Current:Home > InvestIce blocks, misters and dips in the pool: How zoo animals are coping with record heat -MoneyTrend
Ice blocks, misters and dips in the pool: How zoo animals are coping with record heat
View
Date:2025-04-17 03:08:26
Imagine you're an alpaca. You're completely covered in fleece. Now imagine you're Noel, a fleece-covered alpaca at a zoo in Akron, Ohio, where a heat advisory is in effect through the weekend, and a zookeeper has just spritzed you with a garden hose while filling your pool.
How would you respond? Well, with alpaca kisses, of course.
"While filling the pool, she was spraying Noel and helping him cool off," said Akron Zoo spokesperson Elena Bell. "He was so appreciative."
Beastly temperatures nationwide have forced an early hand from zoo teams used to closely monitoring animal comfort and behavior during warm summer months. In response, zookeepers are taking measures to make sure their resident critters stay cool and studying how they respond to better serve them in the future.
In many ways, zoo animals are not unlike us: They enjoy frolicking in pools, chipping at ice blocks and nibbling on popsicles when it gets hot.
In Akron, Luca the juvenile Andean condor has spent time pecking at ice between sessions of ripping apart paper, an exercise meant to mimic the bird’s natural behavior of ripping apart carcasses. Meanwhile, Bell said, Sumini, the zoo’s female Sumatran tiger, has been enjoying extra pool time, gnawing at ice blocks filled with blood and chunks of meat.
Peccaries and tortoises around the country are lollygagging in regularly replenished wallows, while others find comfort under misters. Big cats and spotted hyenas feast on bloodsicles, which are exactly what they sound like – frozen blocks of leftover blood saved during preparation of their standard raw-meat diets.
“We freeze the juice that comes off their regular diet,” said Chris Massaro of ZooTampa at Lowry Park in Tampa, Florida, where such treats are prepared for the facility’s clouded leopards. “Like if you buy a steak at the supermarket and pull the juice out, we freeze that and make a popsicle out of it.”
Such measures help keep animals from overheating while adhering to their regular diet, said Massaro, the zoo's senior vice president of zoological operations.
Frozen treats have been added to many animals’ menus at the zoo, most recently thanks to 150 pounds of shaved ice donated by a local business. The zoo’s nutrition center made snowballs for its orangutans and a watermelon-infused ice block for its Southeast Asian sun bear.
Keeping zoo animals stimulated as they beat the heat
Zoo staff ensure that conditions, too, evoke animals' natural habitats. Rhinos, for instance, can wallow around as they would in the wild, coating their skin with mud to protect themselves from the sun.
“We provide them with everything they would utilize in the wild as cooling techniques,” Massaro said. “We provide what they like and what they need so they have a happy, healthy life here at the zoo."
That doesn’t mean it can’t be fun. Zoo staff strive to keep animals both physically and mentally stimulated, even as they beat the heat. Animals that eat fish, for example, are given buckets full of frozen fish.
"It takes a while to melt, and they can play around with it,” Massaro said.
Zoos typically build animal populations whose natural habitats are similar to their zoo homes. At the Phoenix Zoo in Arizona, for example, the vast majority of animals safely thrive in extreme temperatures.
“The Arizona Trail houses animals who are all native to Arizona and, therefore, familiar with the heat,” the zoo’s website states.
Other animals’ native regions are similarly dry and arid, such as Africa or the Middle East, from which the zoo’s lions, giraffes, cheetahs and Arabian onyx originate.
But Phoenix zookeepers have taken additional measures to supplement animals’ natural heat acclimation, including regularly maintained pools for the lion, elephant, rhinoceros and Andean bear and misters for the zoo's elephant and monkey habitats.
Other animals get a periodic dousing with a sprinkler or garden hose. Slabs with cold water piped underneath help keep tigers from overheating. Tortoises and warty pigs cool off in wallows, and the zoo’s orangutan has an air-conditioned space in which to find solace.
Fans, misters, ice treats with frozen bugs
At the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden in Ohio, a young Black rhino – rarely seen licking – eagerly lapped at a frozen treat while a clutch of elephants took a dip in their giant pond.
In Massachusetts, large shade sails with misters have been erected throughout the Gorilla Grove habitat at Franklin Park Zoo in Boston, where gorillas now snack on frozen berries and diluted fruit juice.
In the zoo’s tropical forest exhibit, ring-tailed lemurs get ice treats packing frozen bugs, while the De Brazza’s monkeys – a mostly arboreal species native to central Africa and known for their beards and orange crowns – have been noshing on the equivalent of frozen fruit bars. Red pandas frolic under misters and a cooling platform.
A half-hour north in Stoneham, Massachusetts, Stone Zoo staff installed a mister and fan for the yak, extra fans for the reindeer and wolves and misters for the zoo’s Caribbean flamingos, peregrine falcon and African-spurred tortoises.
At some zoos, animals receive optional, off-exhibit access to cooler indoor space so they can chill out behind the scenes. At Stone Zoo, that includes the jaguar, snow leopards, black bears and white-cheeked gibbons.
Giving animals choices and observing what they do helps guide future care for zoo staff, said Massaro, of ZooTampa.
“The more we can provide them with opportunities and see how they choose to spend their days, the more we can understand what they prefer,” he said. “We’re seeing what works.”
veryGood! (53)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Dollar Tree to close nearly 1,000 stores, posts surprise fourth quarter loss
- Pennsylvania’s Governor Wants to Cut Power Plant Emissions With His Own Cap-and-Invest Program
- Concorde supersonic jet will return to New York’s Intrepid Museum after seven-month facelift
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Kentucky should reconsider using psychedelics to treat opioid addiction, attorney general says
- Pennsylvania’s Governor Wants to Cut Power Plant Emissions With His Own Cap-and-Invest Program
- George Widman, longtime AP photographer and Pulitzer finalist, dead at 79
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Censorship efforts at libraries continued to soar in 2023, according to a new report
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- You Have to See Kristen Stewart's Bold Dominatrix-Style Look
- Transgender recognition would be blocked under Mississippi bill defining sex as ‘man’ or ‘woman’
- Brittany Cartwright Gets Candid About Scary Doubts She Had Before Jax Taylor Separation
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Lawyer says Epstein plea deal protects Ghislaine Maxwell, asks judge to ditch conviction
- TikTok bill that could lead to ban faces uphill climb in the Senate
- Two-thirds of women professionals think they're unfairly paid, study finds
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Police say suspect in a Hawaii acid attack on a woman plotted with an inmate to carry out 2nd attack
Get free treats, discounts if you solve the 1,000th Wordle puzzle this week
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's Photographer Addresses Report About 2021 Picture
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Paul Alexander, Who Spent 70 Years in an Iron Lung, Dead at 78
Gulf Coast Petrochemical Buildout Draws Billions in Tax Breaks Despite Pollution Violations
Judge schedules sentencing for movie armorer in fatal shooting by Alec Baldwin