Dear Colleague,
It is this digests’ second Birthday today. There are now well over 4000 subscribers in over 80 countries and 566 zoos (those that I have counted anyway). I know that many of the ‘official’ subscribers forward copies to others, and some put it onto their zoo intranet system. I have also heard from zoos which have no computer access but have had printed copies posted to them. Not bad going for an e-zine which has spread largely by word of mouth. I was therefore delighted to have handed to me today a commendation from the Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain and Ireland in the 1999 Education Award category in recognition of Zoo News and Zoo Biology. Many thanks folks, it is appreciated.
Very odd, but not much ‘Zoo’ news about this week.
Chai's baby will fit right in with easygoing all-female herd
(Woodland Park Zoo)
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/news/entertainment/html98/chai22_20000522.html
China Trade in Black and White
(National Zoo)
http://www.foxnews.com/national/052200/pandas.sml
Lost seal returned to sea
http://www.abc.net.au/news/regionals/tas/regtas-22may2000-1.htm
Euthanasia eyed after tiger eats arm
http://www.denverpost.com/news/news0522a.htm
Endangered critter delays projects
http://www.denverpost.com/news/news0522b.htm
Snake fancier appears in court
http://www.thestar.com/editorial/updates/gta/200005170_WEB-SNAKE15.html
Stone Zoo's popular old polar bear Major ailingby Franci Richardson
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/local_regional/majo05172000.htm
Girl attacked by tiger in Brewster animal farm
http://www.boston.com/dailynews/137/region/Girl_attacked_by_tiger_in_Brew:.shtml
J. 'Tiger Lady' contests revocation of her permit
http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/2000/May/17/city/JTIGER17.htm
Former zookeeper mauled by tapir sues over safety
http://www.oklahoman.com/cgi-bin/shart?ID=491178&TP=getarticle
Another giraffe dies at the zoo mysteriously
(San Francisco Zoo)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/examiner/hotnews/stories/16/gira\
ffe.dtl
Nursery for a Species
(Albuquerque's zoo)
http://www.abqjournal.com/news/35550news05-18-00.htm
North Carolina Zoo unveils newest piece of art
http://www.news-record.com/news/local/rand/art05.htm
*********************************************************************
If you know a story I have missed this week do drop me a line with the full web
address and I
will try and include it next week.
Bit & Pieces
ZooNews Digest subscribers can be found in :
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bali, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belize, Bermuda,
Brazil, Bulgaria,
Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Denmark, Ecuador,
Eire, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Hungary,
Iceland,
India, Indonesia, Isle of Man, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Korea,
Kuwait, Latvia,
Lithuania, Mexico, Malaysia, Malta, Mauritius, Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, New
Zealand,
Northern Ireland, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Peoples Republic of China,
Philippines,
Poland, Portugal, Russia, Senegal, Singapore, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, South
Africa, Spain,
Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, The Netherlands, Turkey,
Uganda, Ukraine,
United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Venezuela, Vietnam,
Yugoslavia,
Zambia, Zimbabwe.
*********************************************************************
I was saddened to learn last week of the death of ‘Red’ Palmer. Many of you may
not of heard
of Harold Curtis Palmer, but it was his pioneering work in the 1950’s which led
to the
development of the darting systems we all use today. He revolutionised the way
in which we
manage our animals. Both animals and zoo staff have benefited time and time
again.
His death at 85 years followed complications after heart surgery. He leaves a
wife, Bobbi.
*********************************************************************
The Incubation and Fertility Research Group Meeting, 2000 Meeting - University
of Oxford
The Incubation and Fertility Research Group (WPSA Working Group 6
{Reproduction}) is an
association of people interested in any aspect of incubation. Established almost
30 years ago
the Group is comprised of people interested in both scientific and practical
aspects of
incubation in a wide range of bird species (and even at times, reptilian and
extinct species).
The Group meets once a year at an annual meeting usually held in September
usually at a
venue in the UK, including in recent years, Warwick and Ayr. By nature it is an
informal
organisation open to all and so meetings are attended by a wide range of people
working in
science, commerce, and conservation. Most participants come from the UK and
Europe
although a few delegates come from the USA and even farther afield. The meetings
consist of
a series of oral and poster presentations offered by the delegates and is often
a useful place
for bringing forward new ideas. Many students have given their first ever
scientific
presentation to the IFRG's enthusiastic and friendly audience. Abstracts of
talks each year are
published in Poultry and Avian Reviews and International Hatchery Practise.
The IFRG Meeting 2000 will be held on September 11th-12th in Oxford. As usual,
the meeting
is open to people wishing to present talks or posters on any topic or species.
As usual there
will be ample time for informal discussions over coffee or in the bar.
This year there are special events which will interest everyone interested in
fertility and
incubation, particularly in the commercial sector. There is an invited keynote
speaker,
Professor Eddy Decuypere of the University of Leuven, Belgium, who will be
speaking on
"Incubation, a crucial hinge between breeders and broilers". There will also be
a "Back to
Basics" workshop for incubation featuring leading speakers from Israel and the
UK. Topics
covered will be:
Assessment and significance of fertility in commercial production by Dr Graham
Wishart
(University of Abertay, Dundee).
Shell formation and function and its role in incubation by Dr Nick Sparks (SAC,
Auchincriuve)
Techniques for improving the shelf life of fertile eggs by Professor Amos Ar
(Tel Aviv
University)
The critical importance of temperature in incubation by Dr Nick French (British
United
Turkeys, Tarvin)
Roles of water and gas exchange in determining hatchability success by Professor
Amos Ar.
Problems associated with egg turning by Dr Charles Deeming (Hatchery Consulting
&
Research, Wallingford)
Assessment of chick quality by Dr Charles Deeming
The meeting will be held at historic St Edmund's Hall on the High St, Oxford,
and is reasonably
priced (total costs for registration, meals and accommodation are around
£100.00). All are
welcome. For further information on this meeting please contact:- Dr Charles
Deeming,
Hatchery Consulting & Research, 17 Rowland Close, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10
8LA, UK.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk Tel./Fax: +44-(0)1491-835542.
Or see the website: http://www.biology.bbk.ac.uk/conf/ifrgconf.htm (with online
form).
*********************************************************************
Three new publications published by the Federation of Zoos of Great Britain and
Ireland
The publications are available as paper hard copies and on floppy discs
(versions Microsoft Word 97 and Microsoft Word 95 6.0).
Further information can be obtained from the Federation Secretariat.
Telephone: 020 7586 0230
E-mail: fedzoo@zsl.org
Management Guidelines for the Welfare of Zoo Animals
ISSN 0963-1712
For one copy the postage and packing rates are:
£1.50 United Kingdom
£2.00 Europe
£3.00 Worldwide zone 1 (United States of America etc.)
£3.50 Worldwide zone 2 (Australia etc.)
Falconiformes
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £8.00 £5.00
Non-members £16.00
£10.00
Birds of Prey in Flying Demonstrations
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £5.00 £5.00
Non-members £10.00
£10.00
Guenons
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £6.00 £5.00
Non-members £12.00
£10.00
Payment is by cheque in pounds sterling made payable to "The Federation of
Zoos".
Nicola Charlton
Conservation Coordinator
The Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain and Ireland
Zoological Gardens
Regent's Park
London NW1 4RY
United Kingdom
Telephone +44 (0)20 7586 0230
Direct Dial +44 (0)20 7449 6350
Facsimile +44 (0)20 7722 4427
E-mail fedzoo@zsl.org
Direct E-mail conservation.fedzoo@zsl.org
*********************************************************************
The Primate Conservation & Welfare Society is proud to announce the availability
of our first
annual Primate Conservation Grant Small Grant!
For details, including the Application Packet in .PDF Format, please see our
website at:
http://www.primates-online.com/apps.html
To receive a hard copy of the Conservation Grant Application Packet, please send
a self-
addressed stamped envelope to:
PCWS - Conservation Grant
PO Box 2101
Port Townsend, WA 98368 USA
Please note: Due to the volume of requests, application requests MUST be
accompanied by a
self-addressed stamped envelope. Applicants outside the US should contact PCWS
via email
with appropriate contact information. The grant deadline is June 30, 2000.
Stamp Donations Are Welcome For This Project!
*********************************************************************
Elephant Birth on the Web
Zoo Zurich is expecting the birth of an elephant this May. The birth will be
broadcasted live
on the internet. With this world first Zoo Zurich intends to appeal to a large
public and will
make use of the probable great interest to inform about the situation of the
Asian Elephants in
the wild. At all time the animal’s welfare will be the prime consideration and
will not be
affected in any way by the transmission. Already today live pictures from the
elephant house
will be shown on the following websites: http://www.zoo.ch and
http://www.migros.ch and
http://www.tagesanzeiger.ch
*********************************************************************
Zoo Staff Personals
Looking for work? Someone to travel with? Somewhere to stay? Let me know and I
will post it
here.
*********************************************************************
Situations Vacant
(Please mention you saw the advertisement in ZooNews Digest should you
apply for any of these posts, many thanks) Do you have a vacancy to
advertise? Please email me.
*********************************************************************
Experienced Keepers Wanted At Monkey World – Ape Rescue Centre, Wareham, Dorset
Monkey World is looking for experienced keepers to join our team as we embark
upon a 40
acre expansion. Our small but dedicated team of keepers (12 in all) already
boasts over 120
years of experience. We are interested in career animal keepers and the salaries
will reflect this.
Monkey World is aiming to hire 2 keepers and intends to pull together the best
team of
primate keepers in Europe.
Salaries will start at £10,500 per annum and will be adjusted as to experience.
Primate
experience is a benefit but we are also interested in hearing experienced
carnivore keepers as
well. The job will entail the daily husbandry of over 60 apes and 100 other
primates.
Applicants will be trained to give talks to the public. Monkey World assists
foreign
governments to stop the smuggling of primates from the wild and is a member of
EAZA and
several EEP breeding programmes. For more information about us see our web site
at
http://www.monkeyworld.org
Applications should be sent to: apes@aperescue.org or to Keeper Application,
Monkey
World – Ape Rescue Centre, Wareham, Dorset, BH20 6HH, England.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Blackpool Zoo have a Vacancy for - Senior Keeper ( Birds and Reptiles ) to
cover maternity
leave.
Qualifications required - City & Guilds Animal Management. Must have 3 years
keeping
experience within a zoo or private collection, with a minimum of 1 year
specialising in the
keeping of birds and reptiles.
It would be an advantage, if candidates had some experience of staff management
and
decision making, but this is not essential.
Further details and application forms from Russell Catlow, Blackpool Zoo, East
Park Drive,
Blackpool, FY3 8PP or by telephoning 01253 830801 /830807. Closing date for the
receipt of
completed applications is Friday 16th June.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
BANHAM ZOO
Is re-advertising its vacancy for a hard working, self-motivated HEAD KEEPER
to join their keeping team.
The position is a hands-on role, working with a staff of 14 keepers to maintain
and improve the
already excellent standards achieved.
Candidates should have a minimum of 6/7 years exotic animal husbandry with a
wide range of
species, particularly with primates. Experience with other mammals and birds
also desirable.
City & Guilds essential.
Supervisory experience and knowledge of Health and Safety procedures are also
required; full
driving licence is essential
Salary is negotiable and accommodation is available.
Previous applicants need not apply.
We also have a vacancy for an Experienced Keeper to lead our Primate Section
It is envisaged that this position will become vacant June/July.
The ideal candidate will have 4/5 years experience and the City and Guilds
certificate is
essential, they will need to be a flexible team member, able to use their
experience to assist on
other sections if necessary.
They should be able to lead a small, dedicated team of keepers in providing the
best possible
care. Experience with South American Primates and Lemurs an advantage.
Accommodation available
Please send your application stating which position you are applying for with a
full CV to:
Mike Woolham
Asst Zoo Animal Manager
Banham Zoo
The Grove
Banham
Norfolk
NR16 2HE
Closing date for applications for both positions is 7th June 2000
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Linton Zoo are looking for Experienced Keepers. They are looking for people with
a minimum
of five years experience with mammals, in particular ungulates and large cats or
birds and
reptiles. Having an interest in gardening would be advantageous.
Please send a full CV for application form to:
Kim Simmons, Linton Zoological Gardens, Hadstock Road, Linton, Cambridgeshire.
CB1 6NT
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Twycross Zoo are looking for an experienced Elephant Keeper. Accommodation is
available.
If interested please write to : Twycross Zoo, Atherstone, Warwickshire, CV9 3PX
Telephone 01827 880250
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
AVICULTURE INTERNS WANTED for the Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation Program
at the Maui Bird Conservation Center on the island of Maui and Keauhou Bird
Conservation
Center on the Big Island.
Daily tasks include husbandry duties such as: diet preparation, aviary and
facility
maintenance, behavioral observations of breeding birds, grounds keeping,
predator control.
Applicant must be able to live with several roommates in a remote area and
should show
enthusiasm for work with captive endangered Hawaiian birds. Driver’s license
and proof of
health insurance are required.
Internships last for three-month periods. Interns receive $15/day stipend plus
housing.
For more information, please send a resume, cover letter (with location
preference) and the
names and contacts of three references to: Tracey Powers P.O. Box 39 Volcano,
Hawaii 96785
or fax: 808-985-7034.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The World Ocean Discovery Centre ‘ The Deep’ which will be opening in Hull in
the Autumn
of 2001 are looking for a Curator. Expected salary for this position is expected
to be in the
region of £25,000 + PRP.
Prospective candidates are expected to have a proven track record in an aquarium
of
international or national renown. The should possess excellent people skills,
flexibility and
enthusiasm. The position is open now so that the curator can oversee the
procurement,
quarantine, transportation and other issues. Closing date for applications is
14th June 2000.
Send for application form to : The Deep, 79 Ferensway, Kingston upon Hull, Hull,
HU2 8LE
Telephone : 01482 615776
Fax : 01482 615645
Email ; thedeep@louise-k.fsnet.co.uk
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The Philadelphia Zoo currently has positions available for mammal keepers.
1 year keeper experience required; degree valued. Interest in conservation
education and
ability to interact in a positive, friendly manner with the public. $14.13/hr
plus benefits
package. Send resume to Human Resources, THE PHILADELPHIA ZOO, 3400 W. Girard
Ave., Phila., PA 19104. PH: (215) 243-5350. Visit our Web site at
http://www.phillyzoo.org
Specific positions are:
Small Mammal House Keeper: This is one of two line positions in the building.
Collection for
this line is a combination of nocturnal and diurnal species, including vampire
bats, lorises,
mouse lemurs, African
dormice, Malagasy giant jumping rats, mouse deer, tree shrews, pygmy marmosets,
and
elephant shrews. Exhibits and work are exclusively indoors. Interest in small
mammal
husbandry and creative exhibitry, some previous experience in same required.
Days off would
be consistent, but most likely weekdays.
Assigned Relief Keeper: This position is in the "Rare Animal House", relieving
for three line
positions on some of the line keepers' regular days off. The collection consists
mostly of
primates, including lemurs (2
species), marmosets and tamarins (4 species), spider monkeys, mangabeys, and
langurs. Other
species include naked mole rats, Rodrigues and Egyptian fruit bats, dwarf
mongoose,
armadillos, acouchi, and tree kangaroos. Most exhibits/work indoors. Interest
and some
experience in primate husbandry required; experience, ability in exhibit
furnishing a plus. Days
off would be consistent, but most likely weekdays.
For questions, contact Andy Baker, baker.andy@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5245, or Heidi Hellmuth, hellmuth.heidi@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5319.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Position Available: Chimpanzee Caregiver at the Wildlife Waystation, CA
Job Description: You will be working with 31 chimps (age 3-11 yeas) in 9 social
groups
Your duties include cleaning cages, raking, feeding, and enrichment. 95% of your
job is
CLEANING.
Qualification: You must be healthy, fit and ready to work outside for hours, and
be able to lift
and carry 35 lbs. Must be flexible and resourceful. We need someone who can work
both as a
team and independently. Working experience with any animal is a plus but not
required.
Please have a reference from your current/former employer or from your teacher
if you've just
finished school. High school diploma required.
This is an On-Ranch Volunteer position. The position consists of on-facility
trailer style living
with housing and utilities paid, and there is a food give-away once a week.
Compensation for
this position is a
non-taxable volunteer reimbursement and expense of $258.00 every two weeks. A
minimum six-
month stay required.
If interested, please send your resume and a reference to Dean Seymour, The
Wildlife
Waystation,
14831 Little Tujunga Canyon RD, San Fernando, CA 91342
For further information, please contact Dean Seymour at
dseymour@waystation.org or Asami Kabasawa at asamikabasawa@yahoo.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
For the most up to date links to sites advertising Zoo work go to:
http://members.tripod.com/~Sciurus/index.html
*********************************************************************
Meetings
TheUnion of the Czech and Slovak Zoological Gardens Annual Conference
25- 27 May 2000
ZooChomutov, Czech Republic
Forfurther information please contact: fax: +420-66-7302839
e-mail:jizoo@brn.pvtnet.cz
FifthInternational Elephant Research Symposium
1-3June 2000
Portland,Oregon
email:dolson@indyzoo.com
ANIMAL TRAINERS' NETWORK WORKSHOP
June 11, 12 & 13, 2000
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
To get a registration form or for more information, please
contact:
Email: hospital@cincyzoo.org or jenny.kroll@cincyzoo.org
Marwell Zoological Park Student Research Symposium
21 June 2000, start 9.30, finish 16.30
Everybody is welcome. For further information please contact Tanya
Langenhorst, Marwell Zoological Park, Colden Common, Nr Winchester SO21
1JH. Tel: 01962 777407, Fax: 01962 777511, email: tanyaL@marwell.org.uk
Course of Environmental Enrichment for Wild Animals in Captivity.
The Zoological National the Aurora of Guatemala, and El Zoo Conservation
Outreach Group
(ZCOG), presents/displays:
21-24 June 2000
Zoological National “The Aurora”
City of Guatemala,
Guatemala C.A
Further INFORMATION: Maria Jose Iturbide, Zoological Technical Department Aurora
Tel.
