Edinburgh Zoo Tigers at Edinburgh

this article was in the scotsman newspaper today


Mini-tigers will be big hit at the Zoo



Published Date: 06 October 2008
By GARETH EDWARDS
A PAIR of critically endangered young tigers have become the latest attraction at Edinburgh Zoo.
The year-old Sumatran tigers, Tibor and Chandra, arrived from Heidelberg Zoo last week and are now settling into their new home in the Zoo's jaguar enclosure.

They will spend the next six months there as part of their quarantine before being moved
over to the existing tiger enclosure.

The pair have been brought in to replace the Zoo's two Amur tigers, Yuri and Sasha, who have been moved to the Highland Wildlife Park near Aviemore.

And the two youngsters – described as mini-tigers – are expected to be a huge hit with the public. They were carefully moved by van and ferry across Europe

Like the Amur tiger, Sumatran tigers are critically endangered, with only a few hundred left in the wild. The smallest sub-species of tiger – with males averaging 234 cm in length from head to tail and weighing about 136 kg – they are found only on the Indonesian island of Sumatra. Their stripes are narrower than on other sub-species and they have a more prominent neck ruff.

The main threat to the wild population is habitat loss and poaching for the traditional medicine trade.

Alison MacLean, head keeper of carnivores at Edinburgh Zoo, said the two animals already seemed to be enjoying their new home.

"They are quite young and we want to let them settle in at their own pace, so we leave it up to them to explore in their own time," she said. "They have been incredibly bold, though, and even with the poor weather, when you might have thought they would want to stay inside, they have been out and about exploring the enclosure.

"It has a lot of climbing elements, which maybe they didn't have in Germany, and they are enjoying that. They are beautiful creatures, and they will be a huge hit, because they are very much the typical tiger people expect to see, although a bit smaller." Ms MacLean admitted that she had been sad to see Sasha and Yuri leave, but was "delighted" with their huge new home, which she said they would love.

The pair were moved as part of a five-year redevelopment of the park which will see it take in more species from mountain and tundra habitats around the world.

The move means they can be given a far bigger area to roam around in, and it is hoped they will also breed, to help conservation efforts of the rare species.

Previously known as Siberian tigers, the Amur tiger was renamed in the 1990s when the last disappeared from Siberia. They are now found only in isolated populations around the Amur river valley in the far east of Russia, and it is estimated there are just 500 left in the wild.

Doug Richardson, animal collection manager at Highland Wildlife Park, said: "We are very excited about having these living conservation icons in our care.

"The arrival of the tigers is the latest step in the evolution of the Highland Wildlife Park and one that I am sure will help to raise our profile both within and outside of the Highlands community."
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there was also a news story on reporting scotland about sasha and yuri settling in at the highland wildlife park at kincraig,anyone with bbc scotland can see the full report on reporting scotland starting at 6.30pm tonight
 
The Edinburgh web-site reports that the jaguars are now in the Tiger enclosure , with all the climbing opportunities they should look good in it .
 
So where are the new tigers going?!
Why not just put the new tigers straight into the actual tiger enclosure?
 
Probably because the Tiger accommodation was not suitable for quarantine , whereas the Jaguar's was .
 
Lol, poor Jags.
They're getting shifted around a bit.
I think they could do with a new enclosure anyway.
 
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Do you know if both of the jaguars have been moved?

last time i was at the zoo one of them seemed really disturbed and kept attacking the glass and showing stereotypical behaviour. according to one of the keepers it was rescued from a circus, where it was kept in a tiny cage and had its canines and claws removed.

maybe it will benefit from being moved to a new enclosure?
 
It's interesting you should bring up Longleat....when I saw some of those ridiculous shows where they follow the birth of....a pygmy goat or meet the keeper to groom a guinea pig in the pets corner....they did show the sealion pups being rounded up to be sent off to blair drummond! I thought then, what an awful reality shift, from the half-mile lake to a small concrete pool. So yeah, I do think that collections with very good facilities should try and match what they have when they send off surplus animals. Interesting you should mention the Jaguars, I would be pretty horrified if they were to be shunted back to the old space having been given the amur tiger enclosure.

Similarly, I read that the London wallabies, as I suspected, had been rounded up from...Whipsnade! I realise they wouldn't go to the trouble of acquiring them from elsewhere, but to catch up 20 free-ranging wallabies and move them to...the mappin terraces. It sort of isn't the same as if they'd lived in a small paddock their whole lives before moving to London.
 
I thought then, what an awful reality shift, from the half-mile lake to a small concrete pool. So yeah, I do think that collections with very good facilities should try and match what they have when they send off surplus animals.

But they never do(or didn't used to). Its the 'out of sight/out of mind' mentality.
 
But they never do(or didn't used to). Its the 'out of sight/out of mind' mentality.

Its differcuilt for zoos, I suppose if they have decent husbandry techniques and diets, then even if the eclosure is not as good as the one they left I wouldn't have problem with it.
 
I actually don't have a problem with this either ;) It would be impossible and unrealistic for all zoos to have the same wonderful standards of housing as each other. So transfers are bound to happen where animals end up in less salubrious surroundings as well as in better ones..

Also I'm not sure how much the 'quality' of an enclosure has to do with wellbeing- we automatically presume that what looks to us like ideal or aesthetically pleasing surroundings suits the animals better too, but does it really? - I don't know.:confused:
 
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Are Edinburgh's jaguars actually in the same enclosure as each other? Ive never seen a picture of them together?

Are there plans to breed off this pair?
 
When i was there over summer the keeper said they are not ready to breed them yet and they have to live separately for the near future. I think it was due to age but I'm really not sure (I can't remember basically) no doubt someone knows more than i do
 
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