in an emergency and capable of performing feats that they otherwise couldn't, like lifting a car off of a trapped person, so can an animal with extraordinary motivation do what we previously considered impossible (or at least unlikely). I kept kangaroos for years in a paddock with a fence that held them no problem - but one day we were catching them up, and one of them came pretty darn close to clearing the fence when we had it cornered.
For the second job, most visitors will respect the barrier and stay on their side, but there are always people who won't. Sometimes it's a careless mistake, like leaning too far over, or trying to climb up for a better view. Sometimes it's mischievous or malicious intent. The later is much harder to guard against.
The first role of the barrier - keeping animals in - is self-evidently important. I always find myself exasperated by the second role of keeping visitors out. I'd love to have a zoo with minimal barriers, allowing the greatest possible access to the animals. I recently visited a private bird collection, where the owners allowed us to wander in and out of their aviaries, photographing birds from inches away (and sometimes less), with basically no supervision. They trusted us to not behave in a way that would stress or harm the birds, and to show good sense around the animals (i.e., if we noticed that birds were acting stressed, to quietly leave and give them their space). They knew that we could be trusted to use the disinfectant footbaths that they set out, and to close the doors securely behind us when we left.
I would love to give every visitor that freedom to explore an animal facility and have as much access as possible to the animals (without the expensive, time-consuming need for heavy supervision from staff). That would require trust, as well as confidence that they would behave in an appropriate manner. I really do believe that 90% of the public would be fine, and that of the remaining 10%, at least half of them would be folks erring out of ignorance, not malice. That other 5% though, can really ruin everything.
Friday, January 12, 2024
Cry for the Camera
Wednesday, January 10, 2024
Zoo Review: Tanganyika Wildlife Park, Part II
Tanganyika Wildlife Park bills itself as the most interactive wildlife park in the Midwest, and not without just cause. The facility offers several opportunities for guests to interact with animals. Some of these opportunities are fairly run-of-the-mill, typical zoo experiences. Others are quite unique.
Upon purchasing a ticket, a visitor is given tickets to participate in a certain number (it was five at the time of my visit) of "basic" animal interactions. They can use all of them on a single type of interaction, or spread them out among different experiences. Among the typical zoo experiences is the giraffe feeding station. Tanganyika maintains a very large herd of giraffes, split into two groups and rotated between the feeding yard and a back yard. Another fairly typical feeding experience (though one that is very popular with the public) is the lorikeet feeding aviary.
The zoo also boasts of a kangaroo walkabout, as well as encounter stations where visitors can pet/feed African tortoises, rabbits, guinea pigs, and goats. I remember thinking that all they needed was to add a stingray touch tank and they could complete the standard hands-on zoo experience.
There were, of course, a few more unique opportunities for visitors to get hands-on with animals...
Walk-through lemur exhibits are fairly common in European facilities, but very rare in American ones. Tanganyika has an island habitat for ring-tailed lemurs, which visitors can enter under staff supervision. Upon being given a small cup of feed, the visitor will soon find himself/herself with eager lemurs sitting on their lap, happily feeding (while staff take pictures/try to keep the troop in line).
Many zoos offer behind-the-scenes tours with rhinos, but at Tanganyika rhino encounters are part of the daily experience at the outdoor exhibit. At certain times of day visitors are allowed access to the Indian rhinos to feed and touch the behemoths (the rhinos had just welcomed a calf at the time of my visit, so this encounter was not available that day). I remember how absolutely spellbound I was as a young zoo visitor when I got to pet an Indian rhino for the first time (photo safari at San Diego Zoo Safari Park), so I can imagine what a thrill it would be for kids and adults alike.
Perhaps the most unusual of the "basic" animal encounters is the pygmy hippo feeding experience. This is what really drove me to visit the park, though I'll admit, I found it a little... underwhelming. Mainly because there was no hands-on aspect, which I suppose is fair, as they don't advertise it as such. The hippos approach a barrier, and you are given the opportunity to toss carrot sticks into their mouths. Note: a pygmy hippo's mouth is much smaller than a Nile hippo's, so it's a much harder target, especially as carrot sticks don't toss as easily as one might suspect. Fortunately staff gave me a mulligan after one of mine bounced off the hippo's mouth.
