'Zoos & Sanctuaries'

Denuncian al SEPRONA el estado de un orangután en el antiguo zoo de Valencia

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

El Proyecto Gran Simio ha denunciado ante la Guardia Civil (SEPRONA) la situación lamentable en la que se encuentran un orangután y varios animales que están encerrados en las instalaciones del Zoológico propiedad del propio Ayuntamiento de Valencia, según ha informado hoy a EFE su director ejecutivo, Pedro Pozas Terrados.

Pozas ha indicado que ‘las malas condiciones en las que se encontraban los animales de este Zoológico, hicieron que se aprobara un proyecto para la construcción de un nuevo centro que se ha denominado Bioparc’.

‘Una vez finalizado- ha dicho- y tras permanecer más de un año cerrado el antiguo, los animales han sido trasladados a los recintos nuevos, mientras que algunos por falta de espacio o porque no se ajusta al diseño de las instalaciones como en el caso del orangután, han quedado estancados y abandonados en las estructuras antiguas y así llevan ya varios meses’.

Pedro Pozas ha indicado que el Proyecto Gran Simio ha intentado reiteradas veces ponerse en contacto con las Autoridades del Ayuntamiento sin obtener respuesta.

‘No solamente enviaron un Buro-Fax a los responsables de Bioparc para que informaran por el destino de esos animales abandonados, sino que además se presentó un escrito registrado en el Ayuntamiento pidiendo poder ver al orangután y al resto de los animales y comprobar en qué situación se encontraban’, ha señalado.

Pozas ha indicado que, ‘ante el silencio por respuesta, los responsables del PGS no han tenido más remedio que denunciarlo al SEPRONA, en base a diferentes puntos de la Ley 32/2003 en la que se regula la conservación de fauna silvestre en los parques zoológicos, como es la de no proporcionar el enriquecimiento ambiental de sus recintos mejorando su bienestar y por una falta grave recogida en el artículo 13, punto 4 por el maltrato y abandono de los animales.

Ha dicho que ‘en diez años, el orangután habró desaparecido de las selvas de Sumatra y Borneo por la deforestación y acoso del ser humano, convirtiéndose en una especie de gran valor, por lo que, según los propios responsables del Proyecto Gran Simio, no entienden su abandono y el que no haya podido estar ubicado en las instalaciones de Bioparc’.

Pedro Pozas ha explicado que ‘el estado en que se encuentra de total abandono el orangután en las instalaciones del antiguo zoológico de Valencia, sin que pueda entretenerse o estar en un lugar en el que su bienestar prime, le puede llevar a la depresión, a comportamientos patológicos si no lo está ya e incluso a la muerte’.

‘Nos impiden comprobar cómo esta, por lo que entendemos que nos ocultan algo. Los demás animales que se encuentran allí, suponemos que pueden estar en iguales condiciones’, ha comentado finalmente Pedro Pozas Terrados, director ejecutivo y coordinador del Proyecto Gran Simio en España.

Fuente: http://actualidad.terra.es/ciencia/articulo/denuncian-seprona-valencia-2744342.htm

Central Florida Zoo to build new Sumatran Orangutan exhibit

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

Orlando Business Journal - by Melanie Stawicki Azam

The Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens in Sanford is gearing up for an $11 million Sumatran Swamp Forest project, featuring two new exhibits that will open during the next two years.

Zoo CEO Joe Montisano wants to break ground on a $3.2 million Sumatran tiger exhibit by the end of this year, with work taking about eight months to complete.

Plans call for getting a pair of tigers from another U.S. zoo or facility, breeding them and eventually having four. “It’s entirely feasible to have the tigers on the property by 2009,” Montisano said.

The zoo also will start building an orangutan exhibit next year and open it in 2010 with six animals.

Source: http://www.bizjournals.com/orlando/stories/2008/08/25/story5.html

No Way to Treat an Orangutan: Willie Smits in Wildlife Conservation Society Magazine

Friday, September 5th, 2008

By Nancy Simmons

“Somebody stuck a crate in my face at the market in Balikpapan. Looking out between the slats were the very, very sad eyes of a baby orangutan. I couldn’t forget them. That evening I went back after the market closed. Walking around in the dark, I heard a horrible gasping sound. The baby in its crate was on the garbage dump, dying. I picked her up. Someone sleeping under a table woke up and chased me, ‘Hey Sir. Mr. Money. Mr. Money.’ I didn’t stop.”

