London Zoo Weighs All 14,000 Animals in Its Care

London Zoo Weighs All 14,000 Animals in Its Care


The​ London Zoo, which has more than 14,000 animals, conducted its annual weigh-in this week, an event that ⁢helps keep‌ records​ on their health and‌ other data up-to-date and measures the animals’ well being.

While zookeepers measure the animals throughout the ⁣year, every August they double-check all the information​ and invite‍ news organizations to have⁢ a look.

“Having this data⁤ helps to⁤ ensure that every animal we care for is healthy, eating well, ⁤and ⁢growing at the rate they should,” ‍Angela Ryan, the London ⁤Zoo’s head of zoological operations, said⁢ in a statement. “We record the vital statistics of every ⁤animal at the zoo — from the tallest giraffe​ to the tiniest tadpole.”

The‌ zoo’s heaviest animal is Maggie, a giraffe, who ⁤comes in around 750 kilograms ​(about 1,653‌ pounds). Maggie​ lives with her⁣ sister, Molly, and was joined by another‍ giraffe, ⁢Nuru,⁢ in March.

The zoo’s smallest animal ⁣is a leaf cutter ant, at ‍about 5 milligrams. ​Zookeepers do not ⁣measure each ant individually, but use estimates based on the weight of an entire ⁢colony.

“We can tell a lot ⁣from⁢ an animal by its weight,” Ms. Ryan told a London radio⁤ station. The weigh-in can ⁤also ‌measure how pregnant‌ animals are⁢ doing, and can alert zookeepers to new pregnancies, ​which⁤ in turn⁢ helps with preparing for‌ any births.

Zookeepers add the measurements and weights ⁢to the Zoological Information Management System, ​a​ database that is shared with other zoos around the world that includes ⁣information about ‍threatened species. Conservationists in the wild can also use the ​information to determine the age ‍of a particular endangered animal, for example.

Weighing animals can be challenging.⁤ Zookeepers use different ⁣ways to get them to step ‍— or hop, skip or jump ⁣— onto the scale‌ and ‌stand up straight for measurements.

This year, for example, the zookeepers tricked Humboldt penguin chicks into​ walking over scales one by ⁣one by having them line up for their morning feed, the zoo said. It took the promise of tasty treats to get some ‌Bolivian black-capped‌ squirrel monkeys onto the scales.

2023-08-25 05:31:53
Original from www.nytimes.com
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