(502) 4720507 4720885, Fax (502) 4715286. email mjiturbidef@hotmail.com
The2nd Zoo Research Symposium
6- 7 July 2000
PaigntonZoo
E-mail: aplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk
Symposiumon Asian Raptors
25-27July 2000
Bandung,Indonesia
Forfurther info email : ypal@bdg.centrin.net.id
The2000 Invertebrates in Captivity Conference
3– 6 August 2000
RioRico, Arizona, USA
Fordetails see: http://www.sasionline.org/2000conf/2000confrpg.html
Fourth International Penguin Conference
4 – 8 September 2000
Coquimbo,Chile
ForFurther info : gluna@nevados.cecun.ucn.cl
The Fourth European Elephant Handlers School
4-17 September 2000
Woburn Safari Park and Blackpool Zoo
Further details and a full course programme can be obtained from
Woburn Safari Park-tele-01525 290407or e-mail WobSafari@aol.com
Annual Conference of the Swedish Association of Zoological Parks and Aquaria
6 – 8 September 2000
Boras Djurpark,
Boras, Sweden.
Email: info@parkenzoo.se
11th International Zoo Collectors Meeting
Munster Zoo, Germany
9-10 September 2000
Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
ZooFederation Plant Group Conference
September13th - 15th 2000
CotswoldWildlife Park
For further info:
“Colin Wren” gardens@rzss.org.uk
InternationalWhite-tailed Sea Eagle Conference
13-17September 2000
Bjorko,Sweden.
email: bjorn.helander@nrm.se
17thEAZA/EEP Annual Conference
19- 24 September 2000
AalborgZoo,
Denmark
Allmatters with regard to registration etc : Hju@aalborg-zoo.dk
Anythingrelated to conference programmes, meetings etc : info@eaza.net
InternationalSymposium on Galliformes
23September to 1st October 2000
Nepal
Forfurther information contact the World Pheasant Association on email:
wpa@gn.apc.org
15th International Zoo Educators’ Conference
1- 6 October 2000
Guadalajara,Mexico
For more information contact Maria Eugenia Martinez Arizmendi,
headof the Education Department.
Telephone: 0052-3-6744104
Fax : 0052-3-674-4488
E-mail : 104164.3717@compuserve.com
Third International Symposium on Physiology and Ethology of Wild and Zoo Animals
4 – 7 October 2000
Berlin, Germany
Email: symposium@izw-berlin.de
ZooSciences 2000
Amiens, France
For further details Email: zoolille@nordnet.fr
2000 AAZK Conference
8– 12 October 2000
ColumbusZoo
Checkout information on this conference by accessing its
websiteat: http://aazk2000.homestead.com
ElephantManagers International Conference
6- 9 October 2000
Syracuse,New York
Formore information please contact
AdrienneWhiteley on : bpzoo@emi.com
Panda 2000 International Conference
An international conference on the giant panda will be held in San Diego,
California (USA) October 16-19, 2000. The Zoological Society of San Diego
and the World Wildlife Fund are co- hosts. A program consisting primarily
of work-shops, panel discussions and poster sessions is planned. Topics
in conservation, education, training, research, health, reproduction, and
captive management will be co covered. Persons interested in attending
thismeeting are encouraged to contact the Local Arrangements Chair:
HelenaFitch-Snyder, Zool. Soc. of San Diego, PO Box 120551, San Diego, CA
92112.Phone: (619) 557-3954, FAX: (619) 557-3959; E-mail
helena@sandiegozoo.org.
Reproductionand integrated conservation science.
9thand 10th November, 2000
AZoological Society of London Symposium
TheMeeting Rooms, Zoological Society of London
To register your interest in attending this symposium please contact: D.
Body, Scientific Meetings Co-ordinator, Zoological Society of London,
Regent’s Park, London NW1 4RY, UK or email: Deborah.Body@zsl.org
If you would be interested in submitting a poster presentation, please
indicate this.
5thInternational Aquarium Congress
20- 25th November 2000
Monaco
Organisedby the Oceanographic Institute of Oceanography
Forfurther information email: iac2000monaco@meditnet.com
or write to : Secretariat of the 5th IAC 2000, Oceanographic Institute,
Av.St.Martin, MC 98000 Monaco Tel.: +377-93-25.36.00, Fax :
+377-93-30.90.95.
European Squirrel Workshop
The next WORKSHOP is planned for the year 2001 in Turin, Italy
For further details contact : Kathy Hodder, Institute of Terrestrial Ecology,
Wareham,Dorset,
BH20 4LN Tel. +44 (0) 1929 551518 Fax. 551087, Email k.hodder@ite.ac.uk
Ecologyand Conservation of Mini-antelope
Aninternational symposium on duiker and dwarf antelope in Africa
Hostedby the Marwell Zimbabwe Trust
12th-17thFebruary 2001
Bulawayo,Zimbabwe
Contactaplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk for further info
Second European Zoo Nutrition Conference
6- 9th April 2001
Southampton, UNITED KINGDOM
More detailed information about the programme and registration/abstract
submission deadlines will be available commencing 1st May 2000 at
http://www.marwell.org.uk To join the conference mailing list, send your
contact details (after the above-mentioned date) by email to:
Nutrition2001@marwell.org or by post/fax to: Zoo Nutrition 2001, Marwell
Zoological Park, Owslebury, Winchester, Hampshire, SO21 1JH, United
Kingdom. Fax: (0) 1962 777511.
FourthWorld Congress of Herpetology
1-8August 2001
Colombo,Sri Lanka
Pleasepre-register at website: http://www.4wch.com
Help Wanted
Need assistance? You could try Zoo Biology, it is probably your best bet for
animal
information. However ZooNews Digest reaches more like minded people, more often
than any
other similar publication on the planet! So you could try here. Let me know and
I will post it.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
PRIMATE LICE
Natalie Leo is a PhD student from the University of Queensland studying the
evolution of lice
from primates. She is having trouble getting specimens and thought that best
chance was
sanctuaries (where they might
actually handle the animals - at least the sick ones or newcomers). If you think
Natalie could
possibly help her
she would be extremely grateful. She using them for DNA analysis, and does not
need many
(2 or 3 is adequate to get information), but of course the more the better since
there are so
many different lice out there (some possibly yet unidentified).
If possible, please store them in 100% or 70% ethanol and then e-mail her at:
nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
Natalie Leo, B.Sc.(Hons)
Department of Microbiology and Parasitology
University of Queensland
St Lucia, QLD 4072
Phone: (07) 3365 1101
Fax: (07) 3365 4620
e-mail: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Carlos Boix is a Spanish Veterinary student (in his fourth year) who´s very
interested in doing
field work with marine mammals of any kind. If it´s student practice, volunteer
work, any other
kind of work, he doesn´t care.
He is available in the summer, is very motivated is an advanced diver (PADI).
Contact Carlos on : karlosvoix@LatinMail.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Zoo Biology
To subscribe send an e-mail to: zoo-biology-subscribe@egroups.com For those of
you
unfamiliar with Email groups they work like this. You subscribe. You can then
post questions,
answer questions, make observations, inform or just read the Email. This will
arrive with some
regularity (depending on the flow of information). By Zoo Biology I mean
anything relating to
zoo management. Hediger described this as “the science which embraced everything
which
was biologically relevant to the management of the zoological garden.” The more
that join up
the more effective a management tool it will become. Go on, give it a try, and
subscribe.
Remember no-one will pressurize you to contribute....but you may want to help.
There is a
members only chat site attached to Zoo Biology. This appears to work quite well.
There are
647+ Zoo Biology subscribers to date. More join each week.. Do be prepared to
get a lot of
messages.
Sites worth checking out
Have you got a suggestion? Let me check it out.
WILDLIFE INFORMATION NETWORK
http://www.wildlifeinformation.org
ZooNews Digest is an independent publication, not allied or attached to any
zoological
collection.
Many thanks.
For those of you who have not received the News previously, you have been
included
because someone has suggested you might be interested. If this is not the case
please email
me and I shall remove your name.
Kind Regards,
Wishing you a wonderful week,
Peter Dickinson,
Zoo News Digest is the longest established and most widely read listing of current 'zoo' related news on the internet. It notes 'real' events of interest to people working within the zoo industry. By a Zoo Professional for Zoo Professionals and other interested parties. The Digest includes comments and notification of courses and events.
Sunday, May 21, 2000
Sunday, May 14, 2000
ZooNews Digest 8th May - 14th May 2000 (Zoo News 103)
Dear Colleague,
I have previously mentioned the problems with which Sharon Matola and the
Belize Zoo are faced. Well things are getting worse. I have reproduced
Sharons letter below. Visit the web site at : http://216.247.115.230/
ZOO DIRECTOR UPDATE ON MILE 27 LANDFILL ISSUE
At this writing, 7 May 2000, the issue of placing a Sanitary Landfill
within 2 kilometers of the zoo, and 1 kilometer from the Tropical
Education Center, persists. While the Department of the Environment, under
the Ministry of Natural Resources, has stated that "the project has been
temporarily suspended while The Belize Zoo and their foreign donors can
find an appropriate alternative site for this necessary development",
apparently, this is not the case. The Belize Zoo and Tropical Education
Center, with assistance from geologist Brian Holland and Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC), senior scientist, Dr. Allen Hershkowitz, has
located a possible alternative site. This site seems worthy of further
geological and hydrogeological investigation as a landfill site. As
opposed to the proposed site at Mile 27, this location appears to engender
less risks to public health and to the environment. On 5 May 2000, a
meeting held in Belize City between Stantec, Department of the Environment
(DOE), Inter-American Development Bank, (IDB), independent consultant, and
NRDC, resulted in clear statements that, in spite of scientific points
directed towards the hydrogeological shortfalls of the Mile 27 project,
the above-mentioned entities, with exception of NRDC, want to proceed with
this site development. To underscore that The Belize Zoo and Tropical
Education Center has valid concern about the development of this
poorly-designed Landfill, I will list comments from the IDB independent
consultant: 1. "The hydrogeology report does not meet an acceptable
professional standard" 2. "The section on geology and soils, which is of
great importance to understanding the physical suitability of the site, is
incomplete". 3. "The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) document leaves
many unanswered questions with regards to the geological and
hydrogeological suitability of the property and potential impacts on the
surface water drainage system". 4. "The leachate treatment methods
recommended in the report are questioned and have not proven effective in
many countries in the world. The leachate treatment methods outlines, in
the EIA, are not expected to provide adequate leachate management and
treatment and may well lead to surface water contamination problems". 5.
"A number of key questions related to the physical and hydrogeological
make up of the site have not been answered and the suitability of the site
for landfill activities and the proposed preliminary site design are
questioned in the absence of this information". One Landfill expert, Dr.
G. Fred Lee, read the EIA for Mile 27 proposed site and reported: "The
landfill gas impacts to public health have not been adequately addressed
in the EIA. In addition to the potential for explosions, landfill gas
typically contains a variety of chemical constituents that are hazardous
to humans and wildlife. Further, the flaring of landfill gas as proposed
can lead to dioxin formation...These issues should have been discussed in
the EIA" We are vehemently opposed to placing our zoo visitors, many of
them children, in a position of being downwind from carcinogenic gases
which would include toluene, benzene, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride,
vinyl chloride, trichloroethylene and methylene dichloride, all common
landfill air pollutants. Furthermore, the type of landfill proposed for
Belize is illegal in the United States. Under existing United States
Federal Criteria for MSW Landfills, landfill operators may not add liquids
to waste. According to the U.S. EPA, "At this time, EPA lacks adequate
data and information on the design, operation, and performance of
bioreactor landfills to evaluate this technology". (quoted in volume #31,
dated 14 April 2000, of the Environmental Reporter) Dr. G. Fred Lee has
also stated "There can be little doubt that the Zoo and the Tropical
Education Center will be adversely impacted by the proposed Landfill".
Should this project go forward, the Tropical Education Center (TEC) may be
forced to terminate its operations. With this financial arm of The Belize
Zoo non-existent, and with the threat of disease vectors extending out
from this Landfill, The Belize Zoo may also have to cease its operations.
TBZ & TEC feels that it would be indefensible, given the hydrogeology
information available, that an entire river system would be threatened and
eventually deadened by this project. TBZ & TEC feels that it is socially
irresponsible to threaten the public health of the Belizean people, as
well as to knowingly degrade the environment. There is scientific evidence
that these threats are real. The following organizations stand opposed to
having the proposed Sanitary Landfill located at Mile 27: Belize TouristBoard
(BTB)
Belize Tourism Industry Association (BTIA)
Belize
Ecotourism Association (BETA)
Belize Alliance of Conservation NGOs
(BACONGO)
Sibun Watershed Association (SWA)
Natural Resources Defense
Council (NRDC)
World Wildlife Fund-US (WWF-US)
Conservation
International (CI)
Durrell Conservation Trust
Wildlife Preservation
Trust, Int’l (WPTI)
International Expeditions
Island Expeditions
Zoological Society of Milwaukee
Foundation for Wildlife Conservation
(FWC)
The Ecotourism Society
Should you wish specific information about this project, please contacteither me
at
belizezoo@btl.net or Tony Garel, at tec@btl.net
Should you
wish to protest this project, please send a letter to Hon. Said Musa,
Prime Minister of Belize, Government Buildings, Belmopan, Belize,
CentralAmerica.
Hon. John Briceno, Minister of Natural Resources
lincenbze@btl.net
Mr. Robert Kaplan,
Chief Environment And Natural
Resources Management
Inter-American Development Bank
1300 New York
Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20577
Ismael Fabro, Department of the
Environment
envirodept@btl.net
*********************************************************************
Mayor gets tour of zoo – smells and all (Mesker Park Zoo)
http://www.courierpress.com/cgi-bin/view.cgi?200005/06+zootour050600_news.
html+20000506
Zoo dismisses elephant keeper
(The Oregon Zoo)
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/news/oregonian/00/05/l
c_31zoo09.fram e
Zoo conference focuses on apes
(Brookfield Zoo)
http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/ape10.html
GMOs may pose new risk to endangered plants, animals
http://news.excite.com/news/r/000504/17/food-biotech-endangered
Jane Goodall to Address Bushmeat Crisis May 18 in Washington
http://www.usnewswire.com/topnews/Current_Releases/0512-110.html
'Tenacious' Seattle Aquarium director will resign in July
http://www.seattlep-i.com/local/aqua11.shtml
Rare Sea Dragon 'Pregnancy' at Long Beach Aquarium of the Pacific
http://news.excite.com/news/pr/000508/ca-aquarium-pacific
A big home for big stars
(Cincinnati Zoo)
http://www.cincypost.com/opinion/editb050600.html
Swimming with the sharks: Curator gets new aquarium ready
(Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium)
http://www.post-gazette.com/magazine/20000512aquaside3.asp
Zurich rhino dead at age 39
http://www7.mercurycenter.com/premium/world/docs/rhino12.htm
Aquaria 21 deals called off
http://www.press.co.nz/2000/19/000512b07.htm
'Live' Gorillas in Your Home
(Zoo New England)
http://news.excite.com/news/bw/000510/ma-livewave
Pair of tiny, endangered zoo monkeys lost in Lodi
(Micke Grove Park Zoo)
http://www.sacbee.com/news/news/local12_20000513.html
Neglected Oasis to gain new life when zoo’s rookery is renovated
http://www.chicago.tribune.com/version1/article/0,1575,SAV-0005110168,00.h
tml
N.J. finds homes for evicted tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/daily_news/2000/May/12/national/ROPB12.htm
Owl case awards $2 million to loggers
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/local/html98/owll12m_20000512.html
Euthanasia one option for 26 tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/2000/May/09/sj/JTIGER09.htm
More on Legionnaires' disease
http://www.theage.com.au/news/20000510/A51012-2000May9.html
Not your typical fence lizard
(Oak Mountain)
http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/May2000/9-e415848b.html
Longshoreman gets a lickin'
(Perth Zoo)
http://www.deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,165010583,00.html?
Primates on the brink
http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSScience0005/09_primates.html
Dog days of spring for zoo animals as heat wave continues
http://www.bergen.com/region/tigercut200005095.htm
Zoo Improvement Plans
(Houston Zoo)
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/metropolitan/546514
Conservationists warn that many primate species could vanish immediately
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/050900/tec_124-2727.shtml
High court bans trade in shahtoosh
http://www.rediff.com/news/2000/may/09shah.htm
Reports of Wolves Have Ranchers Concerned
http://www.sltrib.com/05092000/utah/47694.htm
State could get millions for wildlife research
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666806
New exhibits at aquarium to open soon
(Pittsburgh Zoo)
http://www.tribunereview.com/news/rzoo0508.html
State seeks to build whooping crane population
http://www.newsindex.com/cgi-bin/result.cgi?http://www2.startribune.com/st
OnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666875
Cougar-control measures protect public
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/editorial/html98/coug08_20000508.html
10 percent of Floridas manatees could die this summer
http://www.msnbc.com/local/WBBH/283221.asp
Poachers' Snares Maiming Chimpanzees
http://www.africanews.org/east/uganda/stories/20000507/20000507_feat9.html
Feeding time at zoo terrifies children
(Harbin Zoo)
http://www.scmp.com/News/China/Article/FullText_asp_ArticleID-200005080328
15903.asp
State seeks to build whooping crane population starting with sandhills
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81662893
Desert-watering plan too late to help pronghorn this year
http://www.azstarnet.com/public/dnews/000510PRONGHORN.html
Man evicted for killing alligator
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109787,00.
htm
Black bear spends day in Sanford warehouse
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/automagic/news/2000-05-10/NWSSBEAR10051000.
html
Do more to protect panthers, suit says
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109790,00.
html
Dispute puts fish in peril
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/051000/met_152-2413.000.shtml
New Zoo at Pinnawala opens today
http://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/2000/05/10/new18.html
Marine mama expecting
http://www.oklahoman.com/cgi-bin/shart?ID=486831&TP=getarticle
KC's chimpanzee family experiences conflicts, changes in loyalty
http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/local.pat,local/3774724f.507,.html
If you know a story I have missed this week do drop me a line with the
full web address and I will try and include it next week.
Bit & Pieces
ZooNews Digest subscribers can be found in :
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bali, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belize, Bermuda,
Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Croatia,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Eire, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Isle of Man,
Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Korea, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania,
Mexico, Malaysia, Malta, Mauritius, Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, New Zealand,
Northern Ireland, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Peoples Republic of China,
Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Senegal, Singapore, Slovak
Republic, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland,
Taiwan, Thailand, The Netherlands, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab
Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yugoslavia,
Zambia, Zimbabwe.
