Archive for the ‘Featured’ Category

Houston Zoo opens redesigned and improved cougar exhibit.

Posted by in Animal Info,Carnivores,Construction,Featured,Mammals

Agile and graceful, cougars once roamed throughout most of the lower 48 United States.  Today, cougars are found in Florida and 14 western states including Texas – and at the Houston Zoo in a brand new exhibit that offers a unique perspective on an elusive species that few have had the opportunity to closely observe.

Designed entirely “in-house” by the Houston Zoo facilities personnel in concert with the carnivore care staff, the newly redesigned exhibit offers a unique viewing experience for Zoo guests.

About the Cougar Exhibit

Designed entirely “in-house” by the Houston Zoo facilities personnel in concert with the carnivore care staff, the newly redesigned exhibit offers a unique viewing experience for Zoo guests. Inside a viewing area designed to replicate an old abandoned mine shaft entrance, a section of ceiling has been replaced with laminated safety glass, allowing a cougar to peer down on Zoo guests from above.

At ground level, the original Lexan viewing panels that previously surrounded the habitat have been replaced with laminated safety glass inside the abandoned mine shaft viewing area and by stainless steel woven mesh outside, providing guests with a much clearer view of the animals in the exhibit.  The mesh allows Zoo Keepers to safely interact with the cats and conduct training demonstrations and Meet the Keeper Talks for Zoo guests.

Inside, the exhibit offers our cougars numerous climbing opportunities, a resting area that can be cooled in the summer and heated in the winter, and an environment that the Zoo horticulture team has planted with cactus representing species commonly found in the Big Bend region of West Texas.  The guest viewing experience has also been improved with the removal of low metal screening that previously covered the guest viewing area.  The redesign provides more viewing space and a better view of the upper elevations of the exhibit.

Haley exploring her new exhibit

About Cougars

The Houston Zoo is home to two cougars, Rocky (age 15) and Haley (age 2 and a half).  Cougars, also known as pumas and mountain lions have the greatest natural distribution of any terrestrial mammal in the Western Hemisphere, other than humans – from southern Canada and the Western United States throughout Mexico and Central and South America, although the status of their range is not entirely known.

Powerfully built and extremely agile, cougars are characterized by a long body with unusually long hind feet, thought to be an adaptation for chasing and ambushing prey.  Opportunistic and adaptable, cougar prey ranges from mice to elk.  As a group, cougars are not an endangered species but in some parts of their range their populations are declining.  Habitat loss and hunting are the primary threats to the survival of cougar populations. As human populations expand, the amount of habitat available for cougars and other wildlife is shrinking and increasingly fragmented.

Houston Zoo’s Mobile Site is Growing in Popularity

Posted by in Featured,Uncategorized

Houston Zoo Mobile Website

The Zoo's mobile site is handy for checking our hours, directions and parking information, and schedule of Meet the Keeper Talks, feedings and daily activities.

The Houston Zoo’s mobile website www.houstonzoo.org/_mobile/ has been growing in popularity by leaps and bounds lately. In the last 30 days we’ve had more than 21 thousand visits to the mobile homepage, three times that of this time last year. I keep an eye on the top five most popular webpages on the Houston Zoo’s website, and in March for the first time ever I saw the mobile homepage pop up in the top five.

We launched the mobile Houston Zoo web in the summer of 2009. We kept it simple, including five webpages with the basics of hours, prices, directions, and a schedule of daily activities. In the summer of 2010 we added a page about the visiting DINOSAURS! exhibit, which went away after they departed last October.

In the meantime we also launched the Houston Zoo’s free iphone app. It’s been very popular too, and has some added features not available elsewhere, such as the Friend Finder. Soon we’ll be launching an Android app as well. But the mobile site is available to any cell phone with internet access, making it a convenient option for everyone.

We’d like to make it easier for you to get the latest info about the zoo on your mobile phone. Are you one of these thousands of mobile visitors? Do you view our mobile site at the zoo or somewhere else? We’d like to hear from you with your thoughts and ideas about expanding the mobile site and continuing to enhance its functionality.

