Tag Archives: Zoo

Sabrina Carpenter Shares Photo of Sydney Zoo Visit with Taylor Swift as She Reflects on Her Eras Tour Run – PEOPLE

  1. Sabrina Carpenter Shares Photo of Sydney Zoo Visit with Taylor Swift as She Reflects on Her Eras Tour Run PEOPLE
  2. Sabrina Carpenter posts throwback snap of her and Taylor Swift at Sydney Zoo as she reminisces about her Eras Daily Mail
  3. Sabrina Carpenter Shares Eras Tour Photos, Reflects On ‘Taybrina Era’ Billboard
  4. Sabrina Carpenter bids adieu to Eras Tour and Taylor Swift; know these details about the Taybrina Era Hindustan Times
  5. Sabrina Carpenter shares new photo with Taylor Swift at Sydney Zoo as she ends stint as Eras Tour opener Marca English

Read original article here

‘You are the father’: Maury Povich announces orangutan Siska’s paternity results at Denver Zoo – The Washington Post

  1. ‘You are the father’: Maury Povich announces orangutan Siska’s paternity results at Denver Zoo The Washington Post
  2. The Denver Zoo didn’t know who the father of a baby orangutan was. They called in Maury Povich to deliver the paternity test results CBS News
  3. The Denver Zoo got Maury to announce the paternity results for the newest member of its orangutan family Denver 7 Colorado News
  4. ‘You are the father’: Maury Povich announces paternity results of Denver Zoo orangutan FOX 31 Denver
  5. Maury Povich Helps Denver Zoo Reveal the Paternity of Baby Orangutan PEOPLE

Read original article here

Ryan Reynolds Joked That His And Blake Lively’s House Has Turned Into A “Zoo” As He Opened Up About Their Fourth Baby For The First Time – BuzzFeed News

  1. Ryan Reynolds Joked That His And Blake Lively’s House Has Turned Into A “Zoo” As He Opened Up About Their Fourth Baby For The First Time BuzzFeed News
  2. Ryan Reynolds Says Blake Lively and New Baby Are ‘Doing Fantastic’ PEOPLE
  3. Ryan Reynolds Shares How Blake Lively Is Doing After Welcoming Baby No. 4 E! NEWS
  4. Ryan Reynolds Gives Update After Welcoming Fourth Child With Blake Lively Parade Magazine
  5. Ryan Reynolds Says His House Is a ‘Zoo’ After Blake Lively Gave Birth to Baby No. 4: ‘We’re Very Excited’ Us Weekly
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Dallas Zoo says tamarin monkeys that went missing for a day are healthy and uninjured



CNN
 — 

The emperor tamarin monkeys that disappeared from the Dallas Zoo earlier this week but were recovered by police in an abandoned home on Tuesday are healthy and uninjured, the zoo said.

“Emperor tamarin monkeys, Bella and Finn, were so happy to snuggle into their nest sack here at the Zoo last night!” the zoo said on Facebook. “Our veterinary and animal care teams have said, beyond losing a bit of weight, they show no signs of injury and both started eating and drinking almost immediately once the team completed health exams on Tuesday night.”

The zoo said the monkeys will go through a quarantine period before being returned to their zoo habitat.

The zoo also noted that video from their surveillance cameras released on Tuesday “seems to have been critical in generating a tip that led to the recovery of the tamarins.” Further, there is a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and indictment of the person responsible, the zoo said.

The health update comes two days after the zoo said that two tamarin monkeys were missing and that their habitat had been “intentionally compromised.” The Dallas Police said they had reason to believe the monkeys were taken, the zoo said.

The disappearance followed a series of suspicious incidents at the zoo in the last month involving a leopard, langur monkeys and a vulture, all of which have led to a hike in security.

After a tip, the missing tamarin monkeys were found Tuesday inside a closet in an abandoned home in Lancaster, about 15 miles away from the zoo. The police released a photo of one monkey in the closet, standing atop what looked like fencing.

“We are thrilled beyond belief to share that our two emperor tamarin monkeys have been found,” the Dallas Zoo said Tuesday evening. “They will be evaluated by our veterinarians this evening.”

