Visit Singapore Zoo: July 2012

Monday, July 30, 2012

Boater arrested for feeding Croc that bit off his hand

An Everglades airboat operator has been charged with illegally feeding an alligator that bit off his right hand, according to news reports.
Wallace Weatherholt, 63, was arrested Friday on the misdemeanor charge, according to our Gannett colleagues at the Fort Myers News-Press. He's scheduled to be in court Aug. 22.
Weatherholt, who works for Captain Doug's Small Airport Tours in Everglades City, was dangling a fish at the water's surface during a June 12 tour, an Indiana family told the Associated Press. A 9-foot-long alligator then lunged and bit off Weatherholt's right hand at the wrist.
State wildlife officers tracked and killed the gator. Weatherholt's hand was found in the reptile's stomach, but doctors could not reattach it.
The law against feeding alligators is intended to protect the creatures and humans, said Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officer Jorge Pino. Over time, alligators lose their natural fear of humans when they are fed, and then pose a danger to humans.
"It's a very sad situation for Mr. Weatherholt, and we wish this never happened to him," Pino told ABC News. "But there are laws on the books to protect people from this exact incident."

"As soon as you say there's an alligator that's not afraid of humans, that's like signing a death warrant for that alligator," he added. "The more people abide by the rules on the books, the safer the gators will be, and more importantly, the safer the humans will be."
Feeding an alligator is a second-degree misdemeanor punishable by a fine up to $500 and possible jail.
Three weeks ago, an alligator bit off the lower right arm of a teenager swimming in the Caloosahatchee River in southwestern Florida.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Taming the Wild

Killer whale tries to drown trainer


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MK3MNN_rsNk

SeaWorld park in San Diego California, a killer whale suddenly tried drowning its trainer.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Baby giant panda's death in Tokyo sparks grief


The death of a baby panda in Japan stopped regular television programming and brought a Tokyo zoo director to tears on Wednesday, a week after its birth sent ripples of excitement across the nation.
Newscasts had dedicated a nightly segment to the male cub's daily activities since his birth on July 5, with retailers unveiling a host of panda-themed products in celebration.

The unnamed cub was initially hailed as a rare success for Japan's captive breeding programme as it was the zoo's first panda born in 24 years and the only one conceived from natural sexual intercourse.

But the enthusiasm turned to grief on Wednesday after Ueno zoo in the Japanese capital said the tiny, 144-gram male infant had died of pneumonia, bringing zoo director Toshimitsu Doi to tears. "We are very disappointed," Doi said as he wiped his eyes.

Newscasters interrupted regular programming to report the death of the cub, whose birth had been embraced as happy news for a country still struggling to recover from last year's quake-tsunami disaster.
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda described the death as "very disappointing".

"We were all looking forward" to the cub's development, he told reporters in Tokyo.
Matsuzakaya, a major Japanese department store, had planned a "Happy Panda Week" celebration, offering special discounts following the birth, but the event was canceled on Wednesday.

The zoo said keepers found the baby lying on its back against its mother Shin Shin's stomach.
"They administered a cardiac massage and other treatment, but unfortunately they confirmed its death at 8:30 am (2330 GMT Tuesday)," the zoo said.

Shin Shin and her mate Ri Ri were leased from China last year at an annual cost of about one million dollars to the zoo operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan government.

The baby was hailed in China, which has sometimes hostile relations with neighbouring Japan.
"We lament the loss of the cub and believe that the Japanese people, who have been looking forward to seeing the cub, will also lament this loss," said foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin in a statement Wednesday.

Last week Beijing expressed hope "people-to-people sentiment and overall relations between China and Japan" could be promoted by the cub's birth.

China is famed for its "panda diplomacy", using the bears as diplomatic gifts to other countries. About 1,600 remain in the wild in China, with some 300 others in captivity worldwide -- mostly in China.

As many as 16 giant pandas have been born in Japan, according to reports.

So Sad! Panda cub dies at Ueno Zoo


Giant panda Shin Shin holding the baby giant panda in her right arm at the Ueno Zoological Park in Tokyo.

The first panda cub born at Tokyo's Ueno Zoo in 24 years died of pneumonia Wednesday, the Tokyo metropolitan government said. The baby panda was born on Thursday at the zoo in Taito Ward to 7-year-old female giant panda Shin Shin and 6-year-old male Ri Ri. It was the first panda born through natural breeding at the zoo. The zoo had been monitoring the cub after reuniting it with Shin Shin in a maternity room around 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. The zoo said it confirmed the cub's cries at around 6:45 a.m. Wednesday. However, at around 7:30 a.m., a zoo attendant picked the cub up from where it was lying on its back on Shin Shin's belly and found it was in cardiac arrest. The cub was moved to an incubator and given cardiac massage, but was confirmed dead at around 8:30 a.m. Ueno Zoo Director Toshimitsu Doi had stressed that panda cubs need to be carefully watched for at least a week since it takes that long to determine whether a baby panda will be able to thrive. This is because there have been many cases in which baby pandas, blind and covered only with downy hair, die several days after birth. Shin Shin nursed the cub after giving birth Thursday. Shin Shin, however, stopped taking care of the cub around midnight Friday, and the cries of the baby, left on the concrete floor of the maternity room, became weaker. A zoo attendant warmed the baby using a hot water bottle and moved it to an incubator after wrapping it in a towel. While feeding Shin Shin an apple Saturday morning, zoo staff used a pump to collect her milk to feed the cub. The cub regained its strength when it was given the breast milk through a bottle. Its weight, which was 133 grams Friday, increased to 144 grams Tuesday. It sometime happens that a giant panda will stop taking care of its baby. There are also cases in which the tiny baby dies under the large body of a mother panda. In June 1985, Chu Chu, the first panda born in Japan, died at the zoo at the age of just 43 hours.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Copenhagen Zoo Siberian tigers fatally maul man

