Archive for the ‘Holidays’ Category

12 Days of Grub: Day 4 – Four Calling Birds

Posted by in Birds,Gift of Grub,Holidays

On the Fourth Day of Grub, your zoo gift will help to feed…Four Calling Birds (Kookaburras to be exact), Three Wild Dogs, Two Grizzly Bears, and Darwin the Cassowary! CLICK HERE to read them all!

Blue-winged Kookaburra

Anyone who has watched a television show or movie filmed in a tropical location has undoubtedly heard the call of a Laughing Kookaburra (Dacelo novaguineae). While these birds are only found in certain areas of Australia and New Zealand, the call of this bird has become synonymous with untamed wilds and is often added to the soundtrack to create a more “natural” feel. Less melodic but much more visually-striking, our Blue-winged Kookaburras (Dacelo leachii) are also favorites amongst our guests.

The call of a kookaburra may in fact be one of the most interesting things about these birds, with a great deal of myth associated with the vocalization. Aboriginal legend tells us that the Kookaburra is a messenger for the Earth, using a powerful call to alert the Earth of the lighting of the great fire in the sky. In actuality kookaburras will call for a variety of reasons (including territoriality and excitement), and these early morning calls are typically used to assert territorial boundaries. However, this myth does indicate the majesty of the call and the reverence it has inspired.

However, kookaburras have a great many other interesting attributes. While they may appear somewhat fluffy and cuddly, these birds are in fact accomplished predators. Kookaburras consume large food items by beating the prey against a rock or log to break down bones and make the food item easier to swallow.

Laughing Kookaburra

At the Houston Zoo, our birds receive a wide variety of food items to keep them interested in their food and also ensure their nutritional well-being. Our birds eat mice, chicken chicks, anoles (small lizards), crickets, mealworms, smelt, walking sticks and a specialized ground meat diet to ensure optimum feather condition! In the course of a month, these four birds can eat:

  • 50 Mice
  • 50 Anoles
  • 16 Chicken Chicks

A variety of insects are also readily accepted by these ravenous birds. Our Keepers at the Houston Zoo also perform regularly-scheduled feedings so that our guests can learn even more about these fascinating birds. Our Laughing Kookaburras and Blue-winged Kookaburras are on-exhibit daily at Birds of the World, a large outdoor area showing off some of our most interesting feathered residents!

Give the Gift of Grub this holiday season to help provide tasty meals for our Kookaburras and all of the animals at the Houston Zoo!  Between now and December 31, TXU Energy has generously agreed to match all donations, up to $25,000 total, so your gift could go TWICE as far.  That’ll give our birds something to call about.

12 Days of Grub: Day 3 – Three Wild Dogs

Posted by in Carnivores,Gift of Grub,Holidays

On the Third Day of Grub, your zoo gift will help to feed…Three Wild Dogs, Two Grizzly Bears, and Darwin the Cassowary! CLICK HERE to read them all!

Three African Wild Dogs call the Houston Zoo home.  Blaze, Aries, and Mikita have resided here since May of 2007 and are representatives of one of the most social carnivore species in the world.  African Wild Dogs, or Painted Dogs, have fascinated researchers with their ability to cooperate with both the hunt and the sharing of the kill.  Wild packs will allow the young to eat first and will even feed sick and injured dogs by regurgitating the meat.

Blaze, Aries, and Mikita share about 5 pounds of meat daily.  In addition to their normal diets, the African Wild Dogs also enjoy special treats such as goat’s milk, chicken, tuna, herring, blood pops, rats, quail, and eggs.  They are the only carnivores at the Houston Zoo that are fed together as a pack. You can learn more about the painted dogs’ social habits by reading about them in National Geographic.

Our guests may hear some interesting sounds coming from the pack during feeding times or when a new toy is introduced, but they are not necessarily the sounds of conflict.  Each dog is simply trying to assure the other that he is the most submissive/youngest and therefore more deserving of the treat or toy.  It may sound like loud fighting, but Painted Dogs have a large and expressive vocabulary – equal only to the dolphin!


Painted Dog packs, found in Africa, are highly successful with their hunts.  While lions and leopards may only catch 20-30% of what they attempt, African Wild Dogs top the charts at about an 80% success rate, largely owed to their endurance, cooperation, and communication! They prey primarily on impala and other medium-sized antelope, but can take down prey as large as Cape Buffalo if they have enough pack members.

Written by carnivore keeper, Samantha Junker

Give the Gift of Grub  for the holidays to help feed our wild dogs and the rest of the Zoo’s 6,000 animal residents!  From now until December 31, your gift could go twice as far thanks to a generous matching gift challenge by TXU Energy.  All gifts, up to $25,000 total, will be matched dollar for dollar in an effort to help the Zoo provide for its growing animal family.  Blaze Aries and Mikita thank you in advance for your support!

12 Days of Grub: Day 2 – Two Grizzly Bears

Posted by in Bears,Gift of Grub,Holidays

On the Second Day of Grub, your zoo gift will help to feed…Two Grizzly Bears and Darwin the Cassowary! CLICK HERE to read them all!

Grizzly Bears are known for their love of fish and The Houston Zoo’s Boomer and Bailey are no exception!

 

The two 32 year old bears weigh in at 490lbs and 518lbs respectively and each consume about 12lbs of fish and meat, 15lbs fruits and vegetables, and 35lbs omnivore biscuits every week. They are offered a variety of produce items including oranges, apples, pears, pineapple, mango, papaya, avocado, lettuce, bananas, and several different types of berries. They also receive treats of honey, yogurt, and peanut butter. Each bear has his own likes, dislikes, and favorite items. This summer, keepers even kept a chart of each bear’s preferences to further tailor their diets to their personal tastes!

Brown bears have the largest range of any bear species and can be found in a variety of habitats. Grizzly bears are a sub species of brown bear and are found in the continental Unites States, Canada and interior Alaska. The name “grizzly” refers to their “grizzled” or grey blond hair in its fur. Brown bears are easily recognizable by the large muscle on their shoulders, which is used to help them dig for rodents and other foods.

Grizzly Bear diets vary depending on what foods are available. They are omnivorous and although the main part of their diet is fruits and plant material, they will occasionally eat deer, elk, and caribou. To maintain such a large body, they must consume a lot of calories, especially before hibernation. They can gain as much as three pounds a day to put on enough fat to make it through the long winters.  If you’d like to learn more about grizzly bears and other bear species, visit the Great Bear Foundation or the Center for Wildlife Information!

Written by Carnivore Keepers, Samantha Junker and Courtney Patterson

Help provide tasty and nutritious grub for the Zoo’s grizzly bears and the rest of our animal family this holiday season: Give the Gift of Grub! TXU Energy is matching all donations through December 31, up to $25,000 total, so your gift could have TWICE the impact.  Yes, that means you could help feed TWO bears for the price of ONE!

12 Days of Grub: Day 1 – Darwin the Cassowary

Posted by in Birds,Gift of Grub,Holidays

Sing along with us!  On the First Day of Grub, your zoo gift will help to feed… Darwin the Cassowary!  (Who needs a partridge in a pear tree, when you’ve got a bird that can eat a pear in one gulp!?)

Our Double-wattled Cassowary, Darwin, may be the most notorious chow hound at the Houston Zoo.

Darwin weighs in at 110 pounds and eats 11 pounds of food daily.  His diet consists of a wide variety of fruit (strawberries are his favorite), vegetables, and a special dry pellet diet, that smells and looks a little like guinea pig food!   That’s over 4000 pounds of food a year, about the weight of a fully grown male elephant!

Darwin doesn’t just eat a TON (or two!) of food, he can eat very large pieces of fruit as well.  He doesn’t chew or break up his food very often; he just tips his head back and swallows the food whole. Check him out:

Due to their impressive eating talents, cassowaries in the wild are known as a keynote species in their native rainforests.  These birds are the only known animals who can distribute the seeds of over 70 different kinds of trees whose fruit is too large to be swallowed by any other animal.

Not only that, but there are 80 species of plants whose seeds have such a high toxicity that only the cassowary can eat and distribute these fruits!  Cassowaries are aided in this by the relatively shortest and fastest digestive system in the bird world, a powerful liver, and a very unique set of stomach enzymes.

This super fast digestion means that very often, fruit will pass through Darwin’s system before being fully digested.  Cassowaries practice coprophagic behavior…let’s just say they recycle the undigested pieces of food.  Waste not, want not!

To see just how quickly Darwin can eat, you must watch this nail-biting video of a peach eating contest between Darwin and his keepers.  It may not end the way you would guess!

 

Give the Gift of Grub this holiday season to help provide tasty meals for Darwin and all of the animals at the Houston Zoo!  Between now and December 31, TXU Energy has generously agreed to match all donations, up to $25,000 total, so your gift could go TWICE as far.  That means you could help provide TWICE the peaches for Darwin!

Thanksgiving and Turkeys

Posted by in Animal Info,Children's Zoo,Gift of Grub,Holidays

Thanksgiving and Turkeys. It is hardly possible to think about one without thinking about the other. Since we are nearing Thanksgiving, I’d like to introduce you to the resident turkeys in the J.P. McGovern Children’s Zoo – but first, a little bit about turkeys in general.

Beautiful Turkey feathers

There are only two species of turkeys in the world and both are found in the Americas. The Ocellated Turkey is primarily found on the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico as well as the northern parts of Belize and Guatemala. The Ocellated Turkey’s cousin, the Wild Turkey, is found in North America and Mexico.  It is heavier than the Ocellated but they share almost all the same characteristics. Both species are omnivores feeding primarily on berries, seeds, grasses, and insects. They will occasionally eat snakes, snails, and lizards.  Both species were domesticated by Native Americans for food, but it was the Wild Turkey of North America that became the originator of all our modern breeds of domestic turkey.

Jim the Wild Turkey hen

In the Children’s Zoo, we have a true Wild Turkey as well as two domestic turkeys. Our Wild Turkey is a hen and her name is Jim. Yes, it’s a boy’s name - it’s hard to know what sex they are when they are poults (babies)!  Jim lives with the chickens in the goat yard.

Our two domestic turkeys are both males which are called toms. They are Broad Breasted Bronze turkeys and their names are Benjamin and Franklin. Benjamin Franklin wanted the Wild Turkey to be the national bird, so we named our toms in his honor. Ben and Franklin live on exhibit with the deer.

Ben and Franklin

 
 
 
FUN FACT:
Believe it or not, when Europeans first settled in the Americas and started taking turkeys back to Europe, the turkey was so rare and tasted so good, that only royalty was allowed to eat them!
We hope you will come visit our turkeys!
 
Give the Gift of Grub this Thanksgiving to help provide tasty meals for our resident turkeys and the rest of the Zoo’s 6,000 animals.  From now until December 31, your gift could go twice as far thanks to a generous matching gift challenge by TXU Energy.  All gifts, up to $25,000 total, will be matched dollar for dollar in an effort to help the Zoo provide for its growing animal family. 
 
Thank you in advance for your support and have a Happy Thanksgiving!

Halloween Candy That Makes a Difference for Wild Orangutans

Posted by in Holidays,Primates

Orangutan Friendly Sustainable Palm Oil Halloween Candy List

This information is meant to be a helpful guide for consumers that are concerned about orangutan conservation and deforestation due to non-sustainable palm oil production in Indonesia and Malaysia. The companies listed below are members of the RSPO (Round Table on Sustainable Palm Oil) and are committed to using certified sustainable palm oil. Please support companies that are doing their best to make a difference for orangutans.

Company Name Example Snack Name:


Nestle  -  Baby Ruth, Butterfinger, Crunch Bar
Wonka (Nestle)  - Sweetarts, Bottle Caps, Laffy Taffy, Nerds
ConAgra  -  Fiddle Faddle, Crunch & Munch, Poppy Cock
Kellogg’s  -  Rice Krispie Treats, Fruity Snacks, Pop Tarts
Kellogg’s  - Austin Crackers (all varieties)
Kellogg’s  -  All Keebler Brand Cookies
PepsiCo (Frito Lay) –  Cheetos, Doritos
PepsiCo -   Grandma’s Cookies
Hershey’s  - Twizzlers, Jolly Ranchers, Whoppers
Hershey’s  -  Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, Almond Joy
Hershey’s   - Mr. Goodbar, Heath Bars, Milk Duds
Mars  -  Snickers, Twix, M&M’s, 3 Musketeers
Mars  -   Milky Way, Skittles, Dove Chocolates
Justin’s  - Peanut Butter Cups, NutButter (All flavors)
Lindt and Spungli –  Lindor Truffles (All flavors)
Ghirardelli   -All flavors
Walmart  - Great Value Brand products(Candy,Cookies,Crackers etc.)

Note: Any products made by Nestle, Kellogg’s, PepsiCo (Frito Lay),Hershey’s, Mars, Walmart (Great Value Brand) and ConAgra (even if not listed above) are good choices as they are all members of the RSPO.

 

If you do not find your favorite snack/company on this list, take action by writinga letter and asking the company to join the RSPO and be committed to usingcertified sustainable palm oil. For a sample letter and more information on how you can Make a Difference for Wild Orangutans visit: www.cmzoo.org/conservation/PalmOilCrisis.

 

 

Announcing A New Spring Break Program for Teens!

Posted by in Holidays

Are you a teen that loves wildlife and wild places, and wants to help protect them for the future? This spring break join the Houston Zoo as we do something about it!

Alternative Teen Break is a brand new week-long conservation education program for Houston area teens ages 15-18. Participants will spend their spring break conducting valuable conservation fieldwork in the Big Thicket National Preserve while learning about local plants and animals.

Applications are available NOW!  They must be submitted by 5pm on Friday, September 30th, so come on and check it out!

Scholarships are also available and interested students will need to submit an additional application to be considered. These applications and more information can be found on our website at: www.houstonzoo.org/teensandadults.

Written by Martha Petre, Education

Have You Met Liberty, Our Bald Eagle?

Posted by in Birds,Children's Zoo,Holidays

With the 4th of July coming up, why not pay a visit to our National Bird?

Meet Liberty, our Southern Bald Eagle

Come to the Houston Zoo’s McGovern’s Children’s Zoo and say hello to our majestic Bald Eagle. The Eagle was adapted as the nation’s official symbol when George Washington became the first President. It appears on most of our gold and silver coins and as an emblem in many official United States seals. It’s also used decoratively for patriotic purposes. It’s truly breathtaking to see such a striking bird as this up close, and hard not to be stirred by all he represents.

What’s New? Liberty’s Exhibit!

We’ve been very busy working to improve and enlarge Liberty’s habitat.  

A new window has been added to maximize your view — and you’ll see Liberty has new perching, an improved, naturalistic pool and a refurbished forest mural as a backdrop.

The deck has been expanded and now has ceiling fans, a shade structure, beautifully crafted, wood-like detailing through out, and eye-catching new graphics.

What’s more, a new keeper chat area has been added so that we can bring Liberty out for up-close experiences!

It’s pretty awesome to get that close to a bird whose species is so stunning, it was chosen to be our national emblem on June 20, 1782. The eagle represents freedom, and also long life, strength, dignity.

What are you waiting for? Come in to the McGovern’s Children’s Zoo to pay Liberty a visit today!

And if you want to see a great video of Liberty, just click the green underlined link to the blog post below this sentence.

It’s Not Easy Being A Green Dad

Posted by in Amphibians,Endangered,Holidays

When you are small, moist and squishy amphibian, you make a very tasty snack for most mammals, birds, fish and reptiles. In fact, you are kind of like a green (or other colored) oreo cookie! You are very popular in the pond, and not in a good way. You most likely spend the majority of your time not making friends, but being quite anti-social, hiding under logs, leaves, and high up in the trees trying to avoid being someone else’s lunch.

As you might imagine, this makes things especially difficult when parenting comes in to question. Can you imagine if, while attempting to change your child’s diaper or tying their shoes, or teaching them how to throw a baseball you had to constantly be looking over your shoulder or warding off predators, without a weapon, claws, beak, hooves, horns or sharp teeth? It would make things pretty dang stressful and tiring, that’s for sure! And, because of other creatures “sweet tooth” for you, there is a good chance you would be sitting in a stomach basking in gastric juices before you were able to raise your offspring successfully.

For this reason, and others, you do not usually see a lot of parental care in the amphibious creatures. Most amphibians may be absent parents once the deed is done, but they have good reason, and they have adopted a reproductive strategy that works better for their kind.

Glass frog dads guard their fragile eggs

What’s the strategy you ask? Lots, lots, lots and lots, of eggs! By laying hundreds, if not thousands of eggs, there is the hope that a small percentage will make it to adulthood and eventually make more frogs or toads.

This is very different in the mammal and bird world where you see parental care as the major reproductive strategy, having less offspring at a time.

And- if you do have more than 2 or 3 offspring, you generally have aunties, uncles and grandparents to help with the rearing. Why else are we so engrossed by those national stories of those human parents who have 4, 6, 8 babies at a time?! We are amazed and question, how do they do it? The truth is these people must rely on family, good friends and corporate sponsors to make it work! Frogs do not have this luxury!

HOWEVER and quite amazingly, if you look close enough, there are several examples of frog dads out their that do protect their young, proving once again that amphibians (frogs, toads, salamanders and caecilians) are one of the most surprising and diverse groups of vertebrates on this planet.

Although there are quite a few examples of good frog mommies, the majority are generally the males exhibiting parental care. This is because female frogs use up a profound amount of energy producing and carrying around all of those hundreds and thousands of eggs and don’t have much to give once the eggs are deposited. Babies mamma is usually way too tired, ready to prop her feet up, maybe get a massage, and eat a nice fly quiche.

So, in honor of Fathers Day, here are just a few examples of Toad-ally Amazing Amphibian Dads:

* Glass frog dads guard their fragile eggs which hang from leaves snapping at any potential intruders and mimicking their clutch of eggs as well.

* The African bullfrog guards his eggs and will aggressively defend the offspring. Once the eggs have hatched, he will dig a channel between the small pools of water the tadpoles started in, and an adjacent stream so the tadpoles may escape their evaporating natal pool!

* Species of the midwife toad actually carry eggs on their back legs until they are ready to hatch. The male will then transport them to water and let them go!

Poison dart frog

* Poison dart frogs will let little tadpoles take a ride on their back, moving them around to a nursery bromeliad plant filled with still water. Some will even transport them to nearby streams.

* Some African rain frog species will protect their eggs which have been laid in burrows in the ground.

* Gladiator frogs defend their stream side nursery pools and bust out with arm spears projecting from their bodies to aggressively defend their young from other frogs and/or sneaky cockroaches!

* Darwin frogs brood their tadpoles in their vocal sacs until they are ready to complete metamorphosis. Now that’s commitment!

Let’s hear it for the dads! Celebrate Dad by giving him a memorable Father’s Day gift this year – Name a Houston Toad after him! With your gift, you help us support Houston Toads, a critically endangered species native to Texas. Click here to learn more about Houston Toads and how you can further the Houston Zoo’s conservation efforts that help ensure their survival.

The ciritically endangered Houston Toad

Come to TOAD-ally Awesome Father’s Day on June 19! Come visit the newly-named toads on June 19 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. as we celebrate a TOAD-ally Awesome Father’s Day at the Houston Zoo. This fun, family event will be filled with crafts, activities, Houston Toad info and much more! This event is FREE with your paid Zoo admission.

Last Minute Valentine’s Day Gifts: AWESOME!!!

Posted by in Behind the Scenes,Holidays,Valentine's Day

If you are looking for unique, one-of-a-kind, unforgettable gifts that you can also get TODAY, the Houston Zoo has a huge selection. Read on!

1. Get a specialized brick with your personal message that will be paved right into the entrance path at the Zoo! Talk about lasting — and it’s 100% deductible. The one pictured here is a limited-edition, flamingo heart brick, but there are many sizes and designs to choose from.

2. Surprise him or her with tickets to our next cool lecture series on this coming Thursday night, 2/17. You can clink your wine, beer or soft drinks glass and sample light bites before the lecture starts, then settle in and hold hands in our comfy Brown Auditorium chairs to listen to the esteemed Dr. Jill Pruetz. Read all about her on our CALL OF THE WILD page. This is one of the most affordable date nights in town and all proceeds go to conservation!

3. Did you know you can adopt an animal? If you go to the walk-up Membership window at the Zoo you can get the certificate the same day. If not, no worries! You can still get it through our website and print some pictures or make up a nice card to let your Sweetheart know!

4. How about arranging a kiss from a sea lion? Or getting up close to a magnificent lion or tiger for training? You will see the sparkle in their eyes when they do a Behind the Scenes Tour or animal experience. There are so so many to choose from! These need to be scheduled but are so WORTH it! Just put the news of it in a box with a bow! Better yet, come together to the zoo and hand the box over in front of the habitat of the animal you’ve chosen. NICE!

5. For a totally different time, go behind the scenes at our Vet clinic and make the morning rounds being Vet for a Day. Read about the experience from a Zoo blog post about it. Uh-mazing!

6. Does your Love love art? Is there a spot in their office or in the home that just cries out for something to remind them of you? How about an animal painting? We have several animal artists that make true conversation pieces, like the one below:

… Or if you’d like to go really wild, you can give the actual experience of seeing the animal create their 16 x 20 piece.  Your Boo can pick the paint colors and watch as their masterpiece is made I mean, that may just be unmatched in the world of cool!

7. How about something humorous? Surprise your special someone(s) with a yard full of bright pink plastic flamingos planted in stealth by Houston Zoo staff. Complete with your personalized message, it’s a delight and a hoot — and a gift that helps save an endangered species! This one needs to be scheduled but who says you can’t make every day Valentines Day?

8. Lastly, candy never disappoints! If you want a list of Valentines Candy that does not contain Palm-oil, here is an extensive one, which you’ll find at the end of this short Conservation blog post. Why do this? Because it helps to save the lives of Orangutans and many other species.

So, WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR??!!

Thanks to heatherpringle.wordpress.com for the candy photo

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