*********************************************************************
The
Incubation and Fertility Research Group Meeting, 2000 Meeting - University
of Oxford
The Incubation and Fertility Research Group (WPSA Working Group 6
{Reproduction}) is an association of people interested in any aspect of
incubation. Established almost 30 years ago the Group is comprised of
people interested in both scientific and practical aspects of incubation
in a wide range of bird species (and even at times, reptilian and extinct
species). The Group meets once a year at an annual meeting usually held in
September usually at a venue in the UK, including in recent years, Warwick
and Ayr. By nature it is an informal organisation open to all and so
meetings are attended by a wide range of people working in science,
commerce, and conservation. Most participants come from the UK and Europe
although a few delegates come from the USA and even farther afield. The
meetings consist of a series of oral and poster presentations offered by
the delegates and is often a useful place for bringing forward new ideas.
Many students have given their first ever scientific presentation to the
IFRG's enthusiastic and friendly audience. Abstracts of talks each year
are published in Poultry and Avian Reviews and International Hatchery
Practise.
The IFRG Meeting 2000 will be held on September 11th-12th in Oxford. As
usual, the meeting is open to people wishing to present talks or posters
on any topic or species. As usual there will be ample time for informal
discussions over coffee or in the bar.
This year there are special events which will interest everyone interested
in fertility and incubation, particularly in the commercial sector. There
is an invited keynote speaker, Professor Eddy Decuypere of the University
of Leuven, Belgium, who will be speaking on "Incubation, a crucial hinge
between breeders and broilers". There will also be a "Back to Basics"
workshop for incubation featuring leading speakers from Israel and the UK.
Topics covered will be:
Assessment and significance of fertility in commercial production by Dr
Graham Wishart (University of Abertay, Dundee). Shell formation and
function and its role in incubation by Dr Nick Sparks (SAC, Auchincriuve)
Techniques for improving the shelf life of fertile eggs by Professor Amos
Ar (Tel Aviv University) The critical importance of temperature in
incubation by Dr Nick French (British United Turkeys, Tarvin) Roles of
water and gas exchange in determining hatchability success by Professor
Amos Ar. Problems associated with egg turning by Dr Charles Deeming
(Hatchery Consulting & Research, Wallingford) Assessment of chick quality
by Dr Charles Deeming
The meeting will be held at historic St Edmund's Hall on the High St,
Oxford, and is reasonably priced (total costs for registration, meals and
accommodation are around £100.00). All are welcome. For further
information on this meeting please contact:- Dr Charles Deeming, Hatchery
Consulting & Research, 17 Rowland Close, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10
8LA, UK.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk Tel./Fax: +44-(0)1491-835542. Or
see the website: http://www.biology.bbk.ac.uk/conf/ifrgconf.htm (with
online form).
*********************************************************************
Charlie Deeming has recently found reference to a poster presented at the
15th International Symposium on Biotelemetry in May 1999. This was by K.
Bauman, T. Snyder, C. Asa & M. Macek from St Louis Zoo and was entitled
"The Use of aTelemetric egg for monitoring Bird Incubation". This
describes telemetric eggs which measure egg turning in whistling ducks and
Bateleur Eagles but the actual rates of turning were not reported. Given
that he is trying to develop a database on the rates of egg turning in
birds this data would be extremely useful.
Can anyone help him with an email address for any of the authors. He would
really appreciate help with this matter.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk
*********************************************************************
Three new publications published by the Federation of Zoos of Great
Britain and Ireland
The publications are available as paper hard copies and on floppy discs
(versions Microsoft Word 97 and Microsoft Word 95 6.0).
Further information can be obtained from the Federation Secretariat.
Telephone: 020 7586 0230
E-mail: fedzoo@zsl.org
Management Guidelines for the Welfare of Zoo Animals
ISSN 0963-1712
For one copy the postage and packing rates are:
£1.50 United Kingdom
£2.00 Europe
£3.00 Worldwide zone 1 (United States of America etc.)
£3.50 Worldwide zone 2 (Australia etc.)
Falconiformes
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £8.00 £5.00
Non-members £16.00
£10.00
Birds of Prey in Flying Demonstrations
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £5.00 £5.00
Non-members £10.00
£10.00
Guenons
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £6.00 £5.00
Non-members £12.00
£10.00
Payment is by cheque in pounds sterling made payable to "The Federation of
Zoos".
Nicola Charlton
Conservation Coordinator
The Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain and Ireland
Zoological Gardens
Regent's Park
London NW1 4RY
United Kingdom
Telephone +44 (0)20 7586 0230
Direct Dial +44 (0)20 7449 6350
Facsimile +44 (0)20 7722 4427
E-mail fedzoo@zsl.org
Direct E-mail conservation.fedzoo@zsl.org
*********************************************************************
PRIMATE LICE
Natalie Leo is a PhD student from the University of Queensland studying
the evolution of lice from primates. She is having trouble getting
specimens and thought that best chance was sanctuaries (where they might
actually handle the animals - at least the sick ones or newcomers). If you
think Natalie could possibly help her she would be extremely grateful.
She using them for DNA analysis, and does not need many (2 or 3 is
adequate to get information), but of course the more the better since
there are so many different lice out there (some possibly yet
unidentified).
If possible, please store them in 100% or 70% ethanol and then e-mail her
at: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
Natalie Leo, B.Sc.(Hons)
Department of Microbiology and Parasitology
University of Queensland
St Lucia, QLD 4072
Phone: (07) 3365 1101
Fax: (07) 3365 4620
e-mail: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
*********************************************************************
The
Primate Conservation & Welfare Society is proud to announce the
availability of our first annual Primate Conservation Grant Small Grant!
For details, including the Application Packet in .PDF Format, please see
our website at: http://www.primates-online.com/apps.html
To receive a hard copy of the Conservation Grant Application Packet,
please send a self- addressed stamped envelope to: PCWS - Conservation
Grant PO Box 2101 Port Townsend, WA 98368 USA
Please note: Due to the volume of requests, application requests MUST be
accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Applicants outside the
US should contact PCWS via email with appropriate contact information. The
grant deadline is June 30, 2000.
Stamp Donations Are Welcome For This Project!
*********************************************************************
11th
International Zoo Collectors Meeting 9-10 September 2000 Every year
collectors of zoo guidebooks and other zoo related materials meet to trade
and swap items. The 2meeting will be held at 9th/10th September at Munster
Zoo, northern Germany, which celebrates its 125th anniversary.
Traditionally, there will be a guided behind-the-scenes zoo tour, an
auction (in favour of a turtle conservation project) and a visit to
another zoo the next day (this time Rheine Zoo). Attendance fee is 35 DM
(17 US$) including dinner. Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
*********************************************************************
Marwell Zoological Park Student Research Symposium 21 June 2000, start
9.30, finish 16.30 Everybody is welcome. For further information please
contact Tanya Langenhorst, Marwell Zoological Park, Colden Common, Nr
Winchester SO21 1JH. Tel: 01962 777407, Fax: 01962 777511, email:
tanyaL@marwell.org.uk
*********************************************************************
Elephant Birth on the Web
Zoo Zurich is expecting the birth of an elephant this May. The birth will
be broadcasted live on the internet. With this world first Zoo Zurich
intends to appeal to a large public and will make use of the probable
great interest to inform about the situation of the Asian Elephants in the
wild. At all time the animal’s welfare will be the prime consideration and
will not be affected in any way by the transmission. Already today live
pictures from the elephant house will be shown on the following websites:
http://www.zoo.ch and http://www.migros.ch and
http://www.tagesanzeiger.ch
*********************************************************************
Important Research on Captive European Otters
(If you are in a position to help, please do as it will sort out once and
for all the questions which have been bothering otter keepers in Europe
for many a year—Peter Dickinson)
Att.: Molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra lutra and Lutra
lutra barang.
First let us introduce ourselves. We are Edwin Leander and Pieter
Levelink, fourth year Animal Management students on the Van Hall Institute
in Leeuwarden, the Netherlands.
We are being supervised on this Institute by dr. T.H.M. Meijer and
drs.A.C. Meiners.
We have begun our final research regarding our course. This final
assessment, a molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra, is being
conducted on the Biological Centre in Haren, part of the University of
Groningen.
We are being technically supervised on this Centre by the geneticists
dr.R. Bijlsma and dr. L. van de Zande.
This research is being conducted for the EEP otter studbook of which
drs.A. Melissen is the coordinator, working at Aqualutra in the
Netherlands. Also the president of Aqualutra, drs. A. de Jongh, is fully
supporting our research. The otter studbook of the EEP is being divided in
an A- and a B-line. The A-line consists out of the circa 100 homogene
Lutra lutra lutra. The content of the B-line are roughly 200 otters from
which the pedigree and the relationship are not known. There is also an
assumption that the B-line is an interbreed from Lutra Lutra Lutra and
Lutra lutra Barang. With your help, by giving blood or/ and tissue
samples, we can start a good research with promising results which would
finally give an answer or a solution regarding to the stud-book problems.
Hopefully, this way, the A- and the B-line will be put together. Creating
an easier management and by clearing the ban on breeding the B-line
otters, higher welfare on all fronts can be accomplished.
Aim of the research
1.. To get a decisive answer concerning the interbreed of Lutra lutra
lutra and Lutra lutra barang in line-B.
2.. To measure the homozygosity of the B-line related to line A and a
wild population, if line- B is homogene Lutra lutra lutra.
What we need:
To conduct this research we need, as soon as possible, blood or tissue
(e.g. liver) samples from the A- and the B-line otters.
Please contact drs. A Melissen for the possible mailing of the samples, by
e-mail or fax. Could you send us an e-mail in which you state your reply
regarding this matter. E. Leander & P. Levelink, drs. A.
Melissen
Students Animal Management EEP Coordinator
P.B.Levelink@biol.rug.nl info@aqualutra.nl
*********************************************************************
Zoo Staff Personals
Looking for work? Someone to travel with? Somewhere to stay? Let me know
and I will post it here.
*********************************************************************
Situations Vacant (Please mention you saw the advertisement in ZooNews
Digest should you apply for any of these posts, many thanks) Do you have a
vacancy to advertise? Please email me.
Linton Zoo are looking for Experienced Keepers. They are looking for
people with a minimum of five years experience with mammals, in particular
ungulates and large cats or birds and reptiles. Having an interest in
gardening would be advantageous. Please send a full CV for application
form to: Kim Simmons, Linton Zoological Gardens, Hadstock Road, Linton,
Cambridgeshire. CB1 6NT
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The Welsh Hawking Centre are looking for a school leaver and a trainee to
all aspects of the captive management of Birds of Prey. A willingness to
learn and commitment are essential. Accommodation is available. Please
send a letter and full CV to: The Welsh Hawking Centre, Weycock Road,
Barry, South Glamorgan. CF62 3AA
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
AVICULTURE INTERNS WANTED for the Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation
Program at the Maui Bird Conservation Center on the island of Maui and
Keauhou Bird Conservation Center on the Big Island. Daily tasks include
husbandry duties such as: diet preparation, aviary and facility
maintenance, behavioral observations of breeding birds, grounds keeping,
predator control. Applicant must be able to live with several roommates in
a remote area and should show enthusiasm for work with captive endangered
Hawaiian birds. Driver’s license and proof of health insurance are
required. Internships last for three-month periods. Interns receive
$15/day stipend plus housing.
For more information, please send a resume, cover letter (with location
preference) and the names and contacts of three references to: Tracey
Powers P.O. Box 39 Volcano, Hawaii 96785 or fax: 808-985-7034.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The Philadelphia Zoo currently has positions available for mammal keepers.
1 year keeper experience required; degree valued. Interest in
conservation education and ability to interact in a positive, friendly
manner with the public. $14.13/hr plus benefits package. Send resume to
Human Resources, THE PHILADELPHIA ZOO, 3400 W. Girard Ave., Phila., PA
19104. PH: (215) 243-5350. Visit our Web site at
http://www.phillyzoo.org
Specific positions are:
Small Mammal House Keeper: This is one of two line positions in the
building. Collection for this line is a combination of nocturnal and
diurnal species, including vampire bats, lorises, mouse lemurs, African
dormice, Malagasy giant jumping rats, mouse deer, tree shrews, pygmy
marmosets, and elephant shrews. Exhibits and work are exclusively indoors.
Interest in small mammal husbandry and creative exhibitry, some previous
experience in same required. Days off would be consistent, but most likely
weekdays.
Assigned Relief Keeper: This position is in the "Rare Animal House",
relieving for three line positions on some of the line keepers' regular
days off. The collection consists mostly of primates, including lemurs (2
species), marmosets and tamarins (4 species), spider monkeys, mangabeys,
and langurs. Other species include naked mole rats, Rodrigues and Egyptian
fruit bats, dwarf mongoose, armadillos, acouchi, and tree kangaroos. Most
exhibits/work indoors. Interest and some experience in primate husbandry
required; experience, ability in exhibit furnishing a plus. Days off would
be consistent, but most likely weekdays.
For questions, contact Andy Baker, baker.andy@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5245, or Heidi Hellmuth, hellmuth.heidi@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5319.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
CONSERVATION AND SCIENCE PROGRAM ASSISTANT
Conservation and Science program assistant sought by the American Zoo and
Aquarium Association, a non-profit association based in Silver Spring, MD.
Reports to the Director of Conservation and Science. Responsibilities
include: preparing and editing reports for publication, assisting with the
distribution of information, communicating with members, and general
clerical duties.
Requires a Bachelor's degree; excellent writing and computer skills,
including proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, and related
software programs. Degree in biological sciences and interest in wildlife
conservation a plus. Starting salary in the low to mid-$20's, depending
on experience. Full benefits. Please submit resume and one writing sample
to American Zoo and Aquarium Association- C&S Search, 8403 Colesville
Road, Suite 710, Silver Spring, MD 20910 or fax to: (301) 562-0888.
http://www.aza.org EOE. No phone calls please.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Position Available: Chimpanzee Caregiver at the Wildlife Waystation, CA
Job Description: You will be working with 31 chimps (age 3-11 yeas) in 9
social groups
Your duties include cleaning cages, raking, feeding, and enrichment. 95%
of your job is CLEANING.
Qualification: You must be healthy, fit and ready to work outside for
hours, and be able to lift and carry 35 lbs. Must be flexible and
resourceful. We need someone who can work both as a team and
independently. Working experience with any animal is a plus but not
required. Please have a reference from your current/former employer or
from your teacher if you've just finished school. High school diploma
required.
This is an On-Ranch Volunteer position. The position consists of
on-facility trailer style living with housing and utilities paid, and
there is a food give-away once a week. Compensation for this position is a
non-taxable volunteer reimbursement and expense of $258.00 every two
weeks. A minimum six- month stay required.
If interested, please send your resume and a reference to Dean Seymour,
The Wildlife Waystation, 14831 Little Tujunga Canyon RD, San Fernando, CA
91342
For further information, please contact Dean Seymour at
dseymour@waystation.org or Asami Kabasawa at asamikabasawa@yahoo.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
For the most up to date links to sites advertising Zoo work go to:
http://members.tripod.com/~Sciurus/index.html
*********************************************************************
Meetings
First conference of the African Zoo and Reserve Educators Network
(AZOREN) 12 - 18 May 2000 Pretoria Zoo, South Africa Theme of this
training conference is “Effective & Efficient AZOREN; Starting the
Conservation Educators Network”. For further information please contact:
Cherylene Odendaal or Dina Roos of Pretoria Zoo. Telephone :
0027-12-3283265 / 3206020 Fax : 0027-12-3234540 E-mail :
zoologic@cis.co.za
AnnualConference of the Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain
andIreland 19- 21 May 2000 hostedby Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens at the
Maidshead Hotel, Norwich. The principal focus of this year’s conference
will be nutrition.
TheUnion of the Czech and Slovak Zoological Gardens Annual Conference 25-
27 May 2000 ZooChomutov, Czech Republic Forfurther information please
contact: fax: +420-66-7302839 e-mail:jizoo@brn.pvtnet.cz
FifthInternational Elephant Research Symposium
1-3June 2000
Portland,Oregon
email:dolson@indyzoo.com
ANIMAL TRAINERS' NETWORK WORKSHOP
June 11, 12 & 13, 2000
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
To get a registration form or for more information, please
contact:
Email: hospital@cincyzoo.org or jenny.kroll@cincyzoo.org
Course of Environmental Enrichment for Wild Animals in Captivity.
The Zoological National the Aurora of Guatemala, and El Zoo Conservation
Outreach Group (ZCOG), presents/displays: 21-24 June 2000 Zoological
National “The Aurora” City of Guatemala, Guatemala C.A Further
INFORMATION: Maria Jose Iturbide, Zoological Technical Department Aurora
Tel. (502) 4720507 4720885, Fax (502) 4715286. emailmjiturbidef@hotmail.com
The2nd Zoo Research Symposium
6- 7 July 2000
PaigntonZoo
E-mail: aplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk
Symposiumon Asian Raptors
25-27July 2000
Bandung,Indonesia
Forfurther info email : ypal@bdg.centrin.net.id
The2000 Invertebrates in Captivity Conference
3– 6 August 2000
RioRico, Arizona, USA
Fordetails see: http://www.sasionline.org/2000conf/2000confrpg.html
Fourth International Penguin Conference
4 – 8 September 2000
Coquimbo,Chile
ForFurther info : gluna@nevados.cecun.ucn.cl
The Fourth European Elephant Handlers School
4-17 September 2000
Woburn Safari Park and Blackpool Zoo
Further details and a full course programme can be obtained from
Woburn Safari Park-tele-01525 290407or e-mail WobSafari@aol.com
Annual Conference of the Swedish Association of Zoological Parks and
Aquaria 6 – 8 September 2000 Boras Djurpark, Boras, Sweden. Email:
info@parkenzoo.se
11th International Zoo Collectors Meeting
Munster Zoo, Germany
9-10 September 2000
Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
ZooFederation Plant Group Conference
September13th - 15th 2000
CotswoldWildlife Park
For further info:
“Colin Wren” gardens@rzss.org.uk
InternationalWhite-tailed Sea Eagle Conference
13-17September 2000
Bjorko,Sweden.
email: bjorn.helander@nrm.se
17thEAZA/EEP Annual Conference
19- 24 September 2000
AalborgZoo,
Denmark
Allmatters with regard to registration etc : Hju@aalborg-zoo.dk
Anythingrelated to conference programmes, meetings etc : info@eaza.net
InternationalSymposium on Galliformes
23September to 1st October 2000
Nepal
Forfurther information contact the World Pheasant Association on email:
wpa@gn.apc.org
15th International Zoo Educators’ Conference
1- 6 October 2000
Guadalajara,Mexico
For more information contact Maria Eugenia Martinez Arizmendi,
headof the Education Department.
