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This article is from thestar.com.my

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2003/6/5/features/zooboredom & sec\

=features

 

________________________

 

Thursday, June 05, 2003

Happy in captivity

By CARLA HALL

 

While zoos preserve animal species for posterity, zoo operators have a problem

keeping the creatures entertained and enriched. The phenomenon of listless,

bored animals is a crucial problem in zoos, and the challenge is to keep them

stimulated.

 

LIONEL, a 15-year-old, slightly arthritic male lion, ambles across his

savanna-like exhibit at the Los Angeles Zoo headed for an open cardboard box. He

burrows into the box and emerges with a prize & #8211; a burlap bag of straw

bedding soaked with the leftover food and urine of the zoo & #8217;s bongos,

African antelopes, which are the natural prey of lions.

 

With the bag in his teeth, Lionel trots around, breathing in its intoxicating

scents. Then he drops the bag to the ground, rubs his head over it and rolls

around in the dirt like an oversized house cat giddy on catnip.

 

 

 

Cookie, a 14-year-old lioness, sees an opportunity. She snatches the bag and

darts behind a palm tree, pawing at her cache.

 

“She always wants to steal,” says zoo staffer Karin Merit, watching the two

lions make sport with the cardboard box, the bag and each other.

 

That & #8217;s fine with Merit. When the animals cavort and play, she knows she

has done her job well.

 

For two decades, zoos around the world have dedicated themselves to saving

species from extinction, providing better veterinary care and improving zoo

habitats with state-of-the-art exhibits. But the assurance of long life, food

and million-dollar shelters only aggravates a long-standing problem in zoo

populations: boredom.

 

That has given rise to the zoo inventor, people such as Merit, who spend hours

dreaming up ways to amuse, puzzle and challenge captive animals.

 

Great apes and bears at the LA Zoo fiddle with bamboo puzzles that dispense

food. Primates explore their reflections in mirrors. River otters nose plastic

balls filled with fish. Tamarins and marmosets wrestle with toilet paper rolls

stuffed with cereal and worms. Big cats swat at dangling balls of fur perfumed

with wild scents.

 

“Whenever anyone moults, I get fur, feathers, snakeskins,” says Merit, who

fashions the materials into animal playthings.

 

Figuring out ways to stimulate and engage the LA Zoo & #8217;s animals & #8211;

“behaviour enrichment” in zoo parlance & #8211; is the job of Merit, her small

staff and a platoon of volunteers.

 

 

 

Live goldfish are a popular tool. After the zoo & #8217;s three sea lions figure

out how to empty a 23-litre water bottle filled with fish, each proceeds

differently. Bea sucks them up like a vacuum cleaner. Mona only chases them.

Rocky, a 227kg male, lets two or three flop around in his mouth before

swallowing them.

 

“A large challenge is putting things out that they don & #8217;t destroy in 60

seconds,” Merit says.

 

The zoo puts out whole pumpkins for rhinos and other large animals to kick

around like soccer balls, or hollows them out so that small animals like

meerkats can climb inside.

 

Staff members and volunteers make more than 100 frozen treats every week

& #8211; animal popsicles variously filled with horse blood, mice, chicks and,

for the zoo & #8217;s herbivores, a mixture of leaves and twigs known as browse.

 

On this particular morning, after Cookie the lioness tires of playing with the

cardboard box, she gets a thick frozen disk of horse blood to occupy her for a

while.

 

Relieved of the need to hunt for food or evade prey, zoo animals with little to

do sometimes resort to excessive grooming or repetitive behaviour, such as

pacing. No animal is too big or small for some version of enrichment & #8211;

from spiders to elephants.

 

Merit says that hooved animals are the most difficult to occupy or amuse. “They

just stand there,” she says. Happily, the zoo staff has discovered that one of

the African antelopes, an eland, likes to play ball.

 

Mindful of overfeeding, zookeepers restrict snacks. The idea is to make the

food more difficult to find or unwrap. For instance, “browse balls” are placed

in hanging wire baskets that force giraffes to root around with their 45cm-long

tongues.

 

“We & #8217;re trying to get them to forage,” says Merit. “In the wild, they

search all day for food. Here, it & #8217;s all served up.”

 

The introspective orangutans are given books and magazines donated to the zoo.

