Ottawa Citizen

London Zoo counts its creatures

No stone left unturned in annual census

- SYLVIA HUI

LONDON • In a sea of flapping black and white flippers, Ricky is hard to miss: He’s got spiky yellow feathers, a flamboyant character, and he’s the only rockhopper among the dozens of penguins living in the London Zoo.

That’s a big help for keepers who embarked Thursday on their annual stock-taking of all the zoo’s residents. It’s no easy task, when there are more than 17,500 creatures to count. All animals have to be accounted for, including the tarantulas, locusts and snails.

The same scene was being repeated at zoos throughout Britain Thursday — the census is nationwide. No stone is left unturned, lest there be a beetle below.

At the London Zoo, keepers hope the new year will bring some company to Ricky, who has been the zoo’s lone rockhopper since 2011.

“Ricky’s quite a unique character — he was rejected by his parents and was hand-reared. He’s more interested in zoo keepers than in other penguins,” said zoological director David Field. “It’s time to get him some rockhopper partners.”

In the meerkat enclosure, 11 of the small mammals were only too happy to be counted, climbing onto a keeper’s clipboard seeking attention and food.

An all-female family of nine otters likewise rushed forward at the sight of their favoured delicacies: Mice and crayfish. In the invertebra­tes section, a palm-sized red-kneed tarantula called Jill caused a stir among visitors when she was lifted out of her box for inspection.

“This is quite a docile one,” said keeper Amy Callaghan, who held the spider out in her hand for photograph­ers. “I was a little bit wary of them at first, but now I think they’re brilliant.”

The census is required as part of the licence terms of British zoos, and the data is used for zoo management and internatio­nal breeding programs for endangered animals. The final tally could take weeks.

Most animals in the zoo have microchips in their bodies, making counting a little less daunting. Fish and animals with camouflage properties — such as leaf insects — are trickier, and the tiniest ones such as ants are counted in colonies, not as individual­s.

New additions to the zoo being counted for the first time included baby Ziggy, an endangered whitenaped mangabey monkey, and Maxilla, a black-and-white colobus monkey.

The zoo also welcomed a pair of new Sumatran tigers — male Jae Jae from a zoo in Ohio and female Melati, from Perth, Australia. The endangered tigers were matched by an internatio­nal breeding program to ensure a geneticall­y diverse population of animals.

“We breed them in the zoo because they are running out of time in the wild,” said Field, who’s hopeful the tigers will soon produce cubs.

 ?? BEN STANSALL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A zookeeper holds a bull frog during the annual stock take at London Zoo Thursday. The zoo houses over 17,500 mammals, fish and birds.
BEN STANSALL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A zookeeper holds a bull frog during the annual stock take at London Zoo Thursday. The zoo houses over 17,500 mammals, fish and birds.
 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Spectacled Owl nips a clipboard during a photo call at London Zoo Thursday. Zoos throughout Britain tallied creatures large and small.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Spectacled Owl nips a clipboard during a photo call at London Zoo Thursday. Zoos throughout Britain tallied creatures large and small.

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