Telephone: 0052-3-6744104
Fax : 0052-3-674-4488
E-mail : 104164.3717@compuserve.com
Third International Symposium on Physiology and Ethology of Wild and Zoo
Animals 4 – 7 October 2000 Berlin, Germany Email: symposium@izw-berlin.de
ZooSciences 2000
Amiens, France
For further details Email: zoolille@nordnet.fr
2000 AAZK Conference
8– 12 October 2000
ColumbusZoo
Checkout information on this conference by accessing its
websiteat: http://aazk2000.homestead.com
ElephantManagers International Conference
6- 9 October 2000
Syracuse,New York
Formore information please contact
AdrienneWhiteley on : bpzoo@emi.com
Panda 2000 International Conference
An international conference on the giant panda will be held in San Diego,
California (USA) October 16-19, 2000. The Zoological Society of San Diego
and the World Wildlife Fund are co- hosts. A program consisting primarily
of work-shops, panel discussions and poster sessions is planned. Topics
in conservation, education, training, research, health, reproduction, and
captive management will be co covered. Persons interested in attending
thismeeting are encouraged to contact the Local Arrangements Chair:
HelenaFitch-Snyder, Zool. Soc. of San Diego, PO Box 120551, San Diego, CA
92112.Phone: (619) 557-3954, FAX: (619) 557-3959; E-mail
helena@sandiegozoo.org.
Reproductionand integrated conservation science.
9thand 10th November, 2000
AZoological Society of London Symposium
TheMeeting Rooms, Zoological Society of London
To register your interest in attending this symposium please contact: D.
Body, Scientific Meetings Co-ordinator, Zoological Society of London,
Regent’s Park, London NW1 4RY, UK or email: Deborah.Body@zsl.org If you
would be interested in submitting a poster presentation, please indicate
this.
5thInternational Aquarium Congress
20- 25th November 2000
Monaco
Organisedby the Oceanographic Institute of Oceanography
Forfurther information email: iac2000monaco@meditnet.com
or write to : Secretariat of the 5th IAC 2000, Oceanographic Institute,
Av.St.Martin, MC 98000 Monaco Tel.: +377-93-25.36.00, Fax :
+377-93-30.90.95.
European Squirrel Workshop
The next WORKSHOP is planned for the year 2001 in Turin, Italy
For further details contact : Kathy Hodder, Institute of Terrestrial
Ecology, Wareham,Dorset, BH20 4LN Tel. +44 (0) 1929 551518 Fax. 551087,
Email k.hodder@ite.ac.uk
Ecologyand Conservation of Mini-antelope
Aninternational symposium on duiker and dwarf antelope in Africa
Hostedby the Marwell Zimbabwe Trust
12th-17thFebruary 2001
Bulawayo,Zimbabwe
Contactaplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk for further info
Second European Zoo Nutrition Conference
6- 9th April 2001
Southampton, UNITED KINGDOM
More detailed information about the programme and registration/abstract
submission deadlines will be available commencing 1st May 2000 at
http://www.marwell.org.uk To join the conference mailing list, send your
contact details (after the above-mentioned date) by email to:
Nutrition2001@marwell.org or by post/fax to: Zoo Nutrition 2001, Marwell
Zoological Park, Owslebury, Winchester, Hampshire, SO21 1JH, United
Kingdom. Fax: (0) 1962 777511.
FourthWorld Congress of Herpetology
1-8August 2001
Colombo,Sri Lanka
Pleasepre-register at website: http://www.4wch.com
Help Wanted
Need assistance? You could try Zoo Biology, it is probably your best bet
for animal information. However ZooNews Digest reaches more like minded
people, more often than any other similar publication on the planet! So
you could try here. Let me know and I will post it.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Carlos Boix is a Spanish Veterinary student (in his fourth year) who´s
very interested in doing field work with marine mammals of any kind. If
it´s student practice, volunteer work, any other kind of work, he doesn´t
care. He is available in the summer, is very motivated is an advanced
diver (PADI).
Contact Carlos on : karlosvoix@LatinMail.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Dear Zoologists,
The Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford, and the
Laboratory of
Genomic Diversity, NCI-FCRF, USA, are together initiating a project in the
conservation and phylogeography of the wildcat (Felis silvestris ssp.) .
This project will develop a suite of diagnostic genetic markers useful in
distinguishing wildcats from domestic cats or hybrids, define
phylogeographic boundaries in wildcats, and determine the origin of
domestication of the domestic cat.
A collection of reliably provenanced samples is critically important to
the success of this
project. We are therefore seeking collaborators either having wildcat
samples, wildcats in their collection or those who are doing fieldwork on
them. If you have access to wildcats, or wildcat samples of known
provenance from anywhere in the world, and would like to help, your
assistance in this important conservation project would be tremendously
appreciated. Please contact Carlos Driscoll with questions and for further
information on the project.
Wildlife Conservation Research Unit
Department of Zoology
University of Oxford
South Parks Road
Oxford, England
OX1 3PS
carlos.driscoll@zoology.oxford.ac.uk
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Zoo Biology
To subscribe send an e-mail to: zoo-biology-subscribe@egroups.com For
those of you unfamiliar with Email groups they work like this. You
subscribe. You can then post questions, answer questions, make
observations, inform or just read the Email. This will arrive with some
regularity (depending on the flow of information). By Zoo Biology I mean
anything relating to zoo management. Hediger described this as “the
science which embraced everything which was biologically relevant to the
management of the zoological garden.” The more that join up the more
effective a management tool it will become. Go on, give it a try, and
subscribe. Remember no-one will pressurize you to contribute....but you
may want to help. There is a members only chat site attached to Zoo
Biology. This appears to work quite well. There are 600+ Zoo Biology
subscribers to date. More join each week.. Do be prepared to get a lot of
messages.
Sites worth checking out
Have you got a suggestion? Let me check it out.
WILDLIFE INFORMATION NETWORK
http://www.wildlifeinformation.org
ZooNews Digest is an independent publication, not allied or attached to
any zoological collection. Many thanks. For those of you who have not
received the News previously, you have been included because someone has
suggested you might be interested. If this is not the case please email me
and I shall remove your name. Kind Regards,
Wishing you a wonderful week,
Peter Dickinson,
I have previously mentioned the problems with which Sharon Matola and the
Belize Zoo are faced. Well things are getting worse. I have reproduced
Sharons letter below. Visit the web site at : http://216.247.115.230/
ZOO DIRECTOR UPDATE ON MILE 27 LANDFILL ISSUE
At this writing, 7 May 2000, the issue of placing a Sanitary Landfill
within 2 kilometers of the zoo, and 1 kilometer from the Tropical
Education Center, persists. While the Department of the Environment, under
the Ministry of Natural Resources, has stated that "the project has been
temporarily suspended while The Belize Zoo and their foreign donors can
find an appropriate alternative site for this necessary development",
apparently, this is not the case. The Belize Zoo and Tropical Education
Center, with assistance from geologist Brian Holland and Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC), senior scientist, Dr. Allen Hershkowitz, has
located a possible alternative site. This site seems worthy of further
geological and hydrogeological investigation as a landfill site. As
opposed to the proposed site at Mile 27, this location appears to engender
less risks to public health and to the environment. On 5 May 2000, a
meeting held in Belize City between Stantec, Department of the Environment
(DOE), Inter-American Development Bank, (IDB), independent consultant, and
NRDC, resulted in clear statements that, in spite of scientific points
directed towards the hydrogeological shortfalls of the Mile 27 project,
the above-mentioned entities, with exception of NRDC, want to proceed with
this site development. To underscore that The Belize Zoo and Tropical
Education Center has valid concern about the development of this
poorly-designed Landfill, I will list comments from the IDB independent
consultant: 1. "The hydrogeology report does not meet an acceptable
professional standard" 2. "The section on geology and soils, which is of
great importance to understanding the physical suitability of the site, is
incomplete". 3. "The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) document leaves
many unanswered questions with regards to the geological and
hydrogeological suitability of the property and potential impacts on the
surface water drainage system". 4. "The leachate treatment methods
recommended in the report are questioned and have not proven effective in
many countries in the world. The leachate treatment methods outlines, in
the EIA, are not expected to provide adequate leachate management and
treatment and may well lead to surface water contamination problems". 5.
"A number of key questions related to the physical and hydrogeological
make up of the site have not been answered and the suitability of the site
for landfill activities and the proposed preliminary site design are
questioned in the absence of this information". One Landfill expert, Dr.
G. Fred Lee, read the EIA for Mile 27 proposed site and reported: "The
landfill gas impacts to public health have not been adequately addressed
in the EIA. In addition to the potential for explosions, landfill gas
typically contains a variety of chemical constituents that are hazardous
to humans and wildlife. Further, the flaring of landfill gas as proposed
can lead to dioxin formation...These issues should have been discussed in
the EIA" We are vehemently opposed to placing our zoo visitors, many of
them children, in a position of being downwind from carcinogenic gases
which would include toluene, benzene, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride,
vinyl chloride, trichloroethylene and methylene dichloride, all common
landfill air pollutants. Furthermore, the type of landfill proposed for
Belize is illegal in the United States. Under existing United States
Federal Criteria for MSW Landfills, landfill operators may not add liquids
to waste. According to the U.S. EPA, "At this time, EPA lacks adequate
data and information on the design, operation, and performance of
bioreactor landfills to evaluate this technology". (quoted in volume #31,
dated 14 April 2000, of the Environmental Reporter) Dr. G. Fred Lee has
also stated "There can be little doubt that the Zoo and the Tropical
Education Center will be adversely impacted by the proposed Landfill".
Should this project go forward, the Tropical Education Center (TEC) may be
forced to terminate its operations. With this financial arm of The Belize
Zoo non-existent, and with the threat of disease vectors extending out
from this Landfill, The Belize Zoo may also have to cease its operations.
TBZ & TEC feels that it would be indefensible, given the hydrogeology
information available, that an entire river system would be threatened and
eventually deadened by this project. TBZ & TEC feels that it is socially
irresponsible to threaten the public health of the Belizean people, as
well as to knowingly degrade the environment. There is scientific evidence
that these threats are real. The following organizations stand opposed to
having the proposed Sanitary Landfill located at Mile 27: Belize TouristBoard
(BTB)
Belize Tourism Industry Association (BTIA)
Belize
Ecotourism Association (BETA)
Belize Alliance of Conservation NGOs
(BACONGO)
Sibun Watershed Association (SWA)
Natural Resources Defense
Council (NRDC)
World Wildlife Fund-US (WWF-US)
Conservation
International (CI)
Durrell Conservation Trust
Wildlife Preservation
Trust, Int’l (WPTI)
International Expeditions
Island Expeditions
Zoological Society of Milwaukee
Foundation for Wildlife Conservation
(FWC)
The Ecotourism Society
Should you wish specific information about this project, please contacteither me
at
belizezoo@btl.net or Tony Garel, at tec@btl.net
Should you
wish to protest this project, please send a letter to Hon. Said Musa,
Prime Minister of Belize, Government Buildings, Belmopan, Belize,
CentralAmerica.
Hon. John Briceno, Minister of Natural Resources
lincenbze@btl.net
Mr. Robert Kaplan,
Chief Environment And Natural
Resources Management
Inter-American Development Bank
1300 New York
Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20577
Ismael Fabro, Department of the
Environment
envirodept@btl.net
*********************************************************************
Mayor gets tour of zoo – smells and all (Mesker Park Zoo)
http://www.courierpress.com/cgi-bin/view.cgi?200005/06+zootour050600_news.
html+20000506
Zoo dismisses elephant keeper
(The Oregon Zoo)
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/news/oregonian/00/05/l
c_31zoo09.fram e
Zoo conference focuses on apes
(Brookfield Zoo)
http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/ape10.html
GMOs may pose new risk to endangered plants, animals
http://news.excite.com/news/r/000504/17/food-biotech-endangered
Jane Goodall to Address Bushmeat Crisis May 18 in Washington
http://www.usnewswire.com/topnews/Current_Releases/0512-110.html
'Tenacious' Seattle Aquarium director will resign in July
http://www.seattlep-i.com/local/aqua11.shtml
Rare Sea Dragon 'Pregnancy' at Long Beach Aquarium of the Pacific
http://news.excite.com/news/pr/000508/ca-aquarium-pacific
A big home for big stars
(Cincinnati Zoo)
http://www.cincypost.com/opinion/editb050600.html
Swimming with the sharks: Curator gets new aquarium ready
(Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium)
http://www.post-gazette.com/magazine/20000512aquaside3.asp
Zurich rhino dead at age 39
http://www7.mercurycenter.com/premium/world/docs/rhino12.htm
Aquaria 21 deals called off
http://www.press.co.nz/2000/19/000512b07.htm
'Live' Gorillas in Your Home
(Zoo New England)
http://news.excite.com/news/bw/000510/ma-livewave
Pair of tiny, endangered zoo monkeys lost in Lodi
(Micke Grove Park Zoo)
http://www.sacbee.com/news/news/local12_20000513.html
Neglected Oasis to gain new life when zoo’s rookery is renovated
http://www.chicago.tribune.com/version1/article/0,1575,SAV-0005110168,00.h
tml
N.J. finds homes for evicted tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/daily_news/2000/May/12/national/ROPB12.htm
Owl case awards $2 million to loggers
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/local/html98/owll12m_20000512.html
Euthanasia one option for 26 tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/2000/May/09/sj/JTIGER09.htm
More on Legionnaires' disease
http://www.theage.com.au/news/20000510/A51012-2000May9.html
Not your typical fence lizard
(Oak Mountain)
http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/May2000/9-e415848b.html
Longshoreman gets a lickin'
(Perth Zoo)
http://www.deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,165010583,00.html?
Primates on the brink
http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSScience0005/09_primates.html
Dog days of spring for zoo animals as heat wave continues
http://www.bergen.com/region/tigercut200005095.htm
Zoo Improvement Plans
(Houston Zoo)
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/metropolitan/546514
Conservationists warn that many primate species could vanish immediately
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/050900/tec_124-2727.shtml
High court bans trade in shahtoosh
http://www.rediff.com/news/2000/may/09shah.htm
Reports of Wolves Have Ranchers Concerned
http://www.sltrib.com/05092000/utah/47694.htm
State could get millions for wildlife research
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666806
New exhibits at aquarium to open soon
(Pittsburgh Zoo)
http://www.tribunereview.com/news/rzoo0508.html
State seeks to build whooping crane population
http://www.newsindex.com/cgi-bin/result.cgi?http://www2.startribune.com/st
OnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666875
Cougar-control measures protect public
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/editorial/html98/coug08_20000508.html
10 percent of Floridas manatees could die this summer
http://www.msnbc.com/local/WBBH/283221.asp
Poachers' Snares Maiming Chimpanzees
http://www.africanews.org/east/uganda/stories/20000507/20000507_feat9.html
Feeding time at zoo terrifies children
(Harbin Zoo)
http://www.scmp.com/News/China/Article/FullText_asp_ArticleID-200005080328
15903.asp
State seeks to build whooping crane population starting with sandhills
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81662893
Desert-watering plan too late to help pronghorn this year
http://www.azstarnet.com/public/dnews/000510PRONGHORN.html
Man evicted for killing alligator
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109787,00.
htm
Black bear spends day in Sanford warehouse
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/automagic/news/2000-05-10/NWSSBEAR10051000.
html
Do more to protect panthers, suit says
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109790,00.
html
Dispute puts fish in peril
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/051000/met_152-2413.000.shtml
New Zoo at Pinnawala opens today
http://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/2000/05/10/new18.html
Marine mama expecting
http://www.oklahoman.com/cgi-bin/shart?ID=486831&TP=getarticle
KC's chimpanzee family experiences conflicts, changes in loyalty
http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/local.pat,local/3774724f.507,.html
If you know a story I have missed this week do drop me a line with the
full web address and I will try and include it next week.
Bit & Pieces
ZooNews Digest subscribers can be found in :
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bali, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belize, Bermuda,
Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Croatia,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Eire, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Isle of Man,
Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Korea, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania,
Mexico, Malaysia, Malta, Mauritius, Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, New Zealand,
Northern Ireland, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Peoples Republic of China,
Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Senegal, Singapore, Slovak
Republic, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland,
Taiwan, Thailand, The Netherlands, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab
Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yugoslavia,
Zambia, Zimbabwe.
*********************************************************************
The
Incubation and Fertility Research Group Meeting, 2000 Meeting - University
of Oxford
The Incubation and Fertility Research Group (WPSA Working Group 6
{Reproduction}) is an association of people interested in any aspect of
incubation. Established almost 30 years ago the Group is comprised of
people interested in both scientific and practical aspects of incubation
in a wide range of bird species (and even at times, reptilian and extinct
species). The Group meets once a year at an annual meeting usually held in
September usually at a venue in the UK, including in recent years, Warwick
and Ayr. By nature it is an informal organisation open to all and so
meetings are attended by a wide range of people working in science,
commerce, and conservation. Most participants come from the UK and Europe
although a few delegates come from the USA and even farther afield. The
meetings consist of a series of oral and poster presentations offered by
the delegates and is often a useful place for bringing forward new ideas.
Many students have given their first ever scientific presentation to the
IFRG's enthusiastic and friendly audience. Abstracts of talks each year
are published in Poultry and Avian Reviews and International Hatchery
Practise.
The IFRG Meeting 2000 will be held on September 11th-12th in Oxford. As
usual, the meeting is open to people wishing to present talks or posters
on any topic or species. As usual there will be ample time for informal
discussions over coffee or in the bar.
This year there are special events which will interest everyone interested
in fertility and incubation, particularly in the commercial sector. There
is an invited keynote speaker, Professor Eddy Decuypere of the University
of Leuven, Belgium, who will be speaking on "Incubation, a crucial hinge
between breeders and broilers". There will also be a "Back to Basics"
workshop for incubation featuring leading speakers from Israel and the UK.
Topics covered will be:
Assessment and significance of fertility in commercial production by Dr
Graham Wishart (University of Abertay, Dundee). Shell formation and
function and its role in incubation by Dr Nick Sparks (SAC, Auchincriuve)
Techniques for improving the shelf life of fertile eggs by Professor Amos
Ar (Tel Aviv University) The critical importance of temperature in
incubation by Dr Nick French (British United Turkeys, Tarvin) Roles of
water and gas exchange in determining hatchability success by Professor
Amos Ar. Problems associated with egg turning by Dr Charles Deeming
(Hatchery Consulting & Research, Wallingford) Assessment of chick quality
by Dr Charles Deeming
The meeting will be held at historic St Edmund's Hall on the High St,
Oxford, and is reasonably priced (total costs for registration, meals and
accommodation are around £100.00). All are welcome. For further
information on this meeting please contact:- Dr Charles Deeming, Hatchery
Consulting & Research, 17 Rowland Close, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10
8LA, UK.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk Tel./Fax: +44-(0)1491-835542. Or
see the website: http://www.biology.bbk.ac.uk/conf/ifrgconf.htm (with
online form).