Willie Smits
Founder, Borneo Orangutan
Survival Foundation (BOS)

In 1989, Willie Smits came across a sick baby orangutan in a vegetable market. He nursed her back to health and named her Uce for the labored sound she made while gasping for breath. More orangutan rescues followed. With small amounts of money contributed by thousands of schoolchildren in Indonesia, Smits began what became the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS) to rehabilitate orphaned and misused orangutans and return them to a safe place in the wild. He confiscated orangutans people kept as pets, exploited as prostitutes, used in medical research, and trained to perform in shows, like the orangutan boxing matches that are staged in Thailand.

In June 2008, Willie Smits came to the United States to promote the release of his new book Thinkers of the Jungle (h.f. ullmann, 2007). Written with investigative journalist Gerd Schuster, and featuring images by photographer Jay Ullal, the book created a sensation when it was published in Germany. In New York City, Senior Editor Nancy Simmons talked with Smits about his hopes for the orangutans’ future.

Uce was the beginning. Two weeks later, someone from the Ministry of Forestry gave me another sick orangutan baby—a male we named Dodoy. We pulled him through, too. At the time, my wife and I had two human babies at home, and she was pregnant with our third son. This was the basis of my understanding of orangutans. Any mother can see when her baby is hungry, or sleepy, or has a stomachache. She knows it without words. And it’s the same thing with orangutans. They are so much like us.

No one can dispute that, once they look at the pictures in the book—how orangutans fish, how they swim, how they make art. These are beings that can feel, and they know what dangers they are facing.

One orangutan mother put her baby on the road alongside a burning forest. She knew her baby would die if she didn’t. Only when she saw a truck driver stop and pick up her baby, did she turn around and go back into the smoke. This is like the story of Solomon—a mother not wanting her child to be split in two would rather give up that child.

Smits believes that protecting orangutans in their habitat not only benefits our shaggy cousins but also the environment and biological diversity, the poorest of the poor in Borneo, and all the world’s people.

On Borneo, the peat swamp forests are one of the few remaining refuges for orangutans. Now, that habitat is disappearing at a tremendous rate, due mainly to the spread of oil palm plantations.

Oil palm jobs are dirty, dangerous, and low paying. In some areas, the local people lose all the rights to their land, and they lose the forest. Not only that, the peat swamp forests turn into CO2 volcanoes when they are drained and burned to plant oil palms. They emit so much greenhouse gas that Indonesia has become the world’s third largest producer of CO2.

So orangutans have to be the ambassadors for the wake-up call to the world. Consumption patterns in the West help fuel the orangutans’ extinction in the East. More than 10 percent of the products in Western supermarkets contain palm oil, from cookies to cosmetics. Labels often just say vegetable oil. We need to push manufacturers to use only palm oil that comes from sustainable plantations. New oil palm plantations should be planted only on degraded land. No more of the peat forests should be cut. This can be verified by satellite radar monitoring.

If the current trend continues, there will not be a forest big enough to support 1,000 orangutans, the minimum needed for the population to survive in the long term. There will be orangutans in remote places, but no longer living as a species with all of its culture intact—the know-how of what plants to use for medicine, how to make tools, the knowledge of generations. The fact that we have 1,000 orangutans in our care means we have to work harder to save their habitat.

My hope is that people will read this book and get angry. And they will say, “We can’t let this happen.”

Smits has not given up. BOS is helping to regenerate lost forests.

It is not all doom and gloom. There is hope.

Samboja Lestari [“Samboja forever and ever,” an area razed for timber] was grass desert with no wildlife at all. We are working with the local people to replant the area. Already, air temperatures have fallen 3 to 5 degrees centigrade, cloud cover has increased by 12 percent and rainfall by 25 percent. One hundred thirty-seven species of birds are found here. Other animals bring in seeds from far away to further enrich the biodiversity of the more than 1,000 plants we brought in to start the restoration. At the same time we’ve created jobs for local men and women—in the tree nursery, the compost plant, as fire watchers and fighters, road and dam construction workers, and a lot more. Families use the land between the trees to plant their crops, and they will be able to tap the sugar palms that are growing as a source of income. These people have access to schools and fresh drinking water. And they have become the protectors of the rainforest.

They are planting a fence of thorny palms as a border between the orangutan’s sanctuary area and humans. Some 200 rescued orangutans are living there, and there will be more when the fence is complete. Besides healthy orangutans, this will be a place for those most in need: orangutans that have hepatitis B, hepatitis C, or Down syndrome. The blind orangutans that were shot in the eyes. The ones with their hands cut off for eating a palm shoot. The victims. There will be mothers with their infants, but this is not a place where visitors can hug cute babies.

How can people help?

At Samboja Lestari, we have built our eco-lodge—mostly from natural materials. It’s a haven in the middle of the growing jungle. Visitors come here to work with the scientists, helping in the tree nursery, so they can start to understand the complexity of rebuilding a rainforest on the poorest soils.