Tanganyika also offers additional paid encounters to feed and interact with other species. Doubtlessly the most unusual of these is the opportunity to swim with the African penguins - as far as I can tell, this is the only zoo in the country that offers this experience.
Tanganyika was certainly a unique facility, and I wasn't quite sure what to make of it when I left. Seeing so many hands-on opportunities always makes me feel ambivalent. On one hand I worry that it is too much exposure for the animals (especially the lemurs in this post-COVID era). On the other, I've had all of these opportunities (minus the hippo feeding) before, and I know how transformative they can be for some people. I do worry about exotic animals being in a situation where they mostly function as feed-consumers and pet-acceptors, rather than as... well, animals.
Tanganyika's enclosures seemed adequate, if not exciting, and the collection looked well cared for and healthy. I've heard concerns from some zoo folks about the zoo supplying animals to less-appropriate facilities (this is the main producer of African penguins outside of AZA). That being said, many AZA zoos do collaborate with Tanganyika, which means they've cleared their vetting process.
I suppose it comes down to values, then. If you're a visitor who's priority is to see animals in naturalistic habitats with an emphasis on natural behavior, or want to see a variety of species, especially smaller animals, such as birds and herps, this might not be your favorite facility. If you want to have interactions and close encounters with animals, however, this might be your favorite zoo.
Tuesday, January 9, 2024
Zoo Review: Tanganyika Wildlife Park, Part I
Sunday, January 7, 2024
Yuletide Treat
Saturday, January 6, 2024
Games with Great Apes
Thursday, January 4, 2024
Species Fact Profile: Fairy Bluebird (Irena puella)
Fairy Bluebird
Irena puella (Latham, 1790)
- Body length 24-27 centimeters, weigh 75 grams. Females are slightly smaller than males. Northern populations are slightly larger on average than southern ones
- Very sexually dimorphic. Among males, the crown, back of the neck, back, and upper tail are an iridescent blue. The side of the head, tail, wing coverts, and dorsal surface, are jet black (the blue portion of the plumage forms what looks like an hourglass pattern when viewed from the back). Females and immature males are a dull brownish-blue. The bill, legs, and claws are black, while the iris is red with black pupils and the eyelids are pinkish. Highly visible and very striking in direct sunlight, but can be very hard to see in shaded forest conditions
- Sometimes called the Asian fairy bluebird to differentiate it from Irena cyanogaster, the Philippine fairy bluebird, the only other member of the genus and the family.
- Pairs stay in touch with a loud contact call and a sharp whistle. Not migratory, but may wander according to seasonal abundance of different fruits. They may also gather in flocks to come down to the forest floor to bathe so as to have more eyes to keep watch for predators.
- Populations thought to be declining due to habitat loss and fragmentation, loss of fruiting trees. Illegal collection from the wild for the pet trade may also have an impact
- First record of the species in North American collections was of two imported by the Brookfield Zoo in 1935. The first known captive hatch of this species in North America was in 1960, presumably in a private collection, with the first zoo hatching from a pair of wild-caught parents at the Brookfield Zoo in 1976
Wednesday, January 3, 2024
The Reading Room
Monday, January 1, 2024
Welcome to 2024!
Happy New Year! A new year brings the potential for all sorts of changes and improvements, and many people have lots of plans for ways to make life better in 2024. Just remember to take a lesson from animals - sometimes changes can be a little too much, so sometimes a slower, more measured approach is necessary.
And some folks (and animals) just don't handle change as well as they ideally would... (the cartoon below came from a breeder's facebook page, but I've had a lot of similar experiences with all sorts of species in zoos. Kind of makes you wonder how anything survives in the wild).