Elsewhere, a Louisiana zoo reported the weekend theft of 12 squirrel monkeys.

The Dallas Zoo learned Monday the duo of emperor tamarin monkeys was missing from their enclosure, it said.

Dallas police concluded the monkeys’ habitat was intentionally cut open, and it was “believed the animals were intentionally taken from the enclosure,” they said.

The zoo was closed Monday due to inclement weather, it earlier had announced, with the closure extended through Wednesday due to an ice storm.

How the animals left the zoo and got the abandoned house in Lancaster is still a mystery.

Police on Tuesday released surveillance video and a photo of an unidentified man they said they were searching for and want to interview. Police have not said why they want to speak to him or when the footage was recorded, and they’ve asked the public to contact them at 214-671-4509 with any information.

The surveillance video shows a man walking slowly down a nearly empty zoo sidewalk, looking back and forth as he moves. Another person is seen in the background walking in the opposite direction.

The photo shows a man wearing a navy hooded sweatshirt and a navy and red beanie cap while eating a bag of Doritos.

Zoo officials said Wednesday that security is being tightened.

“Although our security program had worked in the past, it has become obvious that we need to make significant changes,” officials said in a written statement. “Words cannot express the frustration our team is feeling.”

Security upgrades include more cameras and more than doubling the number of security patrols as well as increasing the number of people working overnight, installing more fencing and adding other unspecified security technology, according to the news release.

A few other strange developments with animals have unfolded in recent weeks at the Dallas Zoo.

A clouded leopard named Nova disappeared January 13, and the zoo closed to search for the animal.

Police launched a criminal investigation after they found the fence around Nova’s enclosure had been “intentionally cut,” they said. Later that day, Nova was found near her habitat.

Meanwhile, zoo staff observed a similar cut to the enclosure of some langur monkeys, but none of them had escaped, the zoo said.

Police did not immediately determine whether the two incidents were related.

The incidents prompted the zoo to ramp up security, including installing more cameras and boosting overnight security personnel and staffing, its president and CEO Gregg Hudson said. Restrictions were also placed on animals’ ability to go outside overnight, he added.

Then, a lappet-faced vulture named Pin was found dead January 21 in his habitat. “Circumstances of the death are unusual, and the death does not appear to be from natural causes,” the zoo said in a statement.

The bird’s death was “suspicious” and it suffered “an unusual wound and injuries,” Hudson said.

The zoo is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and indictment of a suspect in the vulture’s death.

While the incidents at the Dallas Zoo and the monkey thefts at Zoosiana in Broussard, Louisiana, have raised general security concerns, at least one zoo in Florida is not stepping up security.

There are “several security measures already in place in Zoo Miami” and only so much that can be done, said Ron Magill, wildlife expert and Zoo Miami spokesperson.

“If someone wants to get in and is determined,” he told CNN, “they’re going to find a way.”



Read original article here

2 Missing Dallas Zoo Monkeys Found in North Texas – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

The Dallas Zoo says the two monkeys that are believed to have been taken from their habitats Monday have been found.

Dallas police said that they found the two emperor tamarin monkeys after getting a tip. Police said they then went to the empty home in Lancaster, located just south of Dallas, and found the monkeys safe in a closet.

“We are thrilled beyond belief to share that our two emperor tamarin monkeys have been found,” zoo officials said in a statement. “DPD located the animals early this evening, and called our team to come secure and transport the tamarins back to the Zoo. They will be evaluated by our veterinarians this evening.”

Zoo officials added that more information would be given Wednesday while details about the recovery will be provided by Dallas Police.

No arrests have been made.

The empty building where the monkeys were found was recently broken into and filled with wild animals, according to a nearby church that owned the property and planned to use it as a youth center.

Dallas Police

Officers from Dallas and Lancaster found the Dallas Zoo’s missing emperor tamarin monkeys in an abandoned home Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Dallas Police on Tuesday asked for help identifying a man they say they want to speak with about the case. Detectives said they want to speak with the man “in regard to the two tamarin monkeys missing from the Dallas Zoo,” but offered few other details.

“We reached out to authorities saying that we thought we knew who the person was and how we have had recent break-ins at our youth center that we’ve been trying to get going for the community,” said Tanya, the daughter of the church’s pastor who wished to be identified by her first name.