Witnessing the Birth of a Giraffe at the Houston Zoo

Posted by in African Forest,Babies,Behind the Scenes,Featured,Giraffes,Hoofed Stock

I had the honor of capturing baby giraffe Asali’s birth on film last week for the Houston Zoo’s YouTube Channel. On a busy Friday afternoon in the spring sunshine, Tyra the giraffe began giving birth in the middle of the field in full view of an increasingly large crowd of public. Not long after I arrived, out of breath, having racewalked across the zoo with camera in hand, the keeper staff decided Tyra might appreciate a little privacy. They opened up the gate to the back and waved a green plastic buoy atop a tall bamboo pole. The giraffes notice this as a “come over here if you like” signal. Tyra thought this was a great idea and moseyed into the private back yard, followed by moans of many disappointed guests. For those of you who thought you might have missed the birth, here it is in high definition:

Myself and a few other chosen staff were allowed to follow keepers and vets behind the scenes. It’s not safe to stand in the yard with the giraffes – although they’re completely gentle, there’s always a risk of one accidentally crushing your foot with a misplaced hoof – so we watched and I filmed from behind a wall. Tyra slowly paced around the yard, looking around and gazing at us with her big dark eyes as if to reassure us that she had this completely under control. She stopped periodically for contractions, and would often point her back end at us the contractions came – she knew what we were there to monitor.

We watched and I filmed as giraffe Asali was born

As we watched the baby’s nose, tongue, and then the entire head emerged. Unlike a human birth, the head is not the first to come out, but only after the front feet have appeared. After a brief delay the shoulders came after, and then it was just a minute more before the whole baby came sliding out. Since giraffe moms give birth standing up, it’s a rude awakening into life as baby falls to the ground.

The most remarkable thing about the whole process was how silent it was. There were no outcries of pain, beeps of fetal monitors or hurried bustle of nursing staff around a maternity ward.  Zoo veterinarians kept a vigilant eye, ready for any intervention needed, and we all waited holding our breath while Tyra calmly and quietly brought Asali into the world.

 

Hanging around with Swamp Monkeys and Red Tailed Guenons

Posted by in Featured,Primates

Recently I had the pleasure of filming our families of red-tailed guenons and swamp monkeys and interviewing one of their caring and dedicated keepers. Alissa Fuhrman told me all about this swinging crew, everything from the veggies they love (tomatoes, but just the flesh, not the skin!) to the mischief they get into and the extended games of tag they play across their habitat.

It’s far too easy to walk right past these guys’ habitat in Wortham World of Primates, especially on a visit when the siamangs are calling you to come and see them at jet engine volume just around the bend. Now that I know a bit more about who they are, I can appreciate them so much more, and I look forward to the next time I can stop by and see what they’re up to.

I hope you enjoy this video as much as I enjoyed putting it together for you!

Meet the Staff: Chris Adams

Posted by in Behind the Scenes,Featured,Meet the Staff

Name: Chris Adams

Chris by the reflection pool, a favorite spot at the Zoo

 Hometown: Houston, Texas 

Department: Rangers  

Quote: Be the change you wish to see in the world – Mahatma Gandhi

How long have you worked at the Houston Zoo?: Almost 2 years 

Favorite animal: Polar Bears 

Special interests/hobbies: Playing football with my friends 

What made you want to work at a zoo?: I have a great interest and appreciation for the natural world and I enjoy working outside.  This zoo is also a very beautiful place so when the Ranger position opened up, I applied. 

Education/training: Bachelor of Business Administration, double majoring in Management and Marketing from University of Houston. 

Do you have advice for anyone wanting to enter your field?  This job requires lots walking or riding a “trike” so take that into consideration when applying.  Our job focuses on guests, so previous guest service experience may be helpful.    

What about advice to  guests visiting the Zoo? 
Duck Lake is one of the many areas Chris patrols every day

Stay hydrated, drinking plenty of water.  Also, feel free to ask Zoo staff about the animals.  It’s easy to get some information about the animals from the signs, but the more interesting information and stories come from the keepers or other staff that knows the animals well.  We’ll be glad to share our information or answer any of your questions.

 What is something you want people to know about the Zoo? The Houston Zoo is the most beautiful zoo I have ever visited.  It’s a great combination of beautiful trees, water and lots of animals.  The reflection pool is probably the prettiest sight in Houston. 

 What’s your favorite story from the Zoo:  There is a guest that visits every so often.  Currently he goes a year or two without visiting since he moved out of state.  Every time he comes to the zoo he visits our Orangutan exhibit to see Doc, one of our male orangutans.  It never fails, as soon as Doc sees him, he goes straight over to the window of the exhibit and they look at each other for a while.  I’ve never seen Doc act this way towards anyone else before, not even zoo staff.  The guest doesn’t know why this happens but he’s always amazed when Doc comes over to see him every time, despite not having seen each other for sometimes years. 

 Written by Tina Carpenter, Children’s Zoo Keeper

Meet the Staff: Nathalie Jolicoeur

Posted by in African Forest,Featured,Meet the Staff,Primates

You can see why Natalie is known as a smiler!

Name: Nathalie Jolicoeur
Hometown: Quebec, Canada

Section: Primates- Chimpanzee Keeper

Quote: If you’re gonna be a bear, be a grizzly-When in Rome

Favorite animal: Chimps – I also train them.

Interesting Facts: I speak fluent French.  I haven’t been working here long, but I hear I am already referred to as “that person who’s always walking fast, smiling and waving.”

How long have you been in the animal care field and what institutions did you work at prior to coming to the Houston Zoo?
I worked with Chimpanzees at the Center for Great Apes in Florida for 4 years and at Seaworld in Orlando in the Education Department for 2 years.  I have been working at the Houston Zoo for 1 month.

What made you want to be a zookeeper?
I love to work with animals and I like the challenge they present.  I was volunteering at the Center for Great Apes to get closer to animals and I was exposed to zookeeping.  I was a psychologist but I wasn’t able to work with animals.  I was volunteering one day a week for a year before I was hired at the Center for Great Apes.

Natalie with one of the chimps she works with

What is your previous education/training?
I have my Bachelors of Science and Masters Degree in Psychology from Laval University in Canada.  I had my license in Psychology and had my own practice for a year and a half before I became a keeper.  All of my keeper training was on the job at the Center for Great Apes.

What sort of advice would you give to anyone wanting to enter the zoo field?
Don’t expect the perfect job right away.  Get as much experience as you can and keep learning. You always have to be constantly learning in this job.

What is your favorite animal story?
At the Center for Great Apes we had a baby Chimp named Stryker.  Bubbles, the Chimp that belonged to Michael Jackson, lived at the sanctuary as well.  Mother Chimps are extremely protective and usually do not let their babies wander off anywhere.  One day the baby ventured over to Bubbles, and his mom let him!  Stryker, this little 5 lb baby, was climbing all over Bubbles, who weighed over 200 lbs!  He would climb all over his head, pull on his hair, his ears, poking him in the eyes, and Bubbles never did anything.  Stryker would just hang over his head while Bubbles walked around, and Bubbles was always so patient and gentle.  When Stryker was done, he would climb back to his mom.  Stryker would also mimic Bubbles.  I have this image in my head of Bubbles pushing around a large barrel and Stryker following after him pushing a little can.  They had a really special relationship.

Gift of Grub: Stork Snack

Posted by in Behind the Scenes,Birds,Featured

We are doing a year-end fundraiser to help feed our animals in the coming year. You can click the contribute tab right on our Facebook Page if you’d like to give a tax-deductible donation, or click on the link at the end of this post!  This blog series will reveal just what it really takes to feed the over 6,000 animals at your Zoo…

Using Water Movement to Stimulate Hunting in our Saddlebill Storks

Having a great many carnivorous species in our collection here at the Houston Zoo, it goes without saying that we feed out previously frozen food items to our animals. In the Bird Department we utilize a number of creatures including mice, rats, rabbits, chicks and fish carcass. While we are able to provide a balanced diet to our animals to maintain their peak physical health, sometimes this isn’t enough. Nutrition isn’t the only area of concern;  many of our animals benefit from the chance to “hunt.”

These are our Saddlebill Storks (Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis) getting the chance to “hunt” a lunch of thawed fish.

We’ve found that utilizing the water movement of filling the wading pool encourages a more aggressive hunting and feeding response — instead of just eating, the birds actually have to catch their lunch.

Since most avian species spend the majority of their day seeking food in the wild, this is an ideal means of feeding these animals here in captivity. They get the nutrition from a balanced variety of fish and the mental stimulation of having to hunt their own food. All it takes is a resourceful keeper, a bit of water-pressure and a dream.

This year the Houston Zoo’s end-of-the-year fundraising campaign is called The Gift of Grub. Proceeds will help defray the costs of caring for our animals and provide everything we need to keep them healthy and happy in the coming year. You can make your tax-deductible donation at www.houstonzoo.org/gift-of-grub. or, click our our CONTRIBUTE tab on Facebook!

Email development@houstonzoo.org for more information.

Behind The Scenes with The Houston Zoo Vets

Posted by in Behind the Scenes,Featured,Vet Clinic

I moved to Houston just a few years ago, and live close to Hermann Park.  For my birthday, my husband surprised me with a Vet For A Day tour at the Houston Zoo, and I’m here to tell you it was one of the most memorable things I’ve ever done. 

We got up very early and arrived at the Zoo before 8 AM, where we were whisked off to the substantial Vet clinic to be warmly welcomed by one of the doctors. We were given copies of their schedule for the day and got to sit in on the staff’s morning meeting to go over all they had to do. We then climbed aboard a Zoo golf cart with one of the four docs and her medical bag, and went along as she made the rounds! Let me just say it was WAY cool!

Traveling on all the back roads that we had no idea existed was exhilarating. And along the way we got to see so much.

You will set off with the vet in a vehicle like this to make morning rounds.

A bird in the Tropical Bird House was apparently not feeling it’s best, so we got to walk behind the ehxbit and listen to the keepers discuss the condition with the vet, as she inspected the little guy on site. We proceeded to the Reptile House, walking past rows of exhibit doors (with venemous snakes safely BEHIND them) to peek in on a nursery for newly-hatched, rare and precious little frogs (that’s the laymen’s term, as I know they had a name). The keeper was so excited about her little charges, it was inspiring. Before we left, we saw komodo dragon babies and visited with a chameleon; they let my husband feed him (or her) a cricket.  Proceeing to the Wortham World of Primates, the doctor checked on a siamang with a probable stomache ache. While she was there, the doctor inquired as to the well being of several monkeys, even though they weren’t on her schedule (which she did in each department we visited). It was clear she cared about every single animal, as did the keepers.

After completing house calls, we returned and got a full tour of the Denton A. Cooley veterinary facilities, then checked on the ”patients” that were in-house getting treatment. 

My husband and I were instructed to soap up, don hair nets and face masks, and watch from afar as the doc performed surgery on a raptor’s leg.  Then there was a tiny little animal, about the size of a baby hedgehog, who needed a proceedure. There was an aide — a young guy with the build of a linebacker, sporting tattoos –who treated the animal with the utmost tenderness as he secured a tiny cone over it’s nose to administer anesthesia. He monitored it’s heartbeat dilligently and completely focused on making sure the little one was comfortable. Afterwards, he exhibited the same attentiveness until his patient came out of it okay.

A chameleon patient gets an "in house" check up

Then, unplanned, Dr. Joe snapped us up, and drove us around the Zoo, talking to us about how animal care has evolved. He explained that now, by training the animals to come close and open their mouths, offer a paw or foot, stretch out, or go into a chute, they can get most basic check-ups done without having to sedate the animal. It’s much safer and less stressful for them, he said, but I imagine that also goes for their human helpers too.

An Asian Elephant leans in to make it easy for vets to do an ultrasound

So much had fit into the day and yet it was only noon. Instead of watching something like this on Animal Planet, we were right there, living it for ourselves! We learned so much about animals and our zoo, and the people who make it all happen. I had always wondered as to the mysterious goings-on behind the scenes, and we left with a vastly changed perspective of the habitats and animals we thought we knew so well.

Afterwards, we could not stop telling friends and family all about it, and now I’m telling you –a few years later!  It was the best birthday gift – one I will never forget — and it stirred a desire to do more at the Zoo. I started volunteering regularly (and now, I work here!).  

Whenever there is a special occasion or we have an out of town guest, we book a Behind-The-Scenes Tour.  To provide an experience that rare, one that will last a lifetime and simply can’t be done any other way, is an enormous value for the very affordable price. On separate occasions we’ve taken my husband’ son, my friend from LA with her two kids, a couple we know and their kids, and my sister to feed the giraffes, and we’ve also done a Meerkat and Orangutan Tour. And just a few weeks ago, I treated my college roommate’s sister, in from Boston, to a Sea Lion Tour.  She met and was completely charmed by Cali…

Cali the sea lion then gave my friend a big kiss

We recommend it to everyone, and now I’m recommending it to you!

What struck me most was the the keepers and vets devotion to each animal, whether they were cute and fuzzy or creepy crawly or just downright not-so-pretty (I’m thinking mole rats).  It was clear that in sickeness or in health, the Houston Zoo’s animals got the BEST care and that care was administered not just with the utmost professionalism but with lots of love.

If you want to do a Vet clinic or animal Behind-The-Scenes Tour, reservations can be made by emailing tours@houstonzoo.org or calling 713-533-6550. They need advance notice of course, so it’s never too soon to call and book a time.  

And if you want to read more about Vet For a Day specifically, visit http://www.houstonzoo.org/events/tours/vet/ for details.

Gift of Grub: Grocery Shopping for the Houston Zoo

Posted by in Commissary,Featured,Feeding Our Animals

As part of the Houston Zoo’s holiday fundraising campaign, this fun, new blog series tells the story of exactly what it takes to feed our furry, finned and fanged friends here at the Houston Zoo. At the end you’ll find a way you can Give the Gift of Grub and help defray the costs of caring for our animals and provide everything we need to keep them healthy and happy in 2011!

Besides the produce,  live feed and carcasses that we go through here in the commissary at the Houston Zoo, we spend about $60,000 a year on grocery items.

The grocery list for the zoo is a pretty big one. Once a week I go to stores and purchase items that have short shelf lives ie: yogurts, cheeses and –yep –assorted baby foods (veggie and fruit).  We have a large cooler here in the commissary specifially to store those.

It's hard to tell but this is the inside of our fridge - so big it won't fit in one photograph!

I am sure that some of these items you see stocked in our cooler you also see on your pantry or refrigerator shelves at home.

A sample of some of of the grocery items provided to the Houston Zoo animals

Most of these grocery items are used for enrichment and or training.  Something yummy and nutritious is just the thing to motivate animals.

Sometimes when animals are sick theydon’t like to take medicine, so at times we might have to put the medicine in good tasting foods like peanut butter, applesauce, cheese or yogurts.

Here at the commissary we also keeps lots of vitamins such as centrum kid vitamins and a calcium powder to dust our crickets so the animals reptiles get more calcium in their diet.  The types of vitamins and usages are decided by the vet . The keepers who care for the animals on a daily basis know the animals well and they can make suggestions to their supervisors but the vets basically have the last say!  Of interest:  Mammals such as primates get what people use —  Centrum vitamins. Sometimes if an animals has allergies, like the siamang Gibbon does to wheat, we even use gluten-free vitamins.

Cases of juice used to make ice pops for animals in the summer months

During the summer the commissary staff makes different ice pops for several animals, so we keep lots of juices on hand for this purpose such as apple juice, cranberry juice, grape juice and orange juice.

Written by Phyllis Pietrucha-Mays

We’re reaching out to all Zoo lovers to make a year-end, tax-deductible donation at www.houstonzoo.org/gift-of-grub. You can also donate easily via our CONTRIBUTE tab on Facebook! Email development@houstonzoo.org for more information. 

 

Cali the Sea Lion says: “Thanks for the fish!”

Meet the Staff: PJ Jones

Posted by in Featured,Meet the Staff,Natural Encounters

PJ with just one of the many animals she gets to work with

Name: PJ Jones

Section: Natural Encounters Supervisor

Hometown: Granby, CT – I’ve lived for 4 years in Houston.

Total years of animal care experience: I’ve been working at the Houston Zoo for 4 years and have been in the animal care field for 11 years total.

Quotes: I love deadlines. I love the wooshing sound they make as they go flying by. –Douglas Adams

Favorite Animals: Although I’ve never been a bird person, I love the personalities of our Aracaris, Olivia and Pico.

Special Interests: I like the outdoors, especially kayaking and mountain biking.

Do you train any animals at the Houston Zoo?
I train our Acari and Binturong. Mostly I oversee the training of other animals.

Education/Training: I graduated from the University of Connecticut with an animal science major. I also worked at Disney in merchandizing to get a foot in the door so I could work at Animal Kingdom.

Jobs: I worked as a primate keeper for the Roger Williams Park Zoo in Rhode Island and in education and commissary at Disney’s Animal Kingdom. 

What made you want to be a zookeeper?
When I was in college, I was going to pursue pre-vet for the money. I realized through my studies that I wanted to work in the husbandry field rather than medical, and that’s when I pursued animal science so I could be a zookeeper.

What advice would you give to anyone wanting to be a zookeeper?
Volunteer and get experience in any way you can. Keep trying and don’t take no for an answer!

Interesting Facts: I love to participate in practical jokes! We once stole Brett’s (Sea Lion Supervisor) keys from his keyboard and distributed them throughout the zoo. He had to answer questions correctly to earn his letters back!

What’s your favorite animal story?
When I left the first zoo I worked at, I found it very difficult to say goodbye to the animals I had spent the past 5 years with. I was very sad and went to the siamang building to sit with our ornery old-man siamang and his very young son. As I sat by the mesh, they both came over and very gently placed their hands over mine and sat with me for 10 minutes. This wasn’t typical behavior for either of these apes and it was one of the most touching moments of my career. I’m so blessed to be able to work with these animals every day.

Written by Andrea Pohlman

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