Dierenpark Emmen (Closed) Emmen Zoo news

Oriental Small-clawed otters born at Emmen :
May 27, 2013
Wee Pile 'o Otter Pups Born at Emmen Zoo

Otter emmen pile

How many furry heads do you see in that Otter pup pile? There are four Asian Small-clawed Otters in all, born at Emmen Zoo in mid April. For the most part, keepers have left the babies alone to bond with mom and the other members of the family, who all pitch in, though a vet check on May 21, it was determined that two were boys and two were girls! Newborn Otters are blind, deaf and totally dependent on their parents. They nurse for about seven weeks before they begin to start on solid foods. This is also about the time they open their eyes. Both Otter parents help to raise their pups, often assisted by previous offspring!

The smallest species of otter in the world, weighing less than 11 pounds (5 kg), they are considered Vulnerable by the IUCN, due to ongoing habitat loss, pollution, and hunting. They are found in fresh water in the wetlands, rivers and marshy areas along the coast in the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, India, southern China,Taiwan, Laos, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Indonesia, and Burma.

Otter vet

Otter vet check crop
Photo Credit: Emmen Zoo

Asian Small-clawed Otters (Aonyx cinerea) are named as such because its claws, as you can see, do not grow past the pads of its partially webbed digits. This allows them to use their paws much like we use our hands, which helps when on a diet of feed on mollusks, crabs and shellfish.
Source : Zooborns
 
On July 16 Emmens 25th Asian Elephant was born ! It's a boy -Emmen seems to be very good in breeding boys ! - and mother is Htoo Yin Aye.
 
Giraffe bull, Khamisi was transferred from Emmen to Seville, Spain this week
 
Does anyone know what happened with Radza's body?
If they cut him to pieces and destroyed him, this is a terrible decision.

They cut him to pieces and destroyed him. He will be turned into Bio-fuel. I believe they are keeping his tusks though.

Doesn't matter much what they're going to do with the body, he will not be any less dead....

On the brighter side, the groundworks for the new zoo have begun.
 
His skeleton and / or other body parts might have been of use in a natural history setting or for scientific research on anatomy, morphology et cetera.
 
They cut him to pieces and destroyed him. He will be turned into Bio-fuel. I believe they are keeping his tusks though.

Doesn't matter much what they're going to do with the body, he will not be any less dead....

On the brighter side, the groundworks for the new zoo have begun.

A horrible fate for an unique specimen.
Another marvel of nature gone into complete oblivion.
May this fate be left for farm livestock only.
They have a museum at last - why not honoring Raja as Lin Wang in Taipei Zoo was?


Short-minded and ignorant we are. A dead example of megafauna is regarded only as biological waste - while the real waste are humans, since they're not edible or mountable by ethic reasons.
 
Htoo Yin Aye, Ma Palai, Mong Tine, and Thuya will be transferred to Dierenrijk in the coming months. Emmen has stated that they wish to start a new herd with Mingaloor Oo, Ma Ya Yee, and Swe Zin. No word on the acquisition of a new breeding bull.
Yoe Ma and Anada Yingthway will be transferred in the near future (perhaps to the United states as originally intended prior to the TB scare).
 
Htoo Yin Aye, Ma Palai, Mong Tine, and Thuya will be transferred to Dierenrijk in the coming months. Emmen has stated that they wish to start a new herd with Mingaloor Oo, Ma Ya Yee, and Swe Zin. No word on the acquisition of a new breeding bull.
Yoe Ma and Anada Yingthway will be transferred in the near future (perhaps to the United states as originally intended prior to the TB scare).


From what I have heard, two young bulls should move to Maubeuge, in France.

There's a new breeding bull standing by, but the transfer to Dierenrijk has priority off course.

A horrible fate for an unique specimen.
Another marvel of nature gone into complete oblivion.
May this fate be left for farm livestock only.
They have a museum at last - why not honoring Raja as Lin Wang in Taipei Zoo was?


Short-minded and ignorant we are. A dead example of megafauna is regarded only as biological waste - while the real waste are humans, since they're not edible or mountable by ethic reasons.

It's just a corpse, and not a living animal anymore. There are enough museum specimens already. So why bother? I would rather focus on living animals....
 
It's just a corpse, and not a living animal anymore. There are enough museum specimens already. So why bother? I would rather focus on living animals....

Damn it, he was the largest specimen of our time!!!
Destroying him is like destroying 'just a painting' which is a masterpiece.
With such attitude, why bother on keeping elephants in zoos also? There are many in the wild, go there and watch. Don't forget to euthanize and burn remaining captive ones.

Have you seen the condition of MOST museum skeletal specimens? Boiled, damaged bones with grease & blood stains, dusty and brown-grey colored, often with missing sternal ribs and cracked tusks. Mounts in the similar condition - and many are trophy Africans.
How many elephants die in Europe every year (leave out TB ones that are hazardous)? And how many of them are preserved?
Preparing a stillborn calf is an easiest task in elephant taxidermy, what's the point in discarding them?
Perfect option for a small museum that wants an elephant in the room:
http://bebravebebold.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMG_8947.jpg

Many zoos often don't ask a local museum/university to accept a pachyderm or other animal!!! While in reality, donating is often cheaper than destroying.

And there are not much Asian tuskers left at all! Most are temple elephants, that have ho breeding chance, and become cremated after death as 'holy ones'.
As a zoologist, I regard the total wasting of dead animals, bot exotics and native, as a squander.
Animals turn into waste - and natural resources became useless green-colored paper.
 
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I accept your point of view, but find it no less staggering beyond the unscientific and exhibiting a lack of awareness that a specimen although no longer alive like the magnificent bull Radza should be so squandered by zoo management.

EM is so right that his zoological value even in death is unsurpassed and the policy of the current zoo management certainly does not bode well for the whole ethics and morality of exhibiting live wild animals or the concept of a zoo as an institution of learned development and scientific discovery and innovation.

I let it pass at that …!
 
In a not-so-far future, a hypothetical interview with a zoo spokesperson about Radza may happen:
-So, did you really kept a largest captive Asian elephant of that time here?
-Oh, kinda yes. He was so big and weighed so much that one day he felt into a moat and broken a tusk, and its fragment has flown into the air, nearly killing a visitor! This was funny indeed.
-And what became to him after death?
-He was sent to the rendering plant, to finish the circle of life and fertilise the soil. That 's the biggest honor anyone can deserve.
-But why not preserving him to posterity as a unique specimen?
-Eww, that's disturbing! Everybody in the zoo loved him so much, as a child, and seeing him, or any other animal, dead in a museum would break staff and visitors' hearts... There lived many elephants long ago at the zoo... and when one passes away, it's time to say goodbye forever.
But we have a moving hologram of Radza, wanna see? Reconstructed from antique 2d footage and photographs.
-Too bad that this wonderful species became extinct by our 22nd century... Thanks for the interview!
 
???
@Elephas Maximus
I don´t understand your concern fully, I quess? Radza was a very nice bull specimen, yes of course. But not really exceptionel. I mean european zoos produce 15 - 20 elephant corpses each year, circuses add another circa 10, I d guess. Radza was one of many tuskers in Europe and he left enough offspring too. He got the best care while alive. And now he contiues to live through his sons and daughters. That is a normal circle of life.

Why he was not mounted? There was apparently nobody willing to invest around 30.000 euro to preserve his body. His health was failing for several years, any museum or other educational/research facility with interest had enough time to contact the zoo that they would want the corpse once Radza is dead. Simple as that.
 
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