“Someone has gotten back in there and destroyed it even further,” she said. “So that’s setting us back even further as far as getting the facility up and going. But it was really a shock to see that those precious, you know, animals were in there.”

A spokesman for the Family Center church says the organization is working with police to identify the person responsible.

“The intruder not only caused significant damage to the youth center’s facilities, but also put the safety of both the animals and the community at risk. Despite the setback, the church remains committed to its mission of providing support and resources to those in need and is working closely with local authorities to ensure that the culprit is brought to justice,” the spokesman said.

It’s the fourth suspicious incident at the zoo since the start of the new year — the first involving a clouded leopard, Nova, who escaped her enclosure after police discovered it had been intentionally cut. As Dallas Police opened a criminal investigation, zoo staff members the next day found a similar intentional cut on the enclosure that houses langur monkeys, all of whom were accounted for. Most recently, an endangered vulture was found dead with an “unusual wound,” zoo officials said. Dallas Police later said they were investigating the death as being suspicious.

Read original article here

Dallas Zoo says its missing tamarin monkeys have been found



CNN
 — 

Two emperor tamarin monkeys missing from the Dallas Zoo were found Tuesday, the zoo said.

“We are thrilled beyond belief to share that our two emperor tamarin monkeys have been found,” the zoo said in a statement.

Dallas police located the animals early Tuesday evening, the zoo said, without immediately releasing details about how they were found. The zoo earlier said the animals were believed to have been stolen Monday.

Police “called our team to come secure and transport the tamarins back to the Zoo,” the zoo said. The monkeys will be evaluated by veterinarians Tuesday evening, according to the zoo.

Dallas police earlier said its preliminary investigation found the emperor tamarin monkeys’ habitat had been intentionally cut open and “it is believed the animals were intentionally taken from the enclosure.”

Police had also released surveillance video and a photo of an unidentified man they wanted to speak to in regard to the two missing tamarin monkeys. “Dallas police are looking for the public’s help in identifying the pictured individual,” they wrote.

In the surveillance video, the man can be seen walking slowly down a nearly empty zoo sidewalk, looking back and forth as he moves. A second person also can be seen in the background, but that person walks in the opposite direction.

In the still image, the man is wearing a navy blue hooded sweatshirt and a navy and red beanie cap and is eating a bag of Doritos.

The investigation comes after a series of suspicious animal incidents this month at the Dallas Zoo. The zoo said it believed two of its emperor tamarin monkeys were stolen after they were discovered missing from their enclosure Monday.

“Emperor tamarin monkeys would likely stay close to home – the Zoo searched near their habitat and across Zoo grounds and did not locate them,” the zoo said in a statement Monday.

Earlier Monday, the zoo said it would be closed for the day due to inclement weather. The closure was later extended through Wednesday due to an ice storm impacting the area, the zoo said.

This is the fourth time this month that the zoo has discovered its animals or their enclosures may have been tampered with, including the “unusual” circumstances surrounding the death of a vulture last week, according to the zoo.

The string of events began January 13 when a clouded leopard named Nova disappeared, prompting the zoo to close as they searched for the animal. Dallas police opened a criminal investigation after it was discovered that the fence around Nova’s enclosure had been “intentionally cut,” police said.

While the feline was found close to her habitat later that day, zoo personnel also found a similar cut had been made to the enclosure of some langur monkeys. Despite the new escape route, none of the monkeys left their habitat, the zoo said. Police said at the time that it was “unknown if the two incidents are related.”

Following the incidents, the zoo installed additional security cameras, more than doubled its overnight security personnel, increased its overnight staffing, and began limiting some animals’ ability to go outside overnight, President and CEO Gregg Hudson said.

But less than two weeks after the first discoveries, a vulture named Pin was found dead in his habitat. Hudson called the bird’s death “suspicious” and said “an unusual wound and injuries” indicated Pin did not die from natural causes.

The zoo is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and indictment of a suspect in the vulture’s death.

Dallas police are investigating all four incidents. A spokesperson said last week that the department is collaborating with US Fish and Wildlife on the investigations.



