Zoo Boise's sloth bear heading to Seattle
Medina, Zoo Boise’s female sloth bear, is leaving Oct. 21 for Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo as part of a species survival program. This is the last weekend to visit her at Zoo Boise.
Medina is part of an SSP -- or Species Survival Plan. Accredited zoos across the country participate in SSP, which is a captive breeding program designed to ensure a genetically healthy population of an endangered species. Medina is part of the sloth bear SSP.
“The SSP committee has recommended that Medina go to the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle to breed. While we are sad to see her go, we fully understand that this is necessary to ensure the long-term survival of this species, which has dwindled to less than 20,000 individuals in the wild,” says Steve Burns, Director of Zoo Boise.
Sloth bears are native to India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan. Loss of habitat is the biggest reason for their decline. Sloth bears primarily eat insects in the wild. Their sharp claws allow them to tear into termite mounds, ant hills and bee nests. They also have lips they can pucker like they’re going to whistle. They stick those lips up to a hole in an insect nest and suck out the inhabitants.
“SSP programs have been successful in not only keeping populations of endangered species alive in zoos, they have also helped by providing endangered animals to reintroduce back into the wild. Examples are California condors, golden lion tamarins and scimitar horned oryx.”
In a couple weeks, Zoo Boise will receive an Asiatic black bear from the zoo in Garden City, Kansas.
In addition to saying goodbye to Medina, visitors can also visit the new Mr. & Mrs. Clarence B. Wilmot African Plains Exhibit, which features lions, giraffes and an assortment of other African animals.
Zoo Boise is located in Julia Davis Park in downtown Boise. Hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. Admission is $6.50 for adults, $4 for seniors age 62 and older, $3.75 for children age 4-11 and free for children under age 3. For more information, click here.
Zoo Boise's bear grotto is inadequate for breeding.