Posts Tagged ‘feeding’

Enrichment for a Fierce Hunter

Posted by in Children's Zoo,Enrichment

The Houston Zoo is home to one of the widest varieties of animal species that can be found in the country. Peaceful grazers and fierce hunters can be found side-by-side, and it is the responsibility of animal keepers to provide appropriate enrichment for these animals.

 

Swift Fox

Our Swift Fox

Here we have one of our (not so) fierce hunters… a swift fox (Vulpes velox)! While these small canids have a varied diet, small animals such as crickets and grubs are certainly favored food items. To increase the difficulty of obtaining the prey, these items can be placed in cardboard boxes or mixed among shredded paper to give our animals the opportunity to hunt their food. This gives the animals the chance to exercise both their minds and bodies, and the ability to act on their natural instincts.

 
Items such as boxes and paper are just a few of the items utilized by animal keepers here at the Houston Zoo to better the lives of our animals. Interested in helping out? Our enrichment team has a list of items regularly in demand, which can be found here. Come see our Swift Fox in the McGovern Children’s Zoo!

Animal Enrichment: Stump Full of Treats

Posted by in Children's Zoo,Enrichment,Events

At the Houston Zoo there is a wide variety of animals.  The McGovern Children’s Zoo houses many different species, so the keepers are kept on their toes striving to provide interesting and varied enrichment for all their animals.  Here is an example of one way their enrich the lives of the raccoons that live  at the Children’s Zoo.

For the clever raccoon, getting your food presented to you in a bowl everyday can be a bit mundane. In the wild they would be climbing trees, digging, and wading in the water to get their next meal. They are what I like to call “opportunivores” – taking advantage of food sources wherever they can find them. To create a little variety and to stimulate natural foraging behaviors, we recently took a small stump and drilled raccoon hand sized holes along the top and sides and then dropped their daily diet into the holes. When we gave the girls the stump they dove right in, enthusiastically digging out their favorite tidbits of food.  Even after all of the food has been found, they will still search and scratch at the holes just to be sure they didn’t leave anything behind.

 

What kind of food do we put in the holes you might ask? Raccoons are omnivores – they will eat anything from insects, to plant matter, to the occasional egg snatched from a nest, so we have a wide variety of choices to put in their “puzzle feeder”. It is very rewarding as a keeper to give our animals experiences that mirror their natural wild behaviors.

The next time you come and visit the raccoons, take a peak at their exhibit to see what new ways we enriching our clever masked mammals.

Written by Stephanie Turner

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

Primate Enrichment: It’s Never a Dull Moment!

Posted by in Enrichment,Events,Primates

In the Primate section at the Houston Zoo, we have a multitude of different animals to enrich (including some non-primates!)  Creating work and play for our collection is a big part of what we do every day.  Our challenge as keepers and managers is to find, make or build various objects to manipulate and investigate that our monkeys, apes and others will enjoy.   You can find some of items we use at Amazon.com.   From boxes to shredded paper and from pine bark mulch to wood shavings, we are always looking for materials that our animals might like to tear up or forage through.  Our goals are for animals to behave the way they do in nature: working to find food, making a nest, or just plain having fun.  So remember the next time you see Bobby the mandrill reading through that magazine, he’s not just looking for the latest trends, he’s looking to see if his keeper put a special treat in between the pages!   Or like Jambi babirusa below working the barrel to get the very last treat out to enjoy!

 

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.   Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Houston Zoo and Amazon.com

Posted by in Enrichment,Events

Do you love to shop?!  The Houston Zoo animals now have a wishlist on Amazon.com!  We all enjoy buying that perfect gift for someone special…..and who’s more special than the animals at the zoo!  I know you’ve often wondered, if I were buying a gift for Jonathan the lion what on earth would he want?  And where would I go to buy it?  What about a baby gift for Aurora the orangutan?  Well today’s your lucky day and you don’t even have to leave the comfort of your air conditioned home, yes shopping in the summer without breaking a sweat!!