*********************************************************************
Charlie Deeming has recently found reference to a poster presented at the
15th International Symposium on Biotelemetry in May 1999. This was by K.
Bauman, T. Snyder, C. Asa & M. Macek from St Louis Zoo and was entitled
"The Use of aTelemetric egg for monitoring Bird Incubation". This
describes telemetric eggs which measure egg turning in whistling ducks and
Bateleur Eagles but the actual rates of turning were not reported. Given
that he is trying to develop a database on the rates of egg turning in
birds this data would be extremely useful.
Can anyone help him with an email address for any of the authors. He would
really appreciate help with this matter.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk
*********************************************************************
Three new publications published by the Federation of Zoos of Great
Britain and Ireland
The publications are available as paper hard copies and on floppy discs
(versions Microsoft Word 97 and Microsoft Word 95 6.0).
Further information can be obtained from the Federation Secretariat.
Telephone: 020 7586 0230
E-mail: fedzoo@zsl.org
Management Guidelines for the Welfare of Zoo Animals
ISSN 0963-1712
For one copy the postage and packing rates are:
£1.50 United Kingdom
£2.00 Europe
£3.00 Worldwide zone 1 (United States of America etc.)
£3.50 Worldwide zone 2 (Australia etc.)
Falconiformes
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £8.00 £5.00
Non-members £16.00
£10.00
Birds of Prey in Flying Demonstrations
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £5.00 £5.00
Non-members £10.00
£10.00
Guenons
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £6.00 £5.00
Non-members £12.00
£10.00
Payment is by cheque in pounds sterling made payable to "The Federation of
Zoos".
Nicola Charlton
Conservation Coordinator
The Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain and Ireland
Zoological Gardens
Regent's Park
London NW1 4RY
United Kingdom
Telephone +44 (0)20 7586 0230
Direct Dial +44 (0)20 7449 6350
Facsimile +44 (0)20 7722 4427
E-mail fedzoo@zsl.org
Direct E-mail conservation.fedzoo@zsl.org
*********************************************************************
PRIMATE LICE
Natalie Leo is a PhD student from the University of Queensland studying
the evolution of lice from primates. She is having trouble getting
specimens and thought that best chance was sanctuaries (where they might
actually handle the animals - at least the sick ones or newcomers). If you
think Natalie could possibly help her she would be extremely grateful.
She using them for DNA analysis, and does not need many (2 or 3 is
adequate to get information), but of course the more the better since
there are so many different lice out there (some possibly yet
unidentified).
If possible, please store them in 100% or 70% ethanol and then e-mail her
at: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
Natalie Leo, B.Sc.(Hons)
Department of Microbiology and Parasitology
University of Queensland
St Lucia, QLD 4072
Phone: (07) 3365 1101
Fax: (07) 3365 4620
e-mail: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
*********************************************************************
The
Primate Conservation & Welfare Society is proud to announce the
availability of our first annual Primate Conservation Grant Small Grant!
For details, including the Application Packet in .PDF Format, please see
our website at: http://www.primates-online.com/apps.html
To receive a hard copy of the Conservation Grant Application Packet,
please send a self- addressed stamped envelope to: PCWS - Conservation
Grant PO Box 2101 Port Townsend, WA 98368 USA
Please note: Due to the volume of requests, application requests MUST be
accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Applicants outside the
US should contact PCWS via email with appropriate contact information. The
grant deadline is June 30, 2000.
Stamp Donations Are Welcome For This Project!
*********************************************************************
11th
International Zoo Collectors Meeting 9-10 September 2000 Every year
collectors of zoo guidebooks and other zoo related materials meet to trade
and swap items. The 2meeting will be held at 9th/10th September at Munster
Zoo, northern Germany, which celebrates its 125th anniversary.
Traditionally, there will be a guided behind-the-scenes zoo tour, an
auction (in favour of a turtle conservation project) and a visit to
another zoo the next day (this time Rheine Zoo). Attendance fee is 35 DM
(17 US$) including dinner. Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
*********************************************************************
Marwell Zoological Park Student Research Symposium 21 June 2000, start
9.30, finish 16.30 Everybody is welcome. For further information please
contact Tanya Langenhorst, Marwell Zoological Park, Colden Common, Nr
Winchester SO21 1JH. Tel: 01962 777407, Fax: 01962 777511, email:
tanyaL@marwell.org.uk
*********************************************************************
Elephant Birth on the Web
Zoo Zurich is expecting the birth of an elephant this May. The birth will
be broadcasted live on the internet. With this world first Zoo Zurich
intends to appeal to a large public and will make use of the probable
great interest to inform about the situation of the Asian Elephants in the
wild. At all time the animal’s welfare will be the prime consideration and
will not be affected in any way by the transmission. Already today live
pictures from the elephant house will be shown on the following websites:
http://www.zoo.ch and http://www.migros.ch and
http://www.tagesanzeiger.ch
*********************************************************************
Important Research on Captive European Otters
(If you are in a position to help, please do as it will sort out once and
for all the questions which have been bothering otter keepers in Europe
for many a year—Peter Dickinson)
Att.: Molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra lutra and Lutra
lutra barang.
First let us introduce ourselves. We are Edwin Leander and Pieter
Levelink, fourth year Animal Management students on the Van Hall Institute
in Leeuwarden, the Netherlands.
We are being supervised on this Institute by dr. T.H.M. Meijer and
drs.A.C. Meiners.
We have begun our final research regarding our course. This final
assessment, a molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra, is being
conducted on the Biological Centre in Haren, part of the University of
Groningen.
We are being technically supervised on this Centre by the geneticists
dr.R. Bijlsma and dr. L. van de Zande.
This research is being conducted for the EEP otter studbook of which
drs.A. Melissen is the coordinator, working at Aqualutra in the
Netherlands. Also the president of Aqualutra, drs. A. de Jongh, is fully
supporting our research. The otter studbook of the EEP is being divided in
an A- and a B-line. The A-line consists out of the circa 100 homogene
Lutra lutra lutra. The content of the B-line are roughly 200 otters from
which the pedigree and the relationship are not known. There is also an
assumption that the B-line is an interbreed from Lutra Lutra Lutra and
Lutra lutra Barang. With your help, by giving blood or/ and tissue
samples, we can start a good research with promising results which would
finally give an answer or a solution regarding to the stud-book problems.
Hopefully, this way, the A- and the B-line will be put together. Creating
an easier management and by clearing the ban on breeding the B-line
otters, higher welfare on all fronts can be accomplished.
Aim of the research
1.. To get a decisive answer concerning the interbreed of Lutra lutra
lutra and Lutra lutra barang in line-B.
2.. To measure the homozygosity of the B-line related to line A and a
wild population, if line- B is homogene Lutra lutra lutra.
What we need:
To conduct this research we need, as soon as possible, blood or tissue
(e.g. liver) samples from the A- and the B-line otters.
Please contact drs. A Melissen for the possible mailing of the samples, by
e-mail or fax. Could you send us an e-mail in which you state your reply
regarding this matter. E. Leander & P. Levelink, drs. A.
Melissen
Students Animal Management EEP Coordinator
P.B.Levelink@biol.rug.nl info@aqualutra.nl
*********************************************************************
Zoo Staff Personals
Looking for work? Someone to travel with? Somewhere to stay? Let me know
and I will post it here.
*********************************************************************
Situations Vacant (Please mention you saw the advertisement in ZooNews
Digest should you apply for any of these posts, many thanks) Do you have a
vacancy to advertise? Please email me.
Linton Zoo are looking for Experienced Keepers. They are looking for
people with a minimum of five years experience with mammals, in particular
ungulates and large cats or birds and reptiles. Having an interest in
gardening would be advantageous. Please send a full CV for application
form to: Kim Simmons, Linton Zoological Gardens, Hadstock Road, Linton,
Cambridgeshire. CB1 6NT
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The Welsh Hawking Centre are looking for a school leaver and a trainee to
all aspects of the captive management of Birds of Prey. A willingness to
learn and commitment are essential. Accommodation is available. Please
send a letter and full CV to: The Welsh Hawking Centre, Weycock Road,
Barry, South Glamorgan. CF62 3AA
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
AVICULTURE INTERNS WANTED for the Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation
Program at the Maui Bird Conservation Center on the island of Maui and
Keauhou Bird Conservation Center on the Big Island. Daily tasks include
husbandry duties such as: diet preparation, aviary and facility
maintenance, behavioral observations of breeding birds, grounds keeping,
predator control. Applicant must be able to live with several roommates in
a remote area and should show enthusiasm for work with captive endangered
Hawaiian birds. Driver’s license and proof of health insurance are
required. Internships last for three-month periods. Interns receive
$15/day stipend plus housing.
For more information, please send a resume, cover letter (with location
preference) and the names and contacts of three references to: Tracey
Powers P.O. Box 39 Volcano, Hawaii 96785 or fax: 808-985-7034.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The Philadelphia Zoo currently has positions available for mammal keepers.
1 year keeper experience required; degree valued. Interest in
conservation education and ability to interact in a positive, friendly
manner with the public. $14.13/hr plus benefits package. Send resume to
Human Resources, THE PHILADELPHIA ZOO, 3400 W. Girard Ave., Phila., PA
19104. PH: (215) 243-5350. Visit our Web site at
http://www.phillyzoo.org
Specific positions are:
Small Mammal House Keeper: This is one of two line positions in the
building. Collection for this line is a combination of nocturnal and
diurnal species, including vampire bats, lorises, mouse lemurs, African
dormice, Malagasy giant jumping rats, mouse deer, tree shrews, pygmy
marmosets, and elephant shrews. Exhibits and work are exclusively indoors.
Interest in small mammal husbandry and creative exhibitry, some previous
experience in same required. Days off would be consistent, but most likely
weekdays.
Assigned Relief Keeper: This position is in the "Rare Animal House",
relieving for three line positions on some of the line keepers' regular
days off. The collection consists mostly of primates, including lemurs (2
species), marmosets and tamarins (4 species), spider monkeys, mangabeys,
and langurs. Other species include naked mole rats, Rodrigues and Egyptian
fruit bats, dwarf mongoose, armadillos, acouchi, and tree kangaroos. Most
exhibits/work indoors. Interest and some experience in primate husbandry
required; experience, ability in exhibit furnishing a plus. Days off would
be consistent, but most likely weekdays.
For questions, contact Andy Baker, baker.andy@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5245, or Heidi Hellmuth, hellmuth.heidi@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5319.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
CONSERVATION AND SCIENCE PROGRAM ASSISTANT
Conservation and Science program assistant sought by the American Zoo and
Aquarium Association, a non-profit association based in Silver Spring, MD.
Reports to the Director of Conservation and Science. Responsibilities
include: preparing and editing reports for publication, assisting with the
distribution of information, communicating with members, and general
clerical duties.
Requires a Bachelor's degree; excellent writing and computer skills,
including proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, and related
software programs. Degree in biological sciences and interest in wildlife
conservation a plus. Starting salary in the low to mid-$20's, depending
on experience. Full benefits. Please submit resume and one writing sample
to American Zoo and Aquarium Association- C&S Search, 8403 Colesville
Road, Suite 710, Silver Spring, MD 20910 or fax to: (301) 562-0888.
http://www.aza.org EOE. No phone calls please.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Position Available: Chimpanzee Caregiver at the Wildlife Waystation, CA
Job Description: You will be working with 31 chimps (age 3-11 yeas) in 9
social groups
Your duties include cleaning cages, raking, feeding, and enrichment. 95%
of your job is CLEANING.
Qualification: You must be healthy, fit and ready to work outside for
hours, and be able to lift and carry 35 lbs. Must be flexible and
resourceful. We need someone who can work both as a team and
independently. Working experience with any animal is a plus but not
required. Please have a reference from your current/former employer or
from your teacher if you've just finished school. High school diploma
required.
This is an On-Ranch Volunteer position. The position consists of
on-facility trailer style living with housing and utilities paid, and
there is a food give-away once a week. Compensation for this position is a
non-taxable volunteer reimbursement and expense of $258.00 every two
weeks. A minimum six- month stay required.
If interested, please send your resume and a reference to Dean Seymour,
The Wildlife Waystation, 14831 Little Tujunga Canyon RD, San Fernando, CA
91342
For further information, please contact Dean Seymour at
dseymour@waystation.org or Asami Kabasawa at asamikabasawa@yahoo.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
For the most up to date links to sites advertising Zoo work go to:
http://members.tripod.com/~Sciurus/index.html
*********************************************************************
Meetings
First conference of the African Zoo and Reserve Educators Network
(AZOREN) 12 - 18 May 2000 Pretoria Zoo, South Africa Theme of this
training conference is “Effective & Efficient AZOREN; Starting the
Conservation Educators Network”. For further information please contact:
Cherylene Odendaal or Dina Roos of Pretoria Zoo. Telephone :
0027-12-3283265 / 3206020 Fax : 0027-12-3234540 E-mail :
zoologic@cis.co.za
AnnualConference of the Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain
andIreland 19- 21 May 2000 hostedby Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens at the
Maidshead Hotel, Norwich. The principal focus of this year’s conference
will be nutrition.
TheUnion of the Czech and Slovak Zoological Gardens Annual Conference 25-
27 May 2000 ZooChomutov, Czech Republic Forfurther information please
contact: fax: +420-66-7302839 e-mail:jizoo@brn.pvtnet.cz
FifthInternational Elephant Research Symposium
1-3June 2000
Portland,Oregon
email:dolson@indyzoo.com
ANIMAL TRAINERS' NETWORK WORKSHOP
June 11, 12 & 13, 2000
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
To get a registration form or for more information, please
contact:
Email: hospital@cincyzoo.org or jenny.kroll@cincyzoo.org
Course of Environmental Enrichment for Wild Animals in Captivity.
The Zoological National the Aurora of Guatemala, and El Zoo Conservation
Outreach Group (ZCOG), presents/displays: 21-24 June 2000 Zoological
National “The Aurora” City of Guatemala, Guatemala C.A Further
INFORMATION: Maria Jose Iturbide, Zoological Technical Department Aurora
Tel. (502) 4720507 4720885, Fax (502) 4715286. emailmjiturbidef@hotmail.com
The2nd Zoo Research Symposium
6- 7 July 2000
PaigntonZoo
E-mail: aplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk
Symposiumon Asian Raptors
25-27July 2000
Bandung,Indonesia
Forfurther info email : ypal@bdg.centrin.net.id
The2000 Invertebrates in Captivity Conference
3– 6 August 2000
RioRico, Arizona, USA
Fordetails see: http://www.sasionline.org/2000conf/2000confrpg.html
Fourth International Penguin Conference
4 – 8 September 2000
Coquimbo,Chile
ForFurther info : gluna@nevados.cecun.ucn.cl
The Fourth European Elephant Handlers School
4-17 September 2000
Woburn Safari Park and Blackpool Zoo
Further details and a full course programme can be obtained from
Woburn Safari Park-tele-01525 290407or e-mail WobSafari@aol.com
Annual Conference of the Swedish Association of Zoological Parks and
Aquaria 6 – 8 September 2000 Boras Djurpark, Boras, Sweden. Email:
info@parkenzoo.se
11th International Zoo Collectors Meeting
Munster Zoo, Germany
9-10 September 2000
Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
ZooFederation Plant Group Conference
September13th - 15th 2000
CotswoldWildlife Park
For further info:
“Colin Wren” gardens@rzss.org.uk
InternationalWhite-tailed Sea Eagle Conference
13-17September 2000
Bjorko,Sweden.
email: bjorn.helander@nrm.se
17thEAZA/EEP Annual Conference
19- 24 September 2000
AalborgZoo,
Denmark
Allmatters with regard to registration etc : Hju@aalborg-zoo.dk
Anythingrelated to conference programmes, meetings etc : info@eaza.net
InternationalSymposium on Galliformes
23September to 1st October 2000
Nepal
Forfurther information contact the World Pheasant Association on email:
wpa@gn.apc.org
15th International Zoo Educators’ Conference
1- 6 October 2000
Guadalajara,Mexico
For more information contact Maria Eugenia Martinez Arizmendi,
headof the Education Department.
Telephone: 0052-3-6744104
Fax : 0052-3-674-4488
E-mail : 104164.3717@compuserve.com
Third International Symposium on Physiology and Ethology of Wild and Zoo
Animals 4 – 7 October 2000 Berlin, Germany Email: symposium@izw-berlin.de
ZooSciences 2000
Amiens, France
For further details Email: zoolille@nordnet.fr
2000 AAZK Conference
8– 12 October 2000
ColumbusZoo
Checkout information on this conference by accessing its
websiteat: http://aazk2000.homestead.com
ElephantManagers International Conference
6- 9 October 2000
Syracuse,New York
Formore information please contact
AdrienneWhiteley on : bpzoo@emi.com
Panda 2000 International Conference
An international conference on the giant panda will be held in San Diego,
California (USA) October 16-19, 2000. The Zoological Society of San Diego
and the World Wildlife Fund are co- hosts. A program consisting primarily
of work-shops, panel discussions and poster sessions is planned. Topics
in conservation, education, training, research, health, reproduction, and
captive management will be co covered. Persons interested in attending
thismeeting are encouraged to contact the Local Arrangements Chair:
HelenaFitch-Snyder, Zool. Soc. of San Diego, PO Box 120551, San Diego, CA
92112.Phone: (619) 557-3954, FAX: (619) 557-3959; E-mail
helena@sandiegozoo.org.
Reproductionand integrated conservation science.
9thand 10th November, 2000
AZoological Society of London Symposium
TheMeeting Rooms, Zoological Society of London
To register your interest in attending this symposium please contact: D.
Body, Scientific Meetings Co-ordinator, Zoological Society of London,
Regent’s Park, London NW1 4RY, UK or email: Deborah.Body@zsl.org If you
would be interested in submitting a poster presentation, please indicate
this.
5thInternational Aquarium Congress
20- 25th November 2000
Monaco
Organisedby the Oceanographic Institute of Oceanography
Forfurther information email: iac2000monaco@meditnet.com
or write to : Secretariat of the 5th IAC 2000, Oceanographic Institute,
Av.St.Martin, MC 98000 Monaco Tel.: +377-93-25.36.00, Fax :
+377-93-30.90.95.