 

 

 

“They & #8217;ll actually sit there and turn the pages and look at the pictures,”

says Megan Fox, an animal keeper who works with the great apes. She watches as

Bruno, a shaggy male, holds a banana flower in one hand and a book in the other.

 

As with many other animals in the zoo, orangutans love interacting with their

trainers. At one point, the 190kg Bruno comes over to the wire mesh that

encloses his exhibit and presses his broad face against it.

 

“He wants his lips rubbed,” says Fox as Bruno juts out his lower lip and she

strokes it. The ape grasps the mesh with his big fingers and Fox affectionately

rubs them.

 

“It & #8217;s hard to find things that will keep them stimulated throughout the

day,” she says. “We have enrichment volunteers scheduled five or six days a

week.”

 

This enrichment business has become an increasingly important concept for zoos

in the last 10 years. Once threatened with the loss of accreditation by the

American Zoo and Aquarium Association, the LA Zoo has had to focus in recent

years on renovating its reputation and its ageing, cramped facilities and

dealing with issues such as the genetic management of animals. But the zoo, like

other facilities, still grapples with the phenomenon of listless, unchallenged

animals.

 

“It & #8217;s probably one of the most crucial problems we face,” says Ed

Maruska, interim zoo director. The concept of enrichment grew & #8211; literally

& #8211; out of the zoo & #8217;s gorilla garden, where banana trees and other

plants not readily available were started in 1987, part of a research project to

increase gorilla foraging. Today the zoo has four gardens where special

plantings provide treats and recreation.

 

Initially, enrichment involved little more than refurbishing an animal & #8217;s

exhibit & #8211; putting in plants and materials from their natural habitats.

Over the years, it has come to encompass ways to encourage foraging behaviour,

mental stimulation, cognitive ability and socialising.

 

But recognising that an animal is bored is a complicated issue. Lions naturally

sleep a lot & #8211; no surprise to owners of house cats & #8211; and they pace

when they want to eat.

 

“A visitor comes at 3pm and says, & #8216;Oh, look at that poor animal.

He & #8217;s unhappy cooped up & #8217;,” says Maruska. “In fact, he & #8217;s

hungry.”

 

Animal behaviourist David Shepherdson doesn & #8217;t like the word “bored” to

describe animal behaviour. “The topic of how you assess animal welfare in any

individual is a tough nut to crack,” says Shepherdson, conservation programme

scientist at the Oregon Zoo. “The consensus is, there & #8217;s no one way of

measuring it.”

 

Polar bears, for example, which walk great distances in the wild, are known for

faring poorly in zoos and exhibiting the classic behaviour of a bored animal

& #8211; they pace back and forth.

 

But Shepherdson, who is studying polar bear hormone levels as a measure of

stress, says maybe it & #8217;s the well-adjusted polar bears that pace & #8211;

like athletes running on treadmills when they can & #8217;t run outside.

 

“It could be the bears that are doing this are coping better than the bears who

are not doing it,” he said.

 

Shepherdson believes zoos should adopt a more standardised approach to

enrichment.

 

“You consider the animal & #8217;s behaviour in the wild and compare their

behaviour in captivity,” he says. “If this is an animal that spends 80% of its

time foraging in the undergrowth for insects, one of the goals may be to provide

that kind of foraging opportunity. With an ape, your goal might be to challenge

them cognitively.”

 

Many activists who oppose keeping animals in zoos resign themselves to the

exhibits and support efforts to enrich the animals & #8217; lives.

 

“We owe them the psychological enrichment they deserve & #8211; we put them

there,” says Nicole Paquette, general counsel for the Animal Protection

Institute, a national organisation based in Sacramento, California.

 

For now, enrichment at the zoo is a labour of love & #8211; or enthusiasm.

 

It is not done in any particularly scientific way. Notebooks in the

administration office to record observations of animals with their toys and

games are erratically kept by volunteers. Merit & #8217;s position is part-time

& #8211; even though she works more hours than she is paid for. Maruska still

needs to hire about five keepers.

 

“This continues to present us with challenges to make our animals more

balanced,” Maruska said. “Doing something is wonderful. Is it enough? Probably

not.” & #8211; LAT-WP<p>

 

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