Read original article here

Dallas Zoo alerts police after 2 monkeys declared missing, believed to be ‘taken’

Police believe two monkeys were taken from their enclosure at the Dallas Zoo Monday morning.

Zoo spokeswoman Kari Streiber said when staff discovered two emperor tamarin monkeys were missing, it was immediately “clear the habitat had been intentionally compromised.” According to police, the habitat had been cut.

Streiber said since the monkeys, which are expected to “stay close to home,” were still unaccounted for as of 3:50 p.m., police “have reason to believe the tamarins were taken.”

The zoo was closed Monday due to inclement weather, and isn’t expected to reopen until Thursday.

No additional information was immediatley available.

Dead vulture, stolen monkeys: What’s going on at the Dallas Zoo?

The investigation comes after an unprecedented string of events at the Dallas Zoo, including another missing animal, additional torn enclosures and an unusual death.

On Jan. 13, a 4-year-old clouded leopard named Nova had a day of social media fame when the zoo announced she had escaped from her enclosure. After search involving infrared drones, a “code blue” and Dallas police’s SWAT team, she was found on-site and unharmed.

The day after Nova escaped, officials revealed a similar cut was found on the langur monkeys’ enclosure, but said all of the langurs were in their habitat and accounted for.

About a week after the habitat vandalisms, a 35-year-old endangered vulture was found dead, and zoo staff quickly deemed the cause “unusual.” The bird, named Pin, was one of four lappet-faced vultures at the zoo. He had been at the Dallas Zoo for 33 years.

At first, officials only said that Pin’s death did not appear to be from natural causes, but after the zoo’s veterinary team conducted a necropsy — or an animal autopsy — they said the bird was found with a “wound.”

The Dallas Zoo is offering a $10,000 reward to anyone who provides information, on any of the cases, that leads to an arrest and indictment.

If you have a tip, call the Dallas Police Department’s animal cruelty unit at 214-670-7694.

Read original article here

Dallas Zoo Closed After Clouded Leopard Escapes – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

What to Know

  • Dallas Zoo discovered Nova, a clouded leopard, was not in her habitat Friday morning.
  • Clouded leopards are small cats, about the size of a medium-sized dog and weighing about 30 pounds.
  • The zoo is closed while the search for Nova is ongoing. Zoo officials believe the animal is still on zoo property.

Dallas Police are helping search the Dallas Zoo Friday for a missing clouded leopard, a small cat that poses no threat to humans who escaped its habitat overnight.

The Dallas Zoo posted on social media Friday morning that the zoo is closed due to a serious situation — a Code Blue, which indicated a non-dangerous animal was out of its habitat.

“One of our clouded leopards was not in its habitat when the team arrived this morning and is unaccounted for at this time,” the zoo said in their statement. “The Zoo is closed today as our teams work to find and recover the animal.”

The zoo identified the missing clouded leopard as Nova and said she escaped her habitat through a tear in the mesh enclosure she shares with her sister Luna. Both cats were brought to the Dallas Zoo in 2021 after being raised at the Houston Zoo, according to our partners at The Dallas Morning News.

Getty Images

Clouded leopard, stock photo.

Harrison Edell, vice president for animal care at the Dallas Zoo, said Friday morning that clouded leopards are dramatically different animals from other leopards. They are much smaller, weigh about 30 pounds and pose no danger to people.

Edell said while Nova could be scared, it’s most likely that she climbed a tree to stay out of the way, hunt squirrels and birds and hope to not be noticed.

Because it is winter and there are far fewer leaves on the trees, Edell said it should make finding Nova easier. While staffers are looking into trees from the ground, using binoculars, clouded leopards are very good at staying hidden. He added that the Dallas Police are assisting in the search, looking at treetops with drones equipped with infrared technology.

The zoo said they believe Nova is still inside the zoo and is hiding. The clouded leopard habitat is in Primate Place, in the northwest part of the zoo, north of Clarendon Drive.

Should the cat be seen outside of the zoo’s grounds, Edell cautioned that even though it’s not dangerous to people it’s still a wild animal and people should not attempt to catch it on their own.

“If you happen to see a cat that is bigger than a house cat, smaller than a bobcat, we’d love a heads up. And photos are always helpful too to make sure that we know what we’re looking at. So if people have the opportunity to snap a photo of a cat that looks bigger than usual we’ll take any tip we can get,” Edell said.

The zoo is closed Friday while the search for the animal is ongoing.

WHAT IS A CLOUDED LEOPARD?

According to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, clouded leopards are native to Southeast Asia and are a vulnerable species. Male cats weigh up to 50 pounds while the females are smaller and weigh 25-35 pounds.

The cats have large paws and are very adept at climbing and are one of the few animals that can climb down trees headfirst.

“Clouded leopards are not a ‘type’ of leopard as their name implies. They are a separate species of wild cat, as are snow leopards and leopards,” the Smithsonian reports.


Dallas Zoo

A clouded leopard at the Dallas Zoo.

The cats are carnivores that stalk their prey from the trees and attack from above. The Smithsonian said that in the wild a clouded leopard will eat gibbons, macaques, slow loris, small deer and wild boars.

According to a map of the Dallas Zoo, the gibbon habitat is adjacent to the clouded leopard habitat.

They are primarily nocturnal and with an average life span of 12-15 years. With human care, the cats can live 17 years, the Smithsonian said.

PAST ANIMAL ESCAPES AT THE DALLAS ZOO

In 2004, a 13-year-old gorilla named Jabari cleared a 14-foot wall and injured four people before being shot by Dallas Police. After that incident, the zoo beefed up security measures at the exhibit.

In 2010, Tufani the gorilla escaped her locked living quarters and was spotted by a zoo employee preparing food behind a closed door. The zoo tranquilized Tufani and returned her to her living area within an hour. No injuries were reported.

In 2011, Koko, a chimpanzee at the Dallas Zoo, was sedated after briefly escaping from her enclosure. The animal stayed in an area not open to the public. No injuries were reported.

Two weeks after Koko’s escape, also in 2011, a spider monkey briefly escaped from its enclosure and was on top of it’s habitat for about a half hour. Zoo officials said at the time that the animal basically “got out of his bedroom, but was still in the house.” The spider monkey’s escape was attributed to human error. No injuries were reported.

Check back and refresh this article for the latest update.

Read original article here

Virginia zoo welcomes rare hippopotamus for Christmas

Christmas came early for the Metro Richmond Zoo because, like the song, the organization did indeed get a hippopotamus. And it was a rare one: A pygmy hippo.

Pygmy hippo parents Iris and Corwin gave birth to a female calf on Dec. 6, the zoo announced last week.

The baby pygmy hippo weighed a healthy 16 pounds. One week later, she clocked in at 24.2 pounds. 

Metro Richmond Zoo


The pygmy hippo, which is native to West Africa, is listed as endangered, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Fewer than 2,500 adults are left in the wild, the organization estimates. 

At three days old, the unnamed calf weighed a healthy 16 pounds. A week later, she grew to weigh 24.2 pounds. An adult pygmy hippopotamus can weigh up to 600 pounds— a quarter as much as their larger relatives. 

This is the second pygmy hippo calf born at the zoo and in the state of Virginia. 


Read original article here

Virginia zoo welcomes baby pygmy hippo just in time for Christmas



CNN
 — 

Fifties’ child star Gayla Peevy’s plea for a “hippopotamus for Christmas” came true for one Virginia zoo.

The Metro Richmond Zoo welcomed the birth of a pygmy hippopotamus in time for Christmas, according to a December 22 news release from the zoo.

The adorable newborn was born on December 6, says the release. The yet-unnamed baby was born to parents Iris and Corwin after a 7-month pregnancy.

The baby is the second pygmy hippo born ever in Virginia, according to the zoo. And she’s growing rapidly. She weighed in at 16 pounds at birth, and a week later was already 24.2 pounds. As an adult, she might weigh up to 600 pounds.

The zoo described Iris as “an experienced mother and very caring of her baby.” Mother and baby are currently in a private “super cozy, hay-bedded enclosure.” But soon guests will be able to spot the new addition when the pair move into the indoor pool area, says the zoo.

Pygmy hippos are categorized as endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. There are less than 2,500 adult pygmy hippos left in the wild in Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.

Read original article here