European Squirrel Workshop
The next WORKSHOP is planned for the year 2001 in Turin, Italy
For further details contact : Kathy Hodder, Institute of Terrestrial
Ecology, Wareham,Dorset, BH20 4LN Tel. +44 (0) 1929 551518 Fax. 551087,
Email k.hodder@ite.ac.uk
Ecologyand Conservation of Mini-antelope
Aninternational symposium on duiker and dwarf antelope in Africa
Hostedby the Marwell Zimbabwe Trust
12th-17thFebruary 2001
Bulawayo,Zimbabwe
Contactaplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk for further info
Second European Zoo Nutrition Conference
6- 9th April 2001
Southampton, UNITED KINGDOM
More detailed information about the programme and registration/abstract
submission deadlines will be available commencing 1st May 2000 at
http://www.marwell.org.uk To join the conference mailing list, send your
contact details (after the above-mentioned date) by email to:
Nutrition2001@marwell.org or by post/fax to: Zoo Nutrition 2001, Marwell
Zoological Park, Owslebury, Winchester, Hampshire, SO21 1JH, United
Kingdom. Fax: (0) 1962 777511.
FourthWorld Congress of Herpetology
1-8August 2001
Colombo,Sri Lanka
Pleasepre-register at website: http://www.4wch.com
Help Wanted
Need assistance? You could try Zoo Biology, it is probably your best bet
for animal information. However ZooNews Digest reaches more like minded
people, more often than any other similar publication on the planet! So
you could try here. Let me know and I will post it.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Carlos Boix is a Spanish Veterinary student (in his fourth year) who´s
very interested in doing field work with marine mammals of any kind. If
it´s student practice, volunteer work, any other kind of work, he doesn´t
care. He is available in the summer, is very motivated is an advanced
diver (PADI).
Contact Carlos on : karlosvoix@LatinMail.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Dear Zoologists,
The Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford, and the
Laboratory of
Genomic Diversity, NCI-FCRF, USA, are together initiating a project in the
conservation and phylogeography of the wildcat (Felis silvestris ssp.) .
This project will develop a suite of diagnostic genetic markers useful in
distinguishing wildcats from domestic cats or hybrids, define
phylogeographic boundaries in wildcats, and determine the origin of
domestication of the domestic cat.
A collection of reliably provenanced samples is critically important to
the success of this
project. We are therefore seeking collaborators either having wildcat
samples, wildcats in their collection or those who are doing fieldwork on
them. If you have access to wildcats, or wildcat samples of known
provenance from anywhere in the world, and would like to help, your
assistance in this important conservation project would be tremendously
appreciated. Please contact Carlos Driscoll with questions and for further
information on the project.
Wildlife Conservation Research Unit
Department of Zoology
University of Oxford
South Parks Road
Oxford, England
OX1 3PS
carlos.driscoll@zoology.oxford.ac.uk
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Zoo Biology
To subscribe send an e-mail to: zoo-biology-subscribe@egroups.com For
those of you unfamiliar with Email groups they work like this. You
subscribe. You can then post questions, answer questions, make
observations, inform or just read the Email. This will arrive with some
regularity (depending on the flow of information). By Zoo Biology I mean
anything relating to zoo management. Hediger described this as “the
science which embraced everything which was biologically relevant to the
management of the zoological garden.” The more that join up the more
effective a management tool it will become. Go on, give it a try, and
subscribe. Remember no-one will pressurize you to contribute....but you
may want to help. There is a members only chat site attached to Zoo
Biology. This appears to work quite well. There are 600+ Zoo Biology
subscribers to date. More join each week.. Do be prepared to get a lot of
messages.
Sites worth checking out
Have you got a suggestion? Let me check it out.
WILDLIFE INFORMATION NETWORK
http://www.wildlifeinformation.org
ZooNews Digest is an independent publication, not allied or attached to
any zoological collection. Many thanks. For those of you who have not
received the News previously, you have been included because someone has
suggested you might be interested. If this is not the case please email me
and I shall remove your name. Kind Regards,
Wishing you a wonderful week,
Peter Dickinson,
ZooNews Digest 8th May - 14th May 2000 (Zoo News 103)
Dear Colleague,
I have previously mentioned the problems with which Sharon Matola and the
Belize Zoo are faced. Well things are getting worse. I have reproduced
Sharons letter below. Visit the web site at : http://216.247.115.230/
ZOO DIRECTOR UPDATE ON MILE 27 LANDFILL ISSUE
At this writing, 7 May 2000, the issue of placing a Sanitary Landfill
within 2 kilometers of the zoo, and 1 kilometer from the Tropical
Education Center, persists. While the Department of the Environment, under
the Ministry of Natural Resources, has stated that "the project has been
temporarily suspended while The Belize Zoo and their foreign donors can
find an appropriate alternative site for this necessary development",
apparently, this is not the case. The Belize Zoo and Tropical Education
Center, with assistance from geologist Brian Holland and Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC), senior scientist, Dr. Allen Hershkowitz, has
located a possible alternative site. This site seems worthy of further
geological and hydrogeological investigation as a landfill site. As
opposed to the proposed site at Mile 27, this location appears to engender
less risks to public health and to the environment. On 5 May 2000, a
meeting held in Belize City between Stantec, Department of the Environment
(DOE), Inter-American Development Bank, (IDB), independent consultant, and
NRDC, resulted in clear statements that, in spite of scientific points
directed towards the hydrogeological shortfalls of the Mile 27 project,
the above-mentioned entities, with exception of NRDC, want to proceed with
this site development. To underscore that The Belize Zoo and Tropical
Education Center has valid concern about the development of this
poorly-designed Landfill, I will list comments from the IDB independent
consultant: 1. "The hydrogeology report does not meet an acceptable
professional standard" 2. "The section on geology and soils, which is of
great importance to understanding the physical suitability of the site, is
incomplete". 3. "The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) document leaves
many unanswered questions with regards to the geological and
hydrogeological suitability of the property and potential impacts on the
surface water drainage system". 4. "The leachate treatment methods
recommended in the report are questioned and have not proven effective in
many countries in the world. The leachate treatment methods outlines, in
the EIA, are not expected to provide adequate leachate management and
treatment and may well lead to surface water contamination problems". 5.
"A number of key questions related to the physical and hydrogeological
make up of the site have not been answered and the suitability of the site
for landfill activities and the proposed preliminary site design are
questioned in the absence of this information". One Landfill expert, Dr.
G. Fred Lee, read the EIA for Mile 27 proposed site and reported: "The
landfill gas impacts to public health have not been adequately addressed
in the EIA. In addition to the potential for explosions, landfill gas
typically contains a variety of chemical constituents that are hazardous
to humans and wildlife. Further, the flaring of landfill gas as proposed
can lead to dioxin formation...These issues should have been discussed in
the EIA" We are vehemently opposed to placing our zoo visitors, many of
them children, in a position of being downwind from carcinogenic gases
which would include toluene, benzene, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride,
vinyl chloride, trichloroethylene and methylene dichloride, all common
landfill air pollutants. Furthermore, the type of landfill proposed for
Belize is illegal in the United States. Under existing United States
Federal Criteria for MSW Landfills, landfill operators may not add liquids
to waste. According to the U.S. EPA, "At this time, EPA lacks adequate
data and information on the design, operation, and performance of
bioreactor landfills to evaluate this technology". (quoted in volume #31,
dated 14 April 2000, of the Environmental Reporter) Dr. G. Fred Lee has
also stated "There can be little doubt that the Zoo and the Tropical
Education Center will be adversely impacted by the proposed Landfill".
Should this project go forward, the Tropical Education Center (TEC) may be
forced to terminate its operations. With this financial arm of The Belize
Zoo non-existent, and with the threat of disease vectors extending out
from this Landfill, The Belize Zoo may also have to cease its operations.
TBZ & TEC feels that it would be indefensible, given the hydrogeology
information available, that an entire river system would be threatened and
eventually deadened by this project. TBZ & TEC feels that it is socially
irresponsible to threaten the public health of the Belizean people, as
well as to knowingly degrade the environment. There is scientific evidence
that these threats are real. The following organizations stand opposed to
having the proposed Sanitary Landfill located at Mile 27: Belize TouristBoard
(BTB)
Belize Tourism Industry Association (BTIA)
Belize
Ecotourism Association (BETA)
Belize Alliance of Conservation NGOs
(BACONGO)
Sibun Watershed Association (SWA)
Natural Resources Defense
Council (NRDC)
World Wildlife Fund-US (WWF-US)
Conservation
International (CI)
Durrell Conservation Trust
Wildlife Preservation
Trust, Int’l (WPTI)
International Expeditions
Island Expeditions
Zoological Society of Milwaukee
Foundation for Wildlife Conservation
(FWC)
The Ecotourism Society
Should you wish specific information about this project, please contacteither me
at
belizezoo@btl.net or Tony Garel, at tec@btl.net
Should you
wish to protest this project, please send a letter to Hon. Said Musa,
Prime Minister of Belize, Government Buildings, Belmopan, Belize,
CentralAmerica.
Hon. John Briceno, Minister of Natural Resources
lincenbze@btl.net
Mr. Robert Kaplan,
Chief Environment And Natural
Resources Management
Inter-American Development Bank
1300 New York
Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20577
Ismael Fabro, Department of the
Environment
envirodept@btl.net
*********************************************************************
Mayor gets tour of zoo – smells and all (Mesker Park Zoo)
http://www.courierpress.com/cgi-bin/view.cgi?200005/06+zootour050600_news.
html+20000506
Zoo dismisses elephant keeper
(The Oregon Zoo)
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/news/oregonian/00/05/l
c_31zoo09.fram e
Zoo conference focuses on apes
(Brookfield Zoo)
http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/ape10.html
GMOs may pose new risk to endangered plants, animals
http://news.excite.com/news/r/000504/17/food-biotech-endangered
Jane Goodall to Address Bushmeat Crisis May 18 in Washington
http://www.usnewswire.com/topnews/Current_Releases/0512-110.html
'Tenacious' Seattle Aquarium director will resign in July
http://www.seattlep-i.com/local/aqua11.shtml
Rare Sea Dragon 'Pregnancy' at Long Beach Aquarium of the Pacific
http://news.excite.com/news/pr/000508/ca-aquarium-pacific
A big home for big stars
(Cincinnati Zoo)
http://www.cincypost.com/opinion/editb050600.html
Swimming with the sharks: Curator gets new aquarium ready
(Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium)
http://www.post-gazette.com/magazine/20000512aquaside3.asp
Zurich rhino dead at age 39
http://www7.mercurycenter.com/premium/world/docs/rhino12.htm
Aquaria 21 deals called off
http://www.press.co.nz/2000/19/000512b07.htm
'Live' Gorillas in Your Home
(Zoo New England)
http://news.excite.com/news/bw/000510/ma-livewave
Pair of tiny, endangered zoo monkeys lost in Lodi
(Micke Grove Park Zoo)
http://www.sacbee.com/news/news/local12_20000513.html
Neglected Oasis to gain new life when zoo’s rookery is renovated
http://www.chicago.tribune.com/version1/article/0,1575,SAV-0005110168,00.h
tml
N.J. finds homes for evicted tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/daily_news/2000/May/12/national/ROPB12.htm
Owl case awards $2 million to loggers
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/local/html98/owll12m_20000512.html
Euthanasia one option for 26 tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/2000/May/09/sj/JTIGER09.htm
More on Legionnaires' disease
http://www.theage.com.au/news/20000510/A51012-2000May9.html
Not your typical fence lizard
(Oak Mountain)
http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/May2000/9-e415848b.html
Longshoreman gets a lickin'
(Perth Zoo)
http://www.deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,165010583,00.html?
Primates on the brink
http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSScience0005/09_primates.html
Dog days of spring for zoo animals as heat wave continues
http://www.bergen.com/region/tigercut200005095.htm
Zoo Improvement Plans
(Houston Zoo)
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/metropolitan/546514
Conservationists warn that many primate species could vanish immediately
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/050900/tec_124-2727.shtml
High court bans trade in shahtoosh
http://www.rediff.com/news/2000/may/09shah.htm
Reports of Wolves Have Ranchers Concerned
http://www.sltrib.com/05092000/utah/47694.htm
State could get millions for wildlife research
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666806
New exhibits at aquarium to open soon
(Pittsburgh Zoo)
http://www.tribunereview.com/news/rzoo0508.html
State seeks to build whooping crane population
http://www.newsindex.com/cgi-bin/result.cgi?http://www2.startribune.com/st
OnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666875
Cougar-control measures protect public
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/editorial/html98/coug08_20000508.html
10 percent of Floridas manatees could die this summer
http://www.msnbc.com/local/WBBH/283221.asp
Poachers' Snares Maiming Chimpanzees
http://www.africanews.org/east/uganda/stories/20000507/20000507_feat9.html
Feeding time at zoo terrifies children
(Harbin Zoo)
http://www.scmp.com/News/China/Article/FullText_asp_ArticleID-200005080328
15903.asp
State seeks to build whooping crane population starting with sandhills
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81662893
Desert-watering plan too late to help pronghorn this year
http://www.azstarnet.com/public/dnews/000510PRONGHORN.html
Man evicted for killing alligator
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109787,00.
htm
Black bear spends day in Sanford warehouse
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/automagic/news/2000-05-10/NWSSBEAR10051000.
html
Do more to protect panthers, suit says
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109790,00.
html
Dispute puts fish in peril
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/051000/met_152-2413.000.shtml
New Zoo at Pinnawala opens today
http://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/2000/05/10/new18.html
Marine mama expecting
http://www.oklahoman.com/cgi-bin/shart?ID=486831&TP=getarticle
KC's chimpanzee family experiences conflicts, changes in loyalty
http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/local.pat,local/3774724f.507,.html
If you know a story I have missed this week do drop me a line with the
full web address and I will try and include it next week.
Bit & Pieces
ZooNews Digest subscribers can be found in :
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bali, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belize, Bermuda,
Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Croatia,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Eire, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Isle of Man,
Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Korea, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania,
Mexico, Malaysia, Malta, Mauritius, Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, New Zealand,
Northern Ireland, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Peoples Republic of China,
Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Senegal, Singapore, Slovak
Republic, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland,
Taiwan, Thailand, The Netherlands, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab
Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yugoslavia,
Zambia, Zimbabwe.
*********************************************************************
The
Incubation and Fertility Research Group Meeting, 2000 Meeting - University
of Oxford
The Incubation and Fertility Research Group (WPSA Working Group 6
{Reproduction}) is an association of people interested in any aspect of
incubation. Established almost 30 years ago the Group is comprised of
people interested in both scientific and practical aspects of incubation
in a wide range of bird species (and even at times, reptilian and extinct
species). The Group meets once a year at an annual meeting usually held in
September usually at a venue in the UK, including in recent years, Warwick
and Ayr. By nature it is an informal organisation open to all and so
meetings are attended by a wide range of people working in science,
commerce, and conservation. Most participants come from the UK and Europe
although a few delegates come from the USA and even farther afield. The
meetings consist of a series of oral and poster presentations offered by
the delegates and is often a useful place for bringing forward new ideas.
Many students have given their first ever scientific presentation to the
IFRG's enthusiastic and friendly audience. Abstracts of talks each year
are published in Poultry and Avian Reviews and International Hatchery
Practise.
The IFRG Meeting 2000 will be held on September 11th-12th in Oxford. As
usual, the meeting is open to people wishing to present talks or posters
on any topic or species. As usual there will be ample time for informal
discussions over coffee or in the bar.
This year there are special events which will interest everyone interested
in fertility and incubation, particularly in the commercial sector. There
is an invited keynote speaker, Professor Eddy Decuypere of the University
of Leuven, Belgium, who will be speaking on "Incubation, a crucial hinge
between breeders and broilers". There will also be a "Back to Basics"
workshop for incubation featuring leading speakers from Israel and the UK.
Topics covered will be:
Assessment and significance of fertility in commercial production by Dr
Graham Wishart (University of Abertay, Dundee). Shell formation and
function and its role in incubation by Dr Nick Sparks (SAC, Auchincriuve)
Techniques for improving the shelf life of fertile eggs by Professor Amos
Ar (Tel Aviv University) The critical importance of temperature in
incubation by Dr Nick French (British United Turkeys, Tarvin) Roles of
water and gas exchange in determining hatchability success by Professor
Amos Ar. Problems associated with egg turning by Dr Charles Deeming
(Hatchery Consulting & Research, Wallingford) Assessment of chick quality
by Dr Charles Deeming
The meeting will be held at historic St Edmund's Hall on the High St,
Oxford, and is reasonably priced (total costs for registration, meals and
accommodation are around £100.00). All are welcome. For further
information on this meeting please contact:- Dr Charles Deeming, Hatchery
Consulting & Research, 17 Rowland Close, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10
8LA, UK.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk Tel./Fax: +44-(0)1491-835542. Or
see the website: http://www.biology.bbk.ac.uk/conf/ifrgconf.htm (with
online form).
*********************************************************************
Charlie Deeming has recently found reference to a poster presented at the
15th International Symposium on Biotelemetry in May 1999. This was by K.
Bauman, T. Snyder, C. Asa & M. Macek from St Louis Zoo and was entitled
"The Use of aTelemetric egg for monitoring Bird Incubation". This
describes telemetric eggs which measure egg turning in whistling ducks and
Bateleur Eagles but the actual rates of turning were not reported. Given
that he is trying to develop a database on the rates of egg turning in
birds this data would be extremely useful.
Can anyone help him with an email address for any of the authors. He would
really appreciate help with this matter.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk
*********************************************************************
Three new publications published by the Federation of Zoos of Great
Britain and Ireland
The publications are available as paper hard copies and on floppy discs
(versions Microsoft Word 97 and Microsoft Word 95 6.0).
Further information can be obtained from the Federation Secretariat.
Telephone: 020 7586 0230
E-mail: fedzoo@zsl.org
Management Guidelines for the Welfare of Zoo Animals
ISSN 0963-1712
For one copy the postage and packing rates are:
£1.50 United Kingdom
£2.00 Europe
£3.00 Worldwide zone 1 (United States of America etc.)
£3.50 Worldwide zone 2 (Australia etc.)
Falconiformes
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £8.00 £5.00
Non-members £16.00
£10.00
Birds of Prey in Flying Demonstrations
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £5.00 £5.00
Non-members £10.00
£10.00
Guenons
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £6.00 £5.00
Non-members £12.00
£10.00
Payment is by cheque in pounds sterling made payable to "The Federation of
Zoos".
