The Randolph Guide | Asheboro NC | Home Page

Community News

December 3, 2008

Zoo Tales – Caring for aging animals

Aging animals create special concerns for N.C. Zoo



When Tort the Galapagos turtle arrived at the N.C. Zoo several years ago for his second “tour of duty,” he was more than 50 years old – ancient when compared to most zoo animals. But for his species – that often live to 150 years old – he was hardly even into middle age.

Tort illustrates a growing concern for zoos in America and throughout the world: captive animals are living longer and their extended care into old age has become a growing concern for most zoos and other institutions housing animals.

Just as with humans, animals are living longer because of such things as improved nutrition, better veterinary care and medical breakthroughs.

Also, as they age, animals in the wild usually die off naturally or are killed by other animals. But in zoos, they have no predators, so they live longer.

While most of the N.C. Zoo’s more than 1,100 animals are in the prime of their lives, others are approaching the end of their life expectancies.

This has created the need for zookeepers to learn how to accommodate these aging populations.

Although zoos have always faced the problems of aging animals, today it has become an evolving part of their animal husbandry – learning how to care for older animals and to meet their needs.

Similar to human populations, it’s not that zoos have never dealt with aging animals. It’s that aging animals are now in greater numbers proportionally.

Animal welfare groups would say that it’s good that animals are living longer in zoos and facilities – it illustrates how zoos are doing their job well.

But it also means zoos must now deal with increasingly difficult aging problems.

Animals that would have long before died in the wild are now developing such ailments as cancer, renal failure, and heart and liver disease.

Although zoos could simply move the aging animals off exhibit, it is often necessary to maintain diversity in the ages of animal collections.

Younger animals are typically more active and are of more interest to visitors, but older animals are necessary, too, particularly in species that develop social groups.

The older animals are, in a sense, role models for younger animals, teaching them proper behavior within their social groups.

Animal aging is of special concern at the N.C. Zoo since many of the animals are rapidly approaching about 30 years of age – often the upper limits of life expectancy for many captive animals.

When the zoo was built about 30 years ago, many of the animals were young.

But some of the animals have been at the zoo since its earliest days and have aged those same 30 years.

Often zoo animals, just like household pets, grow weak with age but are not old or sick enough to be euthanized.

Suffering from typical aging maladies such as hearing and sight loss, cancer and dementia, zoo animals often have to be treated with expensive painkillers and other medications.

Often, zoos simply have not budgeted for these higher, long-term health-care costs.

It is a policy that all members of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, of which the N.C. Zoo is a member, commit to the long-term care of their animals.

It would be easier for zoos to euthanize aging animals once they become too old to be exhibited, but as long as their quality of life is good, zoos have a moral obligation to care for their aging animals.

Adding to the aging dilemma is the emotional complexities brought on when both visitors and keepers grow to love the institution’s animals over the years and decades. And, as with companion pets, the choice to finally euthanize a zoo animal can be difficult and emotional.

Keepers often receive letters of condolence when one of their animals dies or it becomes necessary to euthanize.

Simply put, zoos and other animal institutions are responsible for the well-being of their animals for as long as those animals live – no matter how long that might be.

But the new problems facing zoo staffs are taking them – and the animals – into an area of limited experience and many unknowns.



Tom Gillespie lives in Trinity and is a journalist and public affairs specialist at the North Carolina Zoo. For more information on the zoo’s plant and animal collections, special events and education programs, go to their Web site at www.nczoo.org

Text Only
Community News

Echoes from the Titanic
Extra! Extra! Read all about it!
Facebook
Reader Comments
Top News Videos
Calif.'s Coronado Named Nation's Best Beach Raw Video: Wildfire Burns 110 Square Miles Sudden Storm Topples Wisconsin Trees Texan Ranchers Remain Wary of Drought Vegas Grocer Deported to Face War Crimes Charges Raw Video: Soldiers Plant Flags at Arlington NJ Official: NYPD Muslim Surveillance Legal Man Arrested Who Says He Suffocated Etan Patz Police: Man Arrested in Etan Patz Disappearance Hurricane Forecast: 15 Named Storms Expected Man Tells Police He Killed Missing Boy in 1979 Obama Highlights Economic Recovery Plan in Iowa 14-year-old Texan Wins National Geographic Bee Chicago U.S. Attorney Fitzgerald Resigns Neighbors of Etan Patz's Suspect: It's Shocking Today in History for May 23rd Today in History for May 24th Today in History for May 22nd Search Intensifies for Missing Louisiana Woman Bloomberg: Man Implicates Self in Etan Patz Case
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com