It’s not too late. Come and plant some trees. Adopt an orangutan. Support us in saving rainforests. Become involved in promoting the use of sustainably obtained palm oil.

When Thinkers of the Jungle came out in Germany, the country had many electricity-generating plants using palm oil. The parliamentarians who read the book and visited Samboja Lestari have proposed new laws to prevent using this fuel until it is proven that the plants are running on palm oil that has not been grown on newly cleared rainforests. And Germany is pushing the European Union for new regulations. The book already has done an enormous amount of good, and I hope we can achieve something similar here in America.

What happened to Uce?

She was reintroduced to a forest area near Balikpapan. I see her about every two years. Dodoy is the father of Uce’s second son, Matahari. I have a video made a few weeks ago showing Dodoy with Uce and Matahari playing together. So the first and second orangutans that I rescued have had a baby together. Uce is most likely pregnant with her third child. Her first son, Bintang, is living independently, the first free-born, wild orangutan from orphaned, reintroduced orangutans to do so without the presence of wild orangutans living there.

Orangutan mothers nurture their babies for many years. When Jay Ullal photographed Uce holding seven-month-old Matahari in 2003 for a story in Stern magazine, she was very leery of him getting too close—until he snapped Polaroids and showed them to her.

Yes, Uce was pleased with those photos. I have been told that she has come to the guards’ hut in the forest seven times to visit the BOS ranger, Misry, to look at them again.

Download the article as a PDF

Source: http://www.wcs.org/magazine/orangutan-rescue

About Death, Just Like Us or Pretty Much Unaware?

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

By NATALIE ANGIER
Published: September 1, 2008
Source: The New York Times

As anybody who has grieved inconsolably over the death of a loved one can attest, extended mourning is, in part, a perverse kind of optimism. Surely this bottomless, unwavering sorrow will amount to something, goes the tape loop. Surely if I keep it up long enough I’ll accomplish my goal, and the person will stop being dead.

Last week the Internet and European news outlets were flooded with poignant photographs of Gana, an 11-year-old gorilla at the Münster Zoo in Germany, holding up the body of her dead baby, Claudio, and pursing her lips toward his lifeless fingers. Claudio died at the age of 3 months of an apparent heart defect, and for days Gana refused to surrender his corpse to zookeepers, a saga that provoked among her throngs of human onlookers admiration and compassion and murmurings that, you see? Gorillas, and probably a lot of other animals as well, have a grasp of their mortality and will grieve for the dead and are really just like us after all.

Nobody knows what emotions swept through Gana’s head and heart as she persisted in cradling and nuzzling the remains of her son. But primatologists do know this: Among nearly all species of apes and monkeys in the wild, a mother will react to the death of her infant as Gana did — by clutching the little decedent to her breast and treating it as though it were still alive. For days or even weeks afterward, she will take it with her everywhere and fight off anything that threatens to snatch it away. “The only time I was ever mobbed by langurs was when I tried to inspect a baby corpse,” said the primatologist Sarah Hrdy. Only gradually will she allow the distance between herself and the ever-gnarlier carcass to grow.

Yes, we’re a lot like other primates, particularly the great apes, with whom we have more than 98 percent of our genes in common. Yet elaborate displays of apparent maternal grief like Gana’s may reveal less about our shared awareness of death than our shared impulse to act as though it didn’t exist. Dr. Hrdy, author of “Mother Nature” and the coming “Mothers and Others,” said it made adaptive sense for a primate mother to hang onto her motionless baby and keep her hopes high for a while. “If the baby wasn’t dead, but temporarily comatose, because it was sick or fallen from the tree, well, it might come back to life,” Dr. Hrdy said. “We’re talking about primates who have singleton births after long periods of gestation. Each baby represents an enormous investment for the mother.”

Everywhere in nature, biologists say, are examples of animals behaving as though they were at least vaguely aware of death’s brutal supremacy and yet unpersuaded that it had anything to do with them. Michael Wilson, an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota who has studied chimpanzees at Jane Goodall’s research site in Gombe, said chimps were “very different from us in terms of what they understand about death and the difference between the living and the dead.” The Hallmark hanky moment alternates with the Roald Dahl macabre. A mother will try to nurse her dead baby back to life, Dr. Wilson said, “but when the infant becomes quite decayed, she’ll carry it by just one leg or sling it over her back in a casual way.”

Juvenile chimpanzees display signs of genuine grief when their mothers die. In one famous case in Gombe, when a matriarch of the troop named Flo died at the age of 50-plus years, her son, Flint, proved inconsolable. Flint was 8 years old and could easily have cared for himself, but he had been unusually attached to his mother and refused to leave her corpse’s side. Within a month, the son, too, died.

Yet adult chimpanzees rarely react with overt sentimentality to the death of another adult, Dr. Wilson said. As a rule, sick or elderly adults go off into the forest to die alone, he said, and those that die in company often do so at the hands of other adults, who “sometimes make sure the victim is dead, and sometimes they don’t,” he said. The same laissez-faire attitude toward death-versus-life applies to chimpanzee hunting behavior. “When they’re hunting red colobus monkeys, they will either kill the monkeys first or simply immobilize them and start eating them while they’re still alive,” Dr. Wilson said. “The monkey will continue screaming and thrashing as they pull its guts out, which is very unpleasant for humans who are watching.”

For some animals, the death of a conspecific is a little tinkle of the dinner bell. A lion will approach another lion’s corpse, give it a sniff and a lick, and if the corpse is fresh enough, will start to eat it. For others, a corpse is considered dangerous and must be properly disposed of. Among naked mole rats, for example, which are elaborately social mammals that spend their entire lives in a system of underground tunnels, a corpse is detected quickly and then dragged, kicked or carried to the communal latrine. And when the latrine is filled, said Paul Sherman of Cornell University, “they seal it off with an earthen plug, presumably for hygienic reasons, and dig a new one.”

Among the social insects, the need for prompt corpse management is considered so pressing that there are dedicated undertakers, workers that within a few minutes of a death will pick up the body and hoist or fly it outside, to a safe distance from hive or nest, the better to protect against possible contagious disease. Honeybees are such compulsive housekeepers that if a mouse or other large creature, drawn by the warmth or promise of honey, happens to make its way into the hive and die inside, the bees, unable to bodily remove it, will embalm it in resin collected from trees. “You can find mummified mice inside beehives that are completely preserved right down to their whiskers,” said Gene E. Robinson, professor of entomology at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign.

But all is not grim for those dead in tooth and claw. Researchers have determined that elephants deserve their longstanding reputation as exceptionally death-savvy beings, their concern for the remains of their fellows approaching what we might call reverence. Reporting in the journal Biology Letters, Karen McComb of the University of Sussex and her colleagues found that when African elephants were presented with an array of bones and other natural objects, the elephants spent considerably more time exploring the skulls and tusks of elephants than they did anything else, including the skulls of rhinoceroses and other large mammals.

George Wittemyer of Colorado State University and his colleagues described in Applied Animal Behavior Science the extraordinary reactions of different elephants to the death of one of their prominent matriarchs. “One female stood over the body, rocking back and forth,” Dr. Wittemyer said in an interview. “Others raised their foot over her head. Others touched their tusks to hers. They would do their behaviors, and then leave.”

They were saying goodbye, or maybe, Won’t you please come back home?

San Diego Zoo’s Clyde Turns 32

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Photos courtesy of Juan Carlos Fernandez, orangutan keeper extraordinaire at the San Diego Zoo. Check out the San Diego Zoo’s live ape cam.

Clyde’s birthday box contained a Boomer toy with some nuts and raisins. Fresh grapes were hung all around the exhibit. Clyde had a blast.

Do animals have emotions?

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Look deep into her eyes … Is she sad or do we just think so? Many scientists now believe that animals feel emotions too.


Gorilla mother Gana carries her dead baby at the zoo in Muenster, western Germany

By John-Paul Flintoff

Source: Times Online

A three-month-old baby died in its mother’s arms earlier this month. For hours the mother, Gana, gently shook and stroked her son Claudio, apparently trying to restore movement to his lolling head and limp arms. People who watched were moved to tears — unfazed by the fact that Gana and Claudio were “only” gorillas in Münster zoo, northern Germany.

It wasn’t just witnesses who were moved. A British woman who read about Gana’s loss online posted this comment: “From one bereaved mother to another — Gana, you are in my thoughts. My baby boy died last June and you wouldn’t wish it on any form of life.”

Some, to be fair, reacted differently. One newspaper writer asked bluntly whether we are “ too quick to project human feelings onto animals”. However, Dr Bill Sellers, a primatologist at Manchester University, believes gorillas experience pain and loss in a similar way to humans, “but of course it’s extremely difficult to prove scientifically”.

As Einstein said: “Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted, counts.” Only a few years ago doctors did not give anaesthetics to tiny babies, believing they did not feel pain. By focusing narrowly on specifics — in this case, the emotional capacity of animals — scientists may fail to take account of what seems obvious and meaningful to the rest of us. The scientific experience of the world must seem a bit like watching a football match at night, with a single spotlight instead of floodlights.

Many of those who commented on Gana’s story online took a robustly anti-science line, asking angrily how “experts” could be so idiotic. “Have they not heard a cow calling for days when her calves are removed?” asked one. Others described how dogs and cats had become “depressed” by the death of their own kind — and indeed by the loss of human companions. These people would turn the sceptics’ question on its head: “Haven’t we been rather slow to recognise that animals have emotions?”

The question goes to the heart of our way of life. If animals have feelings, it is much harder to justify experimenting on them in laboratories, ogling them in zoos and farming them intensively — or, indeed, at all. The academics attempting to resolve this fall into two camps. Behaviourists accept only the results of tests, rejecting any unproven suggestion that animals think or feel or are even capable of emotion. Ethologists, on the other hand, are prepared to draw conclusions from studies and observation, anecdote and personal observation.

Ethologists, these days, are in the ascendant. One of the best known is Marc Bekoff, professor of biology at the University of Colorado and co-founder with the primatologist Jane Goodall of the group Ethologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

Sceptical behaviourists often ask him, “How do you know dogs and elephants feel joy or jealousy or embarrassment?”

Bekoff replies: “One retort is to say: how do you know they don’t? Darwin said there was continuity in evolution, so the differences between species are differences in degree rather than differences in kind. They’re shades of grey.

“If we feel jealousy, then dogs and wolves and elephants and chimpanzees feel jealousy. Animal emotions are not necessarily identical to ours but there’s no reason to think they should be. Their hearts and stomachs and brains also differ from ours, but this doesn’t stop us from saying they have hearts, stomachs and brains. There’s dog joy and chimpanzee joy and pig joy, and dog grief, chimpanzee grief and pig grief.”

Although many people would feel comfortable associating emotions with large, charismatic mammals, hard evidence increasingly suggests that other animals are similarly capable. The neurobiologist Erich Jarvis of Duke University, North Carolina, argues that evolution has created more than one way to generate complex behaviour; and that they are comparable.

Some birds have evolved cognitive abilities far more complex than those of many mammals. Dr Nathan Emery, a neuropsychologist at Cambridge University’s department of zoology, suggests that in their cognitive ability, corvids — the bird family that includes crows, ravens, rooks, jackdaws, jays and magpies — rival the great apes and might well be considered “feathered apes”.

Esther Woolfson, author of a new book, Corvus: A Life with Birds, has lived for years with a variety of these feathered apes. Woolfson doesn’t believe that her birds understand every word she says — the claim beloved of pet owners everywhere — but she does believe they have emotions. “I have seen — or believe that I have seen — in birds, impatience, frustration, anxiety in the urge to impart news, affection, fear, amusement (the last being a difficult one, I admit, to prove, merely on the basis of watching the look on a magpie’s face as its booby-trap was successful) and, particularly, joy.”

One bird, Spike, would balance an object — a pamphlet, a rubber glove, a matchbox — on top of a half-open cupboard door, then wait until it fell onto the head of the next person to open the cupboard.

Her birds also seemed to empathise: “To have a magpie, on seeing me weep, hover on top of the fridge, wings outstretched, tremble for a few moments then fly down to my knee to crouch, squeaking quietly, edging ever nearer until his body was close against mine, seemed to me at the time, (as it does now) an act of an unexpected tenderness that I can interpret only as empathy. There may be other explanations of their behaviour, but I can’t think what they might be.”

Bekoff agrees that we can no longer associate emotion only with the charismatic mammals: “The fact is that fish show fear. Rodents can empathise. This is hard science. With birds and mammals there is no doubt that they have a very rich ensemble of emotions.”

Satish Kumar, editor of Resurgence magazine, was for several years a Jain monk. The Jain respect for life is extreme: Kumar didn’t wash his hair for years in case there were fleas in it. He gave up being a monk eventually, for other reasons, but still believes that all living beings should be respected.

“We are animals. And we have a kind of empathy with the animal kingdom. They’re our kin. There is a slight difference between a cat and a dog and a chimp and a female human and a male one and a black human and a white one. These differences are very small: 98% of our DNA is the same as in other animals such as primates,” Kumar says.

“There used to be a time when people thought that animals had no soul, just as they thought that slaves or Africans or women had no soul. We realised a long time ago, as Jains, that animals have souls.

They do feel pain and joy. Mostly they feel what we feel. Animals have empathy and intelligence. We have to be humble and accept that we are only one kind of animal and these are others.”

Jains divide the living world into several categories. “Living things like trees and vegetation have only one sense — touch. Then you have two senses, touch and taste, the animals that eat. Then there are animals with a third sense, smell. Fourth are the ones that have sight, too. And then hearing. Intelligence is limited in these cases because they get their information through fewer senses than us,” says Kumar. “But look at people who are not literate. Literacy is a relatively new thing. Before that we had only an oral culture. That does not mean that people lacked intelligence; just techniques.

“So even mosquitos have something. Even viruses and fungi have intelligence. Nature is full of intelligence. That intelligence manifests in different ways. A tree knows how to bear fruit.”

Many people will reject this as sentimental nonsense, but scientific evidence is increasingly providing support for such ideas. Dodder, the parasitic plant, appears to “choose” which host plants to parasitise on the basis of an initial evaluation of a potential host’s nutritional status. Transplanted shoots are more likely to coil on (“accept”) host plants of high nutritional status and grow away from (“reject”) hosts of poor quality. Crucially, this acceptance or rejection occurs before any food has been taken from the host. We do not yet understand how the parasite evaluates the host’s food value.

However, intelligence is not the same as emotion. Studies of intelligence and ability have been around for ever — a new one last week showed that elephants can do maths.

Evidence of emotional capacity, conceivably older in evolutionary terms than intelligence, has the greater potential to change the way we treat animals. You might put an animal into a circus if it did tricks, but if you knew that this upset the animal you would take it out again. (Unless you were a psychopath, many of whom have been shown to be cruel to animals as well as humans.)

To Bekoff, the great distinction between living beings is whether they have eyes: “The eyes tell it all.

If we can stand it, we should look into the fear-filled eyes of animals who suffer at our hands, in horrible conditions of captivity, in slaughterhouses and research labs, fur farms, zoos, rodeos and circuses. Dare to look into the sunken eyes of animals who are afraid or feeling all sorts of pain and then try to deny to yourself and to others that these individuals are feeling anything. I bet you can’t.”

Bekoff abandoned a promising career at medical school for this reason. “A very intelligent cat looked at me and asked, ‘Why me?’ I couldn’t find the words to tell him why or how badly I felt for torturing and killing him.”

Strict behaviourists might laugh at this, saying the animal’s expression was merely a physical response to particular stimuli. But if they are consistent they must say the same about human emotions, too.

Marian Stamp Dawkins, professor of animal behaviour at Oxford University, points out that even in humans it is difficult to measure emotion: “There are three ways: we can listen to what people say they feel; measure body temperature and heart rate and hormonal levels; and observe behaviour. Unfortunately, the three emotional systems do not necessarily correlate with each other. Sometimes, for example, strong subjective emotions occur with no obvious autonomic changes — as when someone experiences a rapid switch from excitement to fear on a roller coaster.”

Ultimately, the minds and feelings of individuals other than ourselves are private. “Access is limited because we can’t really get into the head or heart of another being — and that includes other people,” says Bekoff.

“I often imagine a dinner table conversation between a scientist and his or her child concerning research in which the nature of mother–infant bonds is studied by taking the infant away from their mother.

“Child: ‘What did you do today?’

“Parent: ‘Oh, I removed two baby chimpanzees from their mother to see how they reacted to this treatment.’

“Child: ‘Do you think the baby minded being taken from her mother?’

“Parent: ‘Well, I’m not sure — that’s why I did it.’

“Child: ‘But what do you think the baby’s fighting to get back to her mother and her writhing and screaming meant?’

“Parent: ‘It’s getting late, isn’t it time for bed?’ ”

Central Florida Zoo to Build New Sumatran Orangutan Exhibit

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

The Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens in Sanford is gearing up for an $11 million Sumatran Swamp Forest project, featuring two new exhibits that will open during the next two years.

Zoo CEO Joe Montisano wants to break ground on a $3.2 million Sumatran tiger exhibit by the end of this year, with work taking about eight months to complete.

Plans call for getting a pair of tigers from another U.S. zoo or facility, breeding them and eventually having four. “It’s entirely feasible to have the tigers on the property by 2009,” Montisano said.

The zoo also will start building an orangutan exhibit next year and open it in 2010 with six individuals.

Source: http://www.bizjournals.com/orlando/stories/2008/08/25/story5.html

Newborn Orangutan at Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo

Friday, August 8th, 2008

Visit the source to see video and photos!

Tampa, Florida - A newborn orangutan was welcomed into the world late afternoon Sunday, August 3, at Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo. Although this is the fourth baby for experienced mom “Dee Dee,” it is her first to be born on exhibit.

“As a fourth-time mom, Dee Dee was clearly at ease with this birth, delivering quickly in her own way and time, which for her was outdoors,” said Angela Belcher, assistant curator of primates. “Josie,” another adult female orangutan, helped to clean the baby up after the birth.

The zoo’s primate keepers have monitored Dee Dee and the newborn closely since birth. Dee Dee has been given access to the outdoor exhibit; however, keepers report that she has alternated between her den and outdoors with the infant, resting and nursing. The new baby has been named “RanDee” in honor of dad, “Rango” and mom Dee Dee.

Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo is currently home to five Bornean orangutans including dominant male Rango, the oldest living male Bornean orangutan in an AZA-accredited facility, adult female Josie with juvenile daughter “Hadiah,” and Dee Dee with new baby RanDee. Previous offspring have relocated to other facilities accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) as part of the Species Survival Plan (SSP)

Native to Malaysia and Indonesia, the longhaired red orangutan can be found on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. Orangutan (pronounced oran-gu-tan with no “g” on the end) is a Malay word that means “man of the forest.” The species is considered endangered in the wild due to habitat destruction and the pet trade.

Like humans, Bornean orangutans have gestation periods of approximately nine months. A female becomes sexually mature at age six to seven and may only give birth once every six years.

Babies are born with a thin layer of red hair and cream-colored skin around the face and abdominal region, weighing only about 2-3 pounds. Orangutan offspring are dependent on their mothers for about seven to 10 years, staying close by for comfort long after they are weaned.

The new baby will ride on Dee Dee’s chest and back for the first few years and will nurse for three to five years, on average. She will grow to be approximately 70-80 pounds. As one of the world’s largest primates, the orangutan is second only to the gorilla in size.

“Dee Dee is a great mom, and very experienced,” noted Belcher. “Although he won’t help much with the infant at this stage, we are fortunate that Rango is a good father — very patient and tolerant of offspring.”

The Bornean orangutans at Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo are one of more than 40 species in the zoo’s SSP, a cooperative breeding and conservation program managed by AZA to carefully maintain a healthy, self-sustaining captive population.

Lowry Park Zoo is located at 1101 W. Sligh Avenue in Tampa, one mile west of I-275 (exit 48). The Zoo is open seven days a week, from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., with extended hours on select nights during the summer. Parking is free. Visit _blank” href=”http://LowryParkZoo.com”>LowryParkZoo.com or call (813) 935-8552 for more information.

Source: http://www.tampabays10.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=86732&catid=8

Icy treats help Louisville Zoo animals cope with heat

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Ice is fun!

Teak says the party\'s over

View the complete slideshow at the Courier-Journal Online

By Sheldon S. Shafer

Assuming the alpha role, Teak, a 20-year-old, 225-pound male orangutan, grabbed the blue plastic children’s pool filled with rock ice and ripped it down from the fake rock where it had been placed.

The ice chunks — laden with gelatin, frozen grapes and other goodies that orangutans relish — flew in all directions as Teak romped across the glass-enclosed exhibit at the Islands, with the pool trailing in hand.

“He demolished it,” said Kara Bussabarger, the Louisville Zoo’s spokeswoman who had arranged for reporters to see an “animal-enrichment exercise” and also how the animals cope with the hot weather.

The exercises are intended to stimulate the animals mentally and physically, officials said.

Throughout this weekend most of the animals will get a variety of enrichment training, much of which is being developed around ice treats to help them withstand the expected 90-degree heat.

Lions and tigers, for instance, will get blocks of ice laced with horse blood and with pieces of meat frozen inside, Franklin said. Gorillas and many other animals will get chunks of ice filled with pieces of fruit and other tasty morsels.

Some of the enrichment exercises involve the animals having to unwrap and handle the ice objects.

“They have to learn to manipulate the treat, but, because it’s hot, we don’t want to make them work too hard,” said Jane Anne Franklin, the zoo’s supervisor of animal training.

Franklin said it appeared that the orangs were “having a great time” with the ice. She said they are experts at “figuring out how to get into things.”

For the most part, the animals are handling the heat fairly well, officials said, adding that Scotty, the baby elephant, probably will spend most of the weekend swimming in the elephant yard pool.

During yesterday’s exercise, with the one pool’s contents in shambles, Teak’s female companions, Amber, 20, and Bella, 24, stayed out of harm’s way, nibbling on ice treats from a second filled child’s pool on the other side of the exhibit.

The woolly orangs shot into the exhibit from the holding area as soon as they saw the pools and the keepers turned them loose. They knew something good was up, officials said.

While Amber and Bella headed for the ice, Teak strutted his stuff, climbing, tumbling and pressing his big flat face against the exhibit glass wall as several dozen humans on the other side stared back.

“He’s in charge. He’s on display,” Franklin said.

Among the crowd paying rapt attention to Teak’s antics were Stacey Haley and her daughters, Brittany, 21, and Kaysyee, 11, who live in western Illinois and were passing through Louisville on vacation.

“They are awesome. He’s the biggest orangutan I’ve ever seen,” Brittany said of Teak.

Source: http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080801/NEWS01/80801035/1008

Leila the Orangutan Drowns in German Zoo

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

This is the face of tragedy. Another orangutan needlessly lost…
DON’T FEED THE ANIMALS. Period. ~ RZ

Staff at a Hamburg zoo say one of their orangutans died needlessly after a visitor broke park rules against feeding animals. The animal, they claim, drowned in pursuit of a bread roll that had been lobbed into her enclosure.


An orangutan drowned in a German zoo on Wednesday after she fell into a water basin while trying to fish out a bread roll a visitor had thrown into her enclosure.

Zookeepers at the Tierpark Hagenbeck in Hamburg rushed to Leila’s aid, but by the time they had pulled her out of the water she was dead.

Chief zookeeper Walter Wolters said a visitor was responsible for the drowning. “Leila wanted to get the roll, but instead fell into the water and drowned,” he told German news agency DPA.

Leila, who was 10 years old, had lived in the Hamburg zoo since birth. Wolters said all the zoo’s staff were very upset by Leila’s death. “We are especially devastated by her death, because orangutans are a very endangered species and Leila was a valuable breeding animal,” he told the Hamburger Abendblatt newspaper.

The visitor who threw the roll has not yet been identified. The zoo forbids the feeding of animals and has signs up that expressly remind visitors of the ban. Staff are now considering whether to file charges with police.

Source: http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/0,1518,569266,00.html

Taiwan: The Story of Pipi the Orangutan

Monday, July 28th, 2008

This story is originally from May 9, 2008
Source: http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2008/05/09/2003411457


Photo Caption: Scientists from National Pingtung University of Science and Technology prepare to deliver Pipi, a pongo orangutan, from Tucheng, Taipei County, to her new home inside the school in Pingtung County yesterday. The owner of the animal had to give her away because she has become overweight. Photo Credit: WU JEN-CHIEH, TAIPEI TIMES

Orangutan moved to wildlife center after 18 years

Importing orangutans became illegal in 1999, but most orangutans in Taiwan were imported before 1999 or were illegally traded after that year

A 20-year-old female orangutan caged in Taipei County for 18 years has been moved to a wildlife animal center in souther Pingtung County because of the better living environment there, an official at Taipei County’s Agriculture Bureau said yesterday.

The center, which belongs to the National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, has advanced research in wildlife animal conservation and an exclusive area for housing wildlife animals.

The orangutan, named Pipi (皮皮), had been living in a cage that was placed beside a temple on a mountain climbing path in Taipei County’s Tucheng City (土城市), the official said.

Pipi was raised by owner Lin Cheng-hsiung (林正雄), who applied for legal registration to raise the animal when Pipi was only six.

Raising orangutans is legal in Taiwan as long as the proper registration is made, the official explained.

However, too much feeding from tourists on the path and Pipi’s insufficient exercise because of the limited space in the cage have caused the animal to become overweight, the official said.

According to the official, Lin is not able to improve the current environment for Pipi although he had always wanted to do so.

Lin also worried that Pipi will end up living the rest of his life alone in the cage as he could not find her a companion, the official said.

Persuaded by Taipei County’s Agriculture Bureau and the wildlife animal housing center, Lin agreed to annul his rights over Pipi in the hope of giving her an ideal place to stay for the rest of her life, the official said.

Chen Chen-chih (陳貞志), a veterinarian who accompanied Pipi all the way to her new house, said Pipi would first be quarantined for three months for health checkups. She will then gradually get to know the center’s other six female and more than 10 male orangutans, Chen said.

Chen said the center does not rule out the possibility of Pipi’s having babies, adding that Pipi is at a suitable age for giving birth.

Lin said he intends to visit Pipi, whom he described as his “daughter.”

Perth Zoo orangutan gives WA eye surgeon vision

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

Nic White

July 26, 2008 06:00pm

PERTH Zoo orangutan Hsing Hsing has provided valuable insight to the eye surgeon who battled to save his eye.
Bill Morgan said he was “dumbfounded” by how similar its eyes were to humans.

“If I hadn’t seen his face, I would have thought I was looking at a human eye. The tissue and nerves looked exactly the same,” he said.

More pics of Hsing Hsing in theatre

Prof Morgan and four other specialists from the Lions Eye Institute donated their time and expertise to the zoo to help cure the 33-year-old ape of glaucoma.

“It was an enormously interesting opportunity, but as we do animal research we thought it was a great way to give back what we have learnt from animals,” he said.

But the eye had to be removed when surgeons found it had suffered 98 per cent vision loss and was causing the primate pain and discomfort.

Prof Morgan said an operation to halt the glaucoma’s progress had only a 40 per cent chance of success and would not have restored any sight.

Hsing Hsing was diagnosed with type two diabetes in 1997 but showed almost no sign of diabetic damage to the eye.

“It’s a testament to the zoo’s management of his condition, I was very surprised,” Prof Morgan said.

Source: http://www.news.com.au/perthnow/story/0,21598,24081261-2761,00.html