Nicola Charlton
Conservation Coordinator
The Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain and Ireland
Zoological Gardens
Regent's Park
London NW1 4RY
United Kingdom
Telephone +44 (0)20 7586 0230
Direct Dial +44 (0)20 7449 6350
Facsimile +44 (0)20 7722 4427
E-mail fedzoo@zsl.org
Direct E-mail conservation.fedzoo@zsl.org
*********************************************************************
PRIMATE LICE
Natalie Leo is a PhD student from the University of Queensland studying
the evolution of lice from primates. She is having trouble getting
specimens and thought that best chance was sanctuaries (where they might
actually handle the animals - at least the sick ones or newcomers). If you
think Natalie could possibly help her she would be extremely grateful.
She using them for DNA analysis, and does not need many (2 or 3 is
adequate to get information), but of course the more the better since
there are so many different lice out there (some possibly yet
unidentified).
If possible, please store them in 100% or 70% ethanol and then e-mail her
at: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
Natalie Leo, B.Sc.(Hons)
Department of Microbiology and Parasitology
University of Queensland
St Lucia, QLD 4072
Phone: (07) 3365 1101
Fax: (07) 3365 4620
e-mail: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
*********************************************************************
The
Primate Conservation & Welfare Society is proud to announce the
availability of our first annual Primate Conservation Grant Small Grant!
For details, including the Application Packet in .PDF Format, please see
our website at: http://www.primates-online.com/apps.html
To receive a hard copy of the Conservation Grant Application Packet,
please send a self- addressed stamped envelope to: PCWS - Conservation
Grant PO Box 2101 Port Townsend, WA 98368 USA
Please note: Due to the volume of requests, application requests MUST be
accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Applicants outside the
US should contact PCWS via email with appropriate contact information. The
grant deadline is June 30, 2000.
Stamp Donations Are Welcome For This Project!
*********************************************************************
11th
International Zoo Collectors Meeting 9-10 September 2000 Every year
collectors of zoo guidebooks and other zoo related materials meet to trade
and swap items. The 2meeting will be held at 9th/10th September at Munster
Zoo, northern Germany, which celebrates its 125th anniversary.
Traditionally, there will be a guided behind-the-scenes zoo tour, an
auction (in favour of a turtle conservation project) and a visit to
another zoo the next day (this time Rheine Zoo). Attendance fee is 35 DM
(17 US$) including dinner. Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
*********************************************************************
Marwell Zoological Park Student Research Symposium 21 June 2000, start
9.30, finish 16.30 Everybody is welcome. For further information please
contact Tanya Langenhorst, Marwell Zoological Park, Colden Common, Nr
Winchester SO21 1JH. Tel: 01962 777407, Fax: 01962 777511, email:
tanyaL@marwell.org.uk
*********************************************************************
Elephant Birth on the Web
Zoo Zurich is expecting the birth of an elephant this May. The birth will
be broadcasted live on the internet. With this world first Zoo Zurich
intends to appeal to a large public and will make use of the probable
great interest to inform about the situation of the Asian Elephants in the
wild. At all time the animal’s welfare will be the prime consideration and
will not be affected in any way by the transmission. Already today live
pictures from the elephant house will be shown on the following websites:
http://www.zoo.ch and http://www.migros.ch and
http://www.tagesanzeiger.ch
*********************************************************************
Important Research on Captive European Otters
(If you are in a position to help, please do as it will sort out once and
for all the questions which have been bothering otter keepers in Europe
for many a year—Peter Dickinson)
Att.: Molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra lutra and Lutra
lutra barang.
First let us introduce ourselves. We are Edwin Leander and Pieter
Levelink, fourth year Animal Management students on the Van Hall Institute
in Leeuwarden, the Netherlands.
We are being supervised on this Institute by dr. T.H.M. Meijer and
drs.A.C. Meiners.
We have begun our final research regarding our course. This final
assessment, a molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra, is being
conducted on the Biological Centre in Haren, part of the University of
Groningen.
We are being technically supervised on this Centre by the geneticists
dr.R. Bijlsma and dr. L. van de Zande.
This research is being conducted for the EEP otter studbook of which
drs.A. Melissen is the coordinator, working at Aqualutra in the
Netherlands. Also the president of Aqualutra, drs. A. de Jongh, is fully
supporting our research. The otter studbook of the EEP is being divided in
an A- and a B-line. The A-line consists out of the circa 100 homogene
Lutra lutra lutra. The content of the B-line are roughly 200 otters from
which the pedigree and the relationship are not known. There is also an
assumption that the B-line is an interbreed from Lutra Lutra Lutra and
Lutra lutra Barang. With your help, by giving blood or/ and tissue
samples, we can start a good research with promising results which would
finally give an answer or a solution regarding to the stud-book problems.
Hopefully, this way, the A- and the B-line will be put together. Creating
an easier management and by clearing the ban on breeding the B-line
otters, higher welfare on all fronts can be accomplished.
Aim of the research
1.. To get a decisive answer concerning the interbreed of Lutra lutra
lutra and Lutra lutra barang in line-B.
2.. To measure the homozygosity of the B-line related to line A and a
wild population, if line- B is homogene Lutra lutra lutra.
What we need:
To conduct this research we need, as soon as possible, blood or tissue
(e.g. liver) samples from the A- and the B-line otters.
Please contact drs. A Melissen for the possible mailing of the samples, by
e-mail or fax. Could you send us an e-mail in which you state your reply
regarding this matter. E. Leander & P. Levelink, drs. A.
Melissen
Students Animal Management EEP Coordinator
P.B.Levelink@biol.rug.nl info@aqualutra.nl
*********************************************************************
Zoo Staff Personals
Looking for work? Someone to travel with? Somewhere to stay? Let me know
and I will post it here.
*********************************************************************
Situations Vacant (Please mention you saw the advertisement in ZooNews
Digest should you apply for any of these posts, many thanks) Do you have a
vacancy to advertise? Please email me.
Linton Zoo are looking for Experienced Keepers. They are looking for
people with a minimum of five years experience with mammals, in particular
ungulates and large cats or birds and reptiles. Having an interest in
gardening would be advantageous. Please send a full CV for application
form to: Kim Simmons, Linton Zoological Gardens, Hadstock Road, Linton,
Cambridgeshire. CB1 6NT
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The Welsh Hawking Centre are looking for a school leaver and a trainee to
all aspects of the captive management of Birds of Prey. A willingness to
learn and commitment are essential. Accommodation is available. Please
send a letter and full CV to: The Welsh Hawking Centre, Weycock Road,
Barry, South Glamorgan. CF62 3AA
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
AVICULTURE INTERNS WANTED for the Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation
Program at the Maui Bird Conservation Center on the island of Maui and
Keauhou Bird Conservation Center on the Big Island. Daily tasks include
husbandry duties such as: diet preparation, aviary and facility
maintenance, behavioral observations of breeding birds, grounds keeping,
predator control. Applicant must be able to live with several roommates in
a remote area and should show enthusiasm for work with captive endangered
Hawaiian birds. Driver’s license and proof of health insurance are
required. Internships last for three-month periods. Interns receive
$15/day stipend plus housing.
For more information, please send a resume, cover letter (with location
preference) and the names and contacts of three references to: Tracey
Powers P.O. Box 39 Volcano, Hawaii 96785 or fax: 808-985-7034.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
The Philadelphia Zoo currently has positions available for mammal keepers.
1 year keeper experience required; degree valued. Interest in
conservation education and ability to interact in a positive, friendly
manner with the public. $14.13/hr plus benefits package. Send resume to
Human Resources, THE PHILADELPHIA ZOO, 3400 W. Girard Ave., Phila., PA
19104. PH: (215) 243-5350. Visit our Web site at
http://www.phillyzoo.org
Specific positions are:
Small Mammal House Keeper: This is one of two line positions in the
building. Collection for this line is a combination of nocturnal and
diurnal species, including vampire bats, lorises, mouse lemurs, African
dormice, Malagasy giant jumping rats, mouse deer, tree shrews, pygmy
marmosets, and elephant shrews. Exhibits and work are exclusively indoors.
Interest in small mammal husbandry and creative exhibitry, some previous
experience in same required. Days off would be consistent, but most likely
weekdays.
Assigned Relief Keeper: This position is in the "Rare Animal House",
relieving for three line positions on some of the line keepers' regular
days off. The collection consists mostly of primates, including lemurs (2
species), marmosets and tamarins (4 species), spider monkeys, mangabeys,
and langurs. Other species include naked mole rats, Rodrigues and Egyptian
fruit bats, dwarf mongoose, armadillos, acouchi, and tree kangaroos. Most
exhibits/work indoors. Interest and some experience in primate husbandry
required; experience, ability in exhibit furnishing a plus. Days off would
be consistent, but most likely weekdays.
For questions, contact Andy Baker, baker.andy@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5245, or Heidi Hellmuth, hellmuth.heidi@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5319.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
CONSERVATION AND SCIENCE PROGRAM ASSISTANT
Conservation and Science program assistant sought by the American Zoo and
Aquarium Association, a non-profit association based in Silver Spring, MD.
Reports to the Director of Conservation and Science. Responsibilities
include: preparing and editing reports for publication, assisting with the
distribution of information, communicating with members, and general
clerical duties.
Requires a Bachelor's degree; excellent writing and computer skills,
including proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, and related
software programs. Degree in biological sciences and interest in wildlife
conservation a plus. Starting salary in the low to mid-$20's, depending
on experience. Full benefits. Please submit resume and one writing sample
to American Zoo and Aquarium Association- C&S Search, 8403 Colesville
Road, Suite 710, Silver Spring, MD 20910 or fax to: (301) 562-0888.
http://www.aza.org EOE. No phone calls please.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Position Available: Chimpanzee Caregiver at the Wildlife Waystation, CA
Job Description: You will be working with 31 chimps (age 3-11 yeas) in 9
social groups
Your duties include cleaning cages, raking, feeding, and enrichment. 95%
of your job is CLEANING.
Qualification: You must be healthy, fit and ready to work outside for
hours, and be able to lift and carry 35 lbs. Must be flexible and
resourceful. We need someone who can work both as a team and
independently. Working experience with any animal is a plus but not
required. Please have a reference from your current/former employer or
from your teacher if you've just finished school. High school diploma
required.
This is an On-Ranch Volunteer position. The position consists of
on-facility trailer style living with housing and utilities paid, and
there is a food give-away once a week. Compensation for this position is a
non-taxable volunteer reimbursement and expense of $258.00 every two
weeks. A minimum six- month stay required.
If interested, please send your resume and a reference to Dean Seymour,
The Wildlife Waystation, 14831 Little Tujunga Canyon RD, San Fernando, CA
91342
For further information, please contact Dean Seymour at
dseymour@waystation.org or Asami Kabasawa at asamikabasawa@yahoo.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
For the most up to date links to sites advertising Zoo work go to:
http://members.tripod.com/~Sciurus/index.html
*********************************************************************
Meetings
First conference of the African Zoo and Reserve Educators Network
(AZOREN) 12 - 18 May 2000 Pretoria Zoo, South Africa Theme of this
training conference is “Effective & Efficient AZOREN; Starting the
Conservation Educators Network”. For further information please contact:
Cherylene Odendaal or Dina Roos of Pretoria Zoo. Telephone :
0027-12-3283265 / 3206020 Fax : 0027-12-3234540 E-mail :
zoologic@cis.co.za
AnnualConference of the Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain
andIreland 19- 21 May 2000 hostedby Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens at the
Maidshead Hotel, Norwich. The principal focus of this year’s conference
will be nutrition.
TheUnion of the Czech and Slovak Zoological Gardens Annual Conference 25-
27 May 2000 ZooChomutov, Czech Republic Forfurther information please
contact: fax: +420-66-7302839 e-mail:jizoo@brn.pvtnet.cz
FifthInternational Elephant Research Symposium
1-3June 2000
Portland,Oregon
email:dolson@indyzoo.com
ANIMAL TRAINERS' NETWORK WORKSHOP
June 11, 12 & 13, 2000
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
To get a registration form or for more information, please
contact:
Email: hospital@cincyzoo.org or jenny.kroll@cincyzoo.org
Course of Environmental Enrichment for Wild Animals in Captivity.
The Zoological National the Aurora of Guatemala, and El Zoo Conservation
Outreach Group (ZCOG), presents/displays: 21-24 June 2000 Zoological
National “The Aurora” City of Guatemala, Guatemala C.A Further
INFORMATION: Maria Jose Iturbide, Zoological Technical Department Aurora
Tel. (502) 4720507 4720885, Fax (502) 4715286. emailmjiturbidef@hotmail.com
The2nd Zoo Research Symposium
6- 7 July 2000
PaigntonZoo
E-mail: aplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk
Symposiumon Asian Raptors
25-27July 2000
Bandung,Indonesia
Forfurther info email : ypal@bdg.centrin.net.id
The2000 Invertebrates in Captivity Conference
3– 6 August 2000
RioRico, Arizona, USA
Fordetails see: http://www.sasionline.org/2000conf/2000confrpg.html
Fourth International Penguin Conference
4 – 8 September 2000
Coquimbo,Chile
ForFurther info : gluna@nevados.cecun.ucn.cl
The Fourth European Elephant Handlers School
4-17 September 2000
Woburn Safari Park and Blackpool Zoo
Further details and a full course programme can be obtained from
Woburn Safari Park-tele-01525 290407or e-mail WobSafari@aol.com
Annual Conference of the Swedish Association of Zoological Parks and
Aquaria 6 – 8 September 2000 Boras Djurpark, Boras, Sweden. Email:
info@parkenzoo.se
11th International Zoo Collectors Meeting
Munster Zoo, Germany
9-10 September 2000
Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
ZooFederation Plant Group Conference
September13th - 15th 2000
CotswoldWildlife Park
For further info:
“Colin Wren” gardens@rzss.org.uk
InternationalWhite-tailed Sea Eagle Conference
13-17September 2000
Bjorko,Sweden.
email: bjorn.helander@nrm.se
17thEAZA/EEP Annual Conference
19- 24 September 2000
AalborgZoo,
Denmark
Allmatters with regard to registration etc : Hju@aalborg-zoo.dk
Anythingrelated to conference programmes, meetings etc : info@eaza.net
InternationalSymposium on Galliformes
23September to 1st October 2000
Nepal
Forfurther information contact the World Pheasant Association on email:
wpa@gn.apc.org
15th International Zoo Educators’ Conference
1- 6 October 2000
Guadalajara,Mexico
For more information contact Maria Eugenia Martinez Arizmendi,
headof the Education Department.
Telephone: 0052-3-6744104
Fax : 0052-3-674-4488
E-mail : 104164.3717@compuserve.com
Third International Symposium on Physiology and Ethology of Wild and Zoo
Animals 4 – 7 October 2000 Berlin, Germany Email: symposium@izw-berlin.de
ZooSciences 2000
Amiens, France
For further details Email: zoolille@nordnet.fr
2000 AAZK Conference
8– 12 October 2000
ColumbusZoo
Checkout information on this conference by accessing its
websiteat: http://aazk2000.homestead.com
ElephantManagers International Conference
6- 9 October 2000
Syracuse,New York
Formore information please contact
AdrienneWhiteley on : bpzoo@emi.com
Panda 2000 International Conference
An international conference on the giant panda will be held in San Diego,
California (USA) October 16-19, 2000. The Zoological Society of San Diego
and the World Wildlife Fund are co- hosts. A program consisting primarily
of work-shops, panel discussions and poster sessions is planned. Topics
in conservation, education, training, research, health, reproduction, and
captive management will be co covered. Persons interested in attending
thismeeting are encouraged to contact the Local Arrangements Chair:
HelenaFitch-Snyder, Zool. Soc. of San Diego, PO Box 120551, San Diego, CA
92112.Phone: (619) 557-3954, FAX: (619) 557-3959; E-mail
helena@sandiegozoo.org.
Reproductionand integrated conservation science.
9thand 10th November, 2000
AZoological Society of London Symposium
TheMeeting Rooms, Zoological Society of London
To register your interest in attending this symposium please contact: D.
Body, Scientific Meetings Co-ordinator, Zoological Society of London,
Regent’s Park, London NW1 4RY, UK or email: Deborah.Body@zsl.org If you
would be interested in submitting a poster presentation, please indicate
this.
5thInternational Aquarium Congress
20- 25th November 2000
Monaco
Organisedby the Oceanographic Institute of Oceanography
Forfurther information email: iac2000monaco@meditnet.com
or write to : Secretariat of the 5th IAC 2000, Oceanographic Institute,
Av.St.Martin, MC 98000 Monaco Tel.: +377-93-25.36.00, Fax :
+377-93-30.90.95.
European Squirrel Workshop
The next WORKSHOP is planned for the year 2001 in Turin, Italy
For further details contact : Kathy Hodder, Institute of Terrestrial
Ecology, Wareham,Dorset, BH20 4LN Tel. +44 (0) 1929 551518 Fax. 551087,
Email k.hodder@ite.ac.uk
Ecologyand Conservation of Mini-antelope
Aninternational symposium on duiker and dwarf antelope in Africa
Hostedby the Marwell Zimbabwe Trust
12th-17thFebruary 2001
Bulawayo,Zimbabwe
Contactaplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk for further info
Second European Zoo Nutrition Conference
6- 9th April 2001
Southampton, UNITED KINGDOM
More detailed information about the programme and registration/abstract
submission deadlines will be available commencing 1st May 2000 at
http://www.marwell.org.uk To join the conference mailing list, send your
contact details (after the above-mentioned date) by email to:
Nutrition2001@marwell.org or by post/fax to: Zoo Nutrition 2001, Marwell
Zoological Park, Owslebury, Winchester, Hampshire, SO21 1JH, United
Kingdom. Fax: (0) 1962 777511.
FourthWorld Congress of Herpetology
1-8August 2001
Colombo,Sri Lanka
Pleasepre-register at website: http://www.4wch.com
Help Wanted
Need assistance? You could try Zoo Biology, it is probably your best bet
for animal information. However ZooNews Digest reaches more like minded
people, more often than any other similar publication on the planet! So
you could try here. Let me know and I will post it.
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Carlos Boix is a Spanish Veterinary student (in his fourth year) who´s
very interested in doing field work with marine mammals of any kind. If
it´s student practice, volunteer work, any other kind of work, he doesn´t
care. He is available in the summer, is very motivated is an advanced
diver (PADI).