Tigers fatally mauled a man inside an enclosure at the Copenhagen Zoo, officials said Wednesday.
It was unclear how or why the 21-year-old Afghan-born man had entered the Siberian tiger den, but investigators could not exclude suicide as a motive, police spokesman Lars Borg said.
The man sustained multiple bite wounds to the throat, face, chest and a thigh. "We don't know why he went in and why he ended up in the enclosure," Borg told The Associated Press. The man was granted Danish citizenship last month and his family has identified him, Borg said.
Police declined to release his name. His body was found surrounded by the zoo's three Siberian tigers by a zookeeper early Wednesday.
Borg said the man appeared to have entered the tiger area late Tuesday from a low wall surrounding the den and then ended up in the moat inside the enclosure. "He has been in the water and the animals must have seen that and attacked him," Borg said.
"He was killed in the water." Police were trying to piece together the man's movements inside the zoo, but haven't had any luck with security cameras. There were no surveillance cameras at the tiger enclosure. The man only had his old residence permit and keys to his Copenhagen apartment on him, Borg said. Copenhagen Zoo manager Steffen Straede said it was the first time in the zoo's 152-year history that such an incident has occurred, and there were no plans to reassess its security or to put the tigers down.

"If a person really wants to get in (there), we cannot prevent it from happening," he said.

**** Recalled: A cleaner at Singapore Zoo has died after being mauled by three tigers Nov 2008, Nordin Bin Montong was attacked by the white Bengal tigers after crossing a moat surrounding their enclosure. He was reportedly acting erratically.

Singapore Zoo welcomes new baby white rhino

The Singapore Zoo recently celebrated the birth of its 13th white rhino named Jumaane.

Jumaane, which means "born on Tuesday", arrived on April 10 this year, which of course, was a Tuesday.
He was undoubtedly one of the biggest bundles of joy Singapore Zoo has welcomed to date, weighing in at approximately 70kg at birth.

Baby Jumaane can be seen rolling around in the mud in his exhibit at the Wild Africa region of the Zoo.
His mother, Shova is always close by though, keeping a watchful eye on her baby.
White rhinos are considered near threatened in the wild on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened species.

They are hunted for their horns, which some believe as having medicinal properties.

However, there has been no scientific evidence to suggest that their horns are a cure for anything as they are actually made of keratin, the same type of protein that makes up hair and fingernails.

Singapore Zoo boasts the most number of white rhinos bred in a single zoo in Southeast Asia, with eight of these majestic creatures in its collection.

Of the 13 babies born here, some have been sent to Indonesia, Australia, Thailand and Korea as part of the Zoo's ex-situ conservation efforts through its worldwide exchange programme.

Friday, July 06, 2012

Giant panda Shin Shin gives birth at Ueno Zoo

Giant panda Shin Shin has given birth to a cub, officials at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo said Thursday. It is the first to be born at the nation's oldest zoo in 24 years, and the first there to be conceived naturally.
News photo
Eating for two: Female giant panda Shin Shin feeds on bamboo at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo last month. 
The cub, whose sex has yet to be determined, was born at 12:27 p.m. and both the mother and baby are in good health, an official at the Tokyo Metropolitan Government said. The baby's father is Ri Ri.

"Shin Shin has been holding the cub to her chest" and showing signs of feeding the baby, the official said. Zoo staff have been monitoring the pandas by camera. Neither the weight nor size of the cub are yet known.

Because a second cub is sometimes born as long as a day after the first, Shin Shin will continue to be monitored closely, the official said.

Shin Shin and Ri Ri are on a 10-year loan from China that started in February 2011. Under the terms of the agreement, the cub is owned by China and will be sent there in two years, according to the metropolitan government.
Shin Shin and Ri Ri were placed in the same cage on March 25, and it was confirmed they had mated a day later.

The zoo removed Shin Shin from public view on June 30, when it appeared she was pregnant. However, the zoo was unable to confirm her condition because changes in hormonal level can mimic signs of pregnancy.
The gestation period is usually 80 to 200 days. Shin Shin gave birth 102 days after first mating with Ri Ri.
The cub is the fourth born at the zoo. The last, Yu Yu, was born in 1988.
Information from Kyodo added