All of the animals now have brought their needs and wants to you through Amazon.com, just a click away.  Here’s an example of some of the items you can purchase and enrich the lives of your favorite animal.

The Carnivores are asking for boomer balls, catnip and many other items, you know how cats love to wind themselves up on catnip, then start chasing everything in sight!   Like this Jolly Ball available at Amazon.com, peppermint scented!

Horseman's Pride Jolly Ball

The Primates are asking for a Look Lous feeding mirror….hmmmm is that so Rudy orangutan can make sure there are no crumbs on his face when he finishes his favorite breakfast??  Just a click away!

Looky Lou Feeder 14" X 10" Acrylic w/ 3/4" holes (.125 wall) Mirror on one side: 4 in.

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

 

Avian Enrichment: Great Blue Turaco Gets Bamboo

Posted by in Birds,Enrichment,Everyday Enrichment

Everyday Enrichment: Making Life More Interesting for our Avian Residents – Part IV

As a child, I absolutely hated spinach. I was not a particularly finicky eater, but spinach was the one food substance that would not be accepted under any terms. In my opinion it was slimy, smelly and altogether quite inedible. As I have grown older, I’ve found that there are a variety of ways in which spinach can be a perfectly acceptable component of my diet. Raw spinach in salads is neither slimy nor smelly; spinach baked on a pizza with chicken and red onion is barely even noticeable. The fact of the matter is that there are a wide variety of ways to provide food substances that otherwise might have been deemed unacceptable.

This is a Great Blue Turaco (Corythaeola cristata) enjoying a bit of bamboo browse. Here at the Houston Zoo, we regularly provide our animals with a variety of safe plant material to eat, use as nesting material or otherwise simply destroy. Examples of plants we use in our browse program include hibiscus, bamboo, pyracantha, banana, ginger, mulberry, hackberry and willow. Browse not only provides added supplementation to the nutrition of our animals, it also gives the birds something to do; if a bird wants to eat the new growth found on the branches, it must actually search for the new growth and figure out how to get it.

Our birds react quite favorably to this form of enrichment; it also demonstrates yet another way our keepers must continually think about the presentation of the diet to ensure it is appealing to our animals. For example, the Great Blue Turaco seen in this video enjoys Romaine Lettuce as an occasional treat. Leaves that are broken up are eaten with relish, and there is nothing more exciting than watching this bird thoroughly enjoy half a head of lettuce that is secured to an enclosure wall. However, individual leaves that are placed in the animals bowl will be picked up and thrown on the floor. Turacos are not able to hold and tear food items like other birds can because of their diet; in nature, fruits and leaves are found attached to a tree which means these birds can just bite off pieces of acceptable food material until they are food.

All these examples just demonstrate the wide variety of ways keepers must constantly assess and evaluate the dietary needs of our animals. The dietary care of our animals must provide for nutritional balance as well as mental stimulation – food would not show up in the same place daily in the wild, and our animals demonstrate a great increase in natural behavior from having to work just a little harder to get their food.

To this day, I refuse to believe that spinach that comes from a can has even the slightest properties of food. However, many of our birds at the Houston Zoo will let you know that simply changing up the presentation of a diet (turning over a new leaf, as it were) can provide our animals with a diet that is nutritionally fortified and fun!

You can visit this fabulous bird in our Birds of the World habitat. Hope to see you soon!

Avian Enrichment: Flamingo Flock Gets Krill

Posted by in Birds,Enrichment,Everyday Enrichment

Everyday Enrichment: Making Life More Interesting For Our Avian Residents – Part III

Anyone who has been lucky enough to visit the Houston Zoo recently has most likely gotten a glimpse of enrichment and has an idea of how it is used to better the lives of the macro-mammals at the zoo. However, problems arise with the fact that some of our animals really have no interest in interacting with their human caretakers. When that occurs (as is typical with many bird species), keepers must think of new and innovative means to keep our animals mentally fit.

These are our Chilean Flamingos (Phoenicopterus chilensis) enjoying a snack of krill. This is actually a special treat for our flamingos since they do not get the krill (small shrimp) on a regular basis; instead, our birds are fed a nutritionally-complete pelleted diet that is designed to provide the proper balance of vitamins and nutrients to provide them with everything they need. Also, our birds get different pelleted diets at different times of the year to provide for the variation in metabolic needs that is associated with the breeding season. However, krill are certainly one of the favorite food items and there is no reason why a favored food item can’t be offered in moderation. Here at the Houston Zoo, we readily use the favored food items of our animals to enrich them, train them and encourage them to take active part in their own husbandry.

This instance was actually the first time that the newest editions to our flamingo flock had ever gotten krill; as you can see, they are a bit intimidated by it at first. Flamingos are a prey species, which means that their instincts tell them that anything new should be treated with caution as it could be a potential predator. However, our 6-month old flamingo chicks (noted by the grey/black plumage) eventually pluck up the courage and take to eating the krill with gusto.

Take note of the distinctive stained-glass artwork and the artificial concrete trees visible in the video – the flamingo yard is one of the oldest exhibits in the zoo and these objects are wonderful examples of the obvious appreciation for aesthetics the Houston Zoo has had with regard to animal exhibits. Of course, when guests come to the zoo they can typically look past these unique items of zoo history and simply stare mesmerized at the beauty of our Chilean Flamingo flock. Of course, we also have scheduled flamingo feedings several times a week and also encourage guests to consider “adopting” a flamingo to help provide for the care of these amazing animals. For our guests who can’t seem to get enough of our feathered friends, the Houston Zoo offers “Flocking,” a fun and interesting way to help support avian conservation!

Avian Enrichment: Foraging Fun with an Eclectus Parrot

Posted by in Birds,Enrichment,Everyday Enrichment

Everyday Enrichment: Making Life More Interesting for our Avian Residents – Part I

Many Houston Zoo visitors often ask us what we do to ensure the health and mental well-being of our birds. Our keepers work daily to prepare varied and nutritionally-fortified diets, clean and maintain a variety of enclosures and take steps to ensure the best possible health of our animals. However, this doesn’t address every aspect of caring for our animals: this is where enrichment comes into play.

Enrichment may sound fancy or difficult, but in essence it simply entails giving our animals the opportunity to exhibit natural behaviors and reactions that they would demonstrate in the wild. Here at the Houston Zoo, our keepers work to provide a wide array of enrichment opportunities to keep our animals mentally stimulated (and we try our best to make sure our guests will be able to see these interactions as well).

Here we have an Eclectus Parrot (Eclectus roratus) working to get some mixed nuts and seed that have been placed in a tall can. Parrots in particular are known for spending large parts of their day in the wild seeking out new food sources, so giving a parrot something like this enforces a notion of working to get their food. This bird clearly employs a wide variety of problem-solving skills before she eventually wins the prize of a few peanuts and sunflower seeds.

Ever wonder what you can do to help enrich the animals at the Houston Zoo? There are many items that are highly desirable in our pursuit of providing an ever-changing life of variety for our animals, which you can view here. Of course, you can also feel free to come to the zoo to observe the variety of natural behaviors encouraged through these simple interactions. Many guests can spend hours enraptured by the most basic of natural behaviors, including simple foraging for food!

Lunch Time in the African Forest Ain’t Just for the Animals

Posted by in African Forest

In case you were wondering what’s to eat at the new African Forest…we were wondering the same thing. A group of us took a walk over to African Forest for lunch today. We checked out the new offerings at the restaurant over there and were very impressed. Here’s a sampling of what we ate:

fresh mozzerella & tomato pizza

Curried couscous salad
Reuben flatbread sandwich (my choice)
Gourmet mac & cheese
Turkey burgers with what looked like big hunks of freshly roasted turkey in it
Brownie with caramel filling

A few other awesome sounding things on the menu included a cranberry turkey wrap, bacon bowtie pasta salad and a white pizza with big slices of fresh tomato on it. The dessert counter also had little cups of banana pudding with vanilla wafers and strawberry shortcake cups.

The restaurant also has the usual offering of chicken strips, burgers and fries, chips, sodas and so forth, and those looked yummy as well.

Guinea Hog Piglets Soon to Make Their Debut at the John P. McGovern Children’s Zoo!

Posted by in Children's Zoo,Endangered,Featured,Guinea Hog

Spring is typically thought of as a time for baby animals and flowers, but not for the John P. McGovern Children’s Zoo!  This year, our babies are arriving right in the middle of summer, and they definitely don’t smell like flowers!  We have two adorable Guinea Hog piglets that arrived at the zoo in July, soon to make their debut on exhibit in the Children’s Zoo.  Now, adorable may not be a word that you typically use to describe pigs, but how can you describe these faces as anything else?

You will be able to see this adorable face up close soon in the John P. McGovern Children's Zoo!

These girls may be small now, weighing about 25 lbs, but in a few years they will be about 150 lbs!  That may seem very large, but Guinea Hogs are actually one of the smaller breeds of pigs.  Guinea Hogs originated from West Africa and have been crossbred to create their unique breed, found only in North America, making them a true American Heritage Breed.  You won’t find this breed in the wild, they are only bred and kept on farms and ranches.  Guinea Hogs are omnivores, spending their days foraging for grasses, roots, nuts and the occasional small mammal or snake. Once one of the most commonly kept pigs, there are now fewer than 200 remaining making them a critically rare, or a minor breed.  Similar to a wild animal being classified as threatened or endangered, the term minor breed is used to describe nearly 100 breeds of livestock in North America that are declining.  Many of these breeds, like the Guinea Hog, were once kept widely and played a major role in the development in North American agriculture.  Over time, these breeds have been replaced by specialized breeds to meet the increasing production demand.  Guinea Hogs have a very sweet and docile disposition, and are extremely receptive to attention and training from keepers.  Our new additions have been receiving regular training from the time that they arrived.  Being very intelligent, Guinea Hogs are able to learn new behaviors quickly, already mastering target and station, seen below.  This consistent training is not only important as enrichment, but is also helpful for veterinary check ups, lessening the stress to the animal and staff.

Target is commonly one of the first behaviors any animal learns. Here, one of our girls targets to trainer Russell's hand. She must touch her snout, or gruntle, to his open palm to receive a reward.

Our girls will be venturing out onto exhibit in the John P. McGovern Children’s Zoo very soon.  Check back to see how much they enjoy their new home, exciting enrichment, and learning fun new behaviors, and be sure to visit them soon at the Houston Zoo!

Visit the American Guinea Hog Association to learn more about Guinea Hogs.

To learn more about American Heritage Breeds visit the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy.

Meet the Keeper: Suzanne Jurek

Posted by in Behind the Scenes,Children's Zoo,Christmas,Events,Featured,Holidays,Keepers,Mammals,Profiles

Suzanne shows off a bat skeleton to Zoo guests.

Hometown:Born in Memphis, TN but now a naturalized Texan!
Section: Children’s Zoo – Primary: Desert/Prairie
Quote: “Science without religion is lame; Religion without science is blind.” –Albert Einstein  

Special Interests/Hobbies:
Reading, time with my family, anything related to bats, active in church.  

Interesting Facts:
Population manager for Jamaican Fruit Bats, Certified Interpretive Guide, and once named All City Supreme Princess – of course I was only 4 at the time!  

  

 

What is your education, training, and previous institution(s) you attended before coming to the Houston Zoo?
Some college – 10 years volunteering at the Houston Zoo and on the job.  

Suzanne introduces Trixie to Saint Nick during "Breakfast with Santa"

What animals do you train, and what is your favorite section in the Children’s Zoo?   

I train the foxes in our Desert/Prairie section of the Children’s Zoo, which is also my favorite section!  

What sort of advice would you give to anyone wanting to enter the zoo field?
Science, science, science.  

What is your favorite animal story?
Too many to pick from! We work with the most amazing creatures! I have seen such intelligence and such determination in them. They bring tears to my eyes on a regular basis – mostly in awe of them.

If you have any questions or comments for Suzanne, feel free to post it in the comment section!

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