Contact Carlos on : karlosvoix@LatinMail.com
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Dear Zoologists,
The Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford, and the
Laboratory of
Genomic Diversity, NCI-FCRF, USA, are together initiating a project in the
conservation and phylogeography of the wildcat (Felis silvestris ssp.) .
This project will develop a suite of diagnostic genetic markers useful in
distinguishing wildcats from domestic cats or hybrids, define
phylogeographic boundaries in wildcats, and determine the origin of
domestication of the domestic cat.
A collection of reliably provenanced samples is critically important to
the success of this
project. We are therefore seeking collaborators either having wildcat
samples, wildcats in their collection or those who are doing fieldwork on
them. If you have access to wildcats, or wildcat samples of known
provenance from anywhere in the world, and would like to help, your
assistance in this important conservation project would be tremendously
appreciated. Please contact Carlos Driscoll with questions and for further
information on the project.
Wildlife Conservation Research Unit
Department of Zoology
University of Oxford
South Parks Road
Oxford, England
OX1 3PS
carlos.driscoll@zoology.oxford.ac.uk
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
Zoo Biology
To subscribe send an e-mail to: zoo-biology-subscribe@egroups.com For
those of you unfamiliar with Email groups they work like this. You
subscribe. You can then post questions, answer questions, make
observations, inform or just read the Email. This will arrive with some
regularity (depending on the flow of information). By Zoo Biology I mean
anything relating to zoo management. Hediger described this as “the
science which embraced everything which was biologically relevant to the
management of the zoological garden.” The more that join up the more
effective a management tool it will become. Go on, give it a try, and
subscribe. Remember no-one will pressurize you to contribute....but you
may want to help. There is a members only chat site attached to Zoo
Biology. This appears to work quite well. There are 600+ Zoo Biology
subscribers to date. More join each week.. Do be prepared to get a lot of
messages.
Sites worth checking out
Have you got a suggestion? Let me check it out.
WILDLIFE INFORMATION NETWORK
http://www.wildlifeinformation.org
ZooNews Digest is an independent publication, not allied or attached to
any zoological collection. Many thanks. For those of you who have not
received the News previously, you have been included because someone has
suggested you might be interested. If this is not the case please email me
and I shall remove your name. Kind Regards,
Wishing you a wonderful week,
Peter Dickinson,
I have previously mentioned the problems with which Sharon Matola and the
Belize Zoo are faced. Well things are getting worse. I have reproduced
Sharons letter below. Visit the web site at : http://216.247.115.230/
ZOO DIRECTOR UPDATE ON MILE 27 LANDFILL ISSUE
At this writing, 7 May 2000, the issue of placing a Sanitary Landfill
within 2 kilometers of the zoo, and 1 kilometer from the Tropical
Education Center, persists. While the Department of the Environment, under
the Ministry of Natural Resources, has stated that "the project has been
temporarily suspended while The Belize Zoo and their foreign donors can
find an appropriate alternative site for this necessary development",
apparently, this is not the case. The Belize Zoo and Tropical Education
Center, with assistance from geologist Brian Holland and Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC), senior scientist, Dr. Allen Hershkowitz, has
located a possible alternative site. This site seems worthy of further
geological and hydrogeological investigation as a landfill site. As
opposed to the proposed site at Mile 27, this location appears to engender
less risks to public health and to the environment. On 5 May 2000, a
meeting held in Belize City between Stantec, Department of the Environment
(DOE), Inter-American Development Bank, (IDB), independent consultant, and
NRDC, resulted in clear statements that, in spite of scientific points
directed towards the hydrogeological shortfalls of the Mile 27 project,
the above-mentioned entities, with exception of NRDC, want to proceed with
this site development. To underscore that The Belize Zoo and Tropical
Education Center has valid concern about the development of this
poorly-designed Landfill, I will list comments from the IDB independent
consultant: 1. "The hydrogeology report does not meet an acceptable
professional standard" 2. "The section on geology and soils, which is of
great importance to understanding the physical suitability of the site, is
incomplete". 3. "The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) document leaves
many unanswered questions with regards to the geological and
hydrogeological suitability of the property and potential impacts on the
surface water drainage system". 4. "The leachate treatment methods
recommended in the report are questioned and have not proven effective in
many countries in the world. The leachate treatment methods outlines, in
the EIA, are not expected to provide adequate leachate management and
treatment and may well lead to surface water contamination problems". 5.
"A number of key questions related to the physical and hydrogeological
make up of the site have not been answered and the suitability of the site
for landfill activities and the proposed preliminary site design are
questioned in the absence of this information". One Landfill expert, Dr.
G. Fred Lee, read the EIA for Mile 27 proposed site and reported: "The
landfill gas impacts to public health have not been adequately addressed
in the EIA. In addition to the potential for explosions, landfill gas
typically contains a variety of chemical constituents that are hazardous
to humans and wildlife. Further, the flaring of landfill gas as proposed
can lead to dioxin formation...These issues should have been discussed in
the EIA" We are vehemently opposed to placing our zoo visitors, many of
them children, in a position of being downwind from carcinogenic gases
which would include toluene, benzene, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride,
vinyl chloride, trichloroethylene and methylene dichloride, all common
landfill air pollutants. Furthermore, the type of landfill proposed for
Belize is illegal in the United States. Under existing United States
Federal Criteria for MSW Landfills, landfill operators may not add liquids
to waste. According to the U.S. EPA, "At this time, EPA lacks adequate
data and information on the design, operation, and performance of
bioreactor landfills to evaluate this technology". (quoted in volume #31,
dated 14 April 2000, of the Environmental Reporter) Dr. G. Fred Lee has
also stated "There can be little doubt that the Zoo and the Tropical
Education Center will be adversely impacted by the proposed Landfill".
Should this project go forward, the Tropical Education Center (TEC) may be
forced to terminate its operations. With this financial arm of The Belize
Zoo non-existent, and with the threat of disease vectors extending out
from this Landfill, The Belize Zoo may also have to cease its operations.
TBZ & TEC feels that it would be indefensible, given the hydrogeology
information available, that an entire river system would be threatened and
eventually deadened by this project. TBZ & TEC feels that it is socially
irresponsible to threaten the public health of the Belizean people, as
well as to knowingly degrade the environment. There is scientific evidence
that these threats are real. The following organizations stand opposed to
having the proposed Sanitary Landfill located at Mile 27: Belize TouristBoard
(BTB)
Belize Tourism Industry Association (BTIA)
Belize
Ecotourism Association (BETA)
Belize Alliance of Conservation NGOs
(BACONGO)
Sibun Watershed Association (SWA)
Natural Resources Defense
Council (NRDC)
World Wildlife Fund-US (WWF-US)
Conservation
International (CI)
Durrell Conservation Trust
Wildlife Preservation
Trust, Int’l (WPTI)
International Expeditions
Island Expeditions
Zoological Society of Milwaukee
Foundation for Wildlife Conservation
(FWC)
The Ecotourism Society
Should you wish specific information about this project, please contacteither me
at
belizezoo@btl.net or Tony Garel, at tec@btl.net
Should you
wish to protest this project, please send a letter to Hon. Said Musa,
Prime Minister of Belize, Government Buildings, Belmopan, Belize,
CentralAmerica.
Hon. John Briceno, Minister of Natural Resources
lincenbze@btl.net
Mr. Robert Kaplan,
Chief Environment And Natural
Resources Management
Inter-American Development Bank
1300 New York
Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20577
Ismael Fabro, Department of the
Environment
envirodept@btl.net
*********************************************************************
Mayor gets tour of zoo – smells and all (Mesker Park Zoo)
http://www.courierpress.com/cgi-bin/view.cgi?200005/06+zootour050600_news.
html+20000506
Zoo dismisses elephant keeper
(The Oregon Zoo)
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/news/oregonian/00/05/l
c_31zoo09.fram e
Zoo conference focuses on apes
(Brookfield Zoo)
http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/ape10.html
GMOs may pose new risk to endangered plants, animals
http://news.excite.com/news/r/000504/17/food-biotech-endangered
Jane Goodall to Address Bushmeat Crisis May 18 in Washington
http://www.usnewswire.com/topnews/Current_Releases/0512-110.html
'Tenacious' Seattle Aquarium director will resign in July
http://www.seattlep-i.com/local/aqua11.shtml
Rare Sea Dragon 'Pregnancy' at Long Beach Aquarium of the Pacific
http://news.excite.com/news/pr/000508/ca-aquarium-pacific
A big home for big stars
(Cincinnati Zoo)
http://www.cincypost.com/opinion/editb050600.html
Swimming with the sharks: Curator gets new aquarium ready
(Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium)
http://www.post-gazette.com/magazine/20000512aquaside3.asp
Zurich rhino dead at age 39
http://www7.mercurycenter.com/premium/world/docs/rhino12.htm
Aquaria 21 deals called off
http://www.press.co.nz/2000/19/000512b07.htm
'Live' Gorillas in Your Home
(Zoo New England)
http://news.excite.com/news/bw/000510/ma-livewave
Pair of tiny, endangered zoo monkeys lost in Lodi
(Micke Grove Park Zoo)
http://www.sacbee.com/news/news/local12_20000513.html
Neglected Oasis to gain new life when zoo’s rookery is renovated
http://www.chicago.tribune.com/version1/article/0,1575,SAV-0005110168,00.h
tml
N.J. finds homes for evicted tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/daily_news/2000/May/12/national/ROPB12.htm
Owl case awards $2 million to loggers
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/local/html98/owll12m_20000512.html
Euthanasia one option for 26 tigers
http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/2000/May/09/sj/JTIGER09.htm
More on Legionnaires' disease
http://www.theage.com.au/news/20000510/A51012-2000May9.html
Not your typical fence lizard
(Oak Mountain)
http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/May2000/9-e415848b.html
Longshoreman gets a lickin'
(Perth Zoo)
http://www.deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,165010583,00.html?
Primates on the brink
http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSScience0005/09_primates.html
Dog days of spring for zoo animals as heat wave continues
http://www.bergen.com/region/tigercut200005095.htm
Zoo Improvement Plans
(Houston Zoo)
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/metropolitan/546514
Conservationists warn that many primate species could vanish immediately
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/050900/tec_124-2727.shtml
High court bans trade in shahtoosh
http://www.rediff.com/news/2000/may/09shah.htm
Reports of Wolves Have Ranchers Concerned
http://www.sltrib.com/05092000/utah/47694.htm
State could get millions for wildlife research
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666806
New exhibits at aquarium to open soon
(Pittsburgh Zoo)
http://www.tribunereview.com/news/rzoo0508.html
State seeks to build whooping crane population
http://www.newsindex.com/cgi-bin/result.cgi?http://www2.startribune.com/st
OnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81666875
Cougar-control measures protect public
http://www.seattletimes.com/news/editorial/html98/coug08_20000508.html
10 percent of Floridas manatees could die this summer
http://www.msnbc.com/local/WBBH/283221.asp
Poachers' Snares Maiming Chimpanzees
http://www.africanews.org/east/uganda/stories/20000507/20000507_feat9.html
Feeding time at zoo terrifies children
(Harbin Zoo)
http://www.scmp.com/News/China/Article/FullText_asp_ArticleID-200005080328
15903.asp
State seeks to build whooping crane population starting with sandhills
http://www2.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisStory=81662893
Desert-watering plan too late to help pronghorn this year
http://www.azstarnet.com/public/dnews/000510PRONGHORN.html
Man evicted for killing alligator
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109787,00.
htm
Black bear spends day in Sanford warehouse
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/automagic/news/2000-05-10/NWSSBEAR10051000.
html
Do more to protect panthers, suit says
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,31500000000109790,00.
html
Dispute puts fish in peril
http://augustachronicle.com/stories/051000/met_152-2413.000.shtml
New Zoo at Pinnawala opens today
http://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/2000/05/10/new18.html
Marine mama expecting
http://www.oklahoman.com/cgi-bin/shart?ID=486831&TP=getarticle
KC's chimpanzee family experiences conflicts, changes in loyalty
http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/local.pat,local/3774724f.507,.html
If you know a story I have missed this week do drop me a line with the
full web address and I will try and include it next week.
Bit & Pieces
ZooNews Digest subscribers can be found in :
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bali, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belize, Bermuda,
Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Croatia,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Eire, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Isle of Man,
Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Korea, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania,
Mexico, Malaysia, Malta, Mauritius, Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, New Zealand,
Northern Ireland, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Peoples Republic of China,
Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Senegal, Singapore, Slovak
Republic, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland,
Taiwan, Thailand, The Netherlands, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab
Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yugoslavia,
Zambia, Zimbabwe.
*********************************************************************
The
Incubation and Fertility Research Group Meeting, 2000 Meeting - University
of Oxford
The Incubation and Fertility Research Group (WPSA Working Group 6
{Reproduction}) is an association of people interested in any aspect of
incubation. Established almost 30 years ago the Group is comprised of
people interested in both scientific and practical aspects of incubation
in a wide range of bird species (and even at times, reptilian and extinct
species). The Group meets once a year at an annual meeting usually held in
September usually at a venue in the UK, including in recent years, Warwick
and Ayr. By nature it is an informal organisation open to all and so
meetings are attended by a wide range of people working in science,
commerce, and conservation. Most participants come from the UK and Europe
although a few delegates come from the USA and even farther afield. The
meetings consist of a series of oral and poster presentations offered by
the delegates and is often a useful place for bringing forward new ideas.
Many students have given their first ever scientific presentation to the
IFRG's enthusiastic and friendly audience. Abstracts of talks each year
are published in Poultry and Avian Reviews and International Hatchery
Practise.
The IFRG Meeting 2000 will be held on September 11th-12th in Oxford. As
usual, the meeting is open to people wishing to present talks or posters
on any topic or species. As usual there will be ample time for informal
discussions over coffee or in the bar.
This year there are special events which will interest everyone interested
in fertility and incubation, particularly in the commercial sector. There
is an invited keynote speaker, Professor Eddy Decuypere of the University
of Leuven, Belgium, who will be speaking on "Incubation, a crucial hinge
between breeders and broilers". There will also be a "Back to Basics"
workshop for incubation featuring leading speakers from Israel and the UK.
Topics covered will be:
Assessment and significance of fertility in commercial production by Dr
Graham Wishart (University of Abertay, Dundee). Shell formation and
function and its role in incubation by Dr Nick Sparks (SAC, Auchincriuve)
Techniques for improving the shelf life of fertile eggs by Professor Amos
Ar (Tel Aviv University) The critical importance of temperature in
incubation by Dr Nick French (British United Turkeys, Tarvin) Roles of
water and gas exchange in determining hatchability success by Professor
Amos Ar. Problems associated with egg turning by Dr Charles Deeming
(Hatchery Consulting & Research, Wallingford) Assessment of chick quality
by Dr Charles Deeming
The meeting will be held at historic St Edmund's Hall on the High St,
Oxford, and is reasonably priced (total costs for registration, meals and
accommodation are around £100.00). All are welcome. For further
information on this meeting please contact:- Dr Charles Deeming, Hatchery
Consulting & Research, 17 Rowland Close, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10
8LA, UK.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk Tel./Fax: +44-(0)1491-835542. Or
see the website: http://www.biology.bbk.ac.uk/conf/ifrgconf.htm (with
online form).
*********************************************************************
Charlie Deeming has recently found reference to a poster presented at the
15th International Symposium on Biotelemetry in May 1999. This was by K.
Bauman, T. Snyder, C. Asa & M. Macek from St Louis Zoo and was entitled
"The Use of aTelemetric egg for monitoring Bird Incubation". This
describes telemetric eggs which measure egg turning in whistling ducks and
Bateleur Eagles but the actual rates of turning were not reported. Given
that he is trying to develop a database on the rates of egg turning in
birds this data would be extremely useful.
Can anyone help him with an email address for any of the authors. He would
really appreciate help with this matter.
Email:charlie@deemingdc.freeserve.co.uk
*********************************************************************
Three new publications published by the Federation of Zoos of Great
Britain and Ireland
The publications are available as paper hard copies and on floppy discs
(versions Microsoft Word 97 and Microsoft Word 95 6.0).
Further information can be obtained from the Federation Secretariat.
Telephone: 020 7586 0230
E-mail: fedzoo@zsl.org
Management Guidelines for the Welfare of Zoo Animals
ISSN 0963-1712
For one copy the postage and packing rates are:
£1.50 United Kingdom
£2.00 Europe
£3.00 Worldwide zone 1 (United States of America etc.)
£3.50 Worldwide zone 2 (Australia etc.)
Falconiformes
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £8.00 £5.00
Non-members £16.00
£10.00
Birds of Prey in Flying Demonstrations
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £5.00 £5.00
Non-members £10.00
£10.00
Guenons
hard copy disc
Federation Members and Associates £6.00 £5.00
Non-members £12.00
£10.00
Payment is by cheque in pounds sterling made payable to "The Federation of
Zoos".
Nicola Charlton
Conservation Coordinator
The Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain and Ireland
Zoological Gardens
Regent's Park
London NW1 4RY
United Kingdom
Telephone +44 (0)20 7586 0230
Direct Dial +44 (0)20 7449 6350
Facsimile +44 (0)20 7722 4427
E-mail fedzoo@zsl.org
Direct E-mail conservation.fedzoo@zsl.org
*********************************************************************
PRIMATE LICE
Natalie Leo is a PhD student from the University of Queensland studying
the evolution of lice from primates. She is having trouble getting
specimens and thought that best chance was sanctuaries (where they might
actually handle the animals - at least the sick ones or newcomers). If you
think Natalie could possibly help her she would be extremely grateful.
She using them for DNA analysis, and does not need many (2 or 3 is
adequate to get information), but of course the more the better since
there are so many different lice out there (some possibly yet
unidentified).
If possible, please store them in 100% or 70% ethanol and then e-mail her
at: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
Natalie Leo, B.Sc.(Hons)
Department of Microbiology and Parasitology
University of Queensland
St Lucia, QLD 4072
Phone: (07) 3365 1101
Fax: (07) 3365 4620
e-mail: nat.leo@mailbox.uq.edu.au
*********************************************************************
The
Primate Conservation & Welfare Society is proud to announce the
availability of our first annual Primate Conservation Grant Small Grant!
For details, including the Application Packet in .PDF Format, please see
our website at: http://www.primates-online.com/apps.html
To receive a hard copy of the Conservation Grant Application Packet,
please send a self- addressed stamped envelope to: PCWS - Conservation
Grant PO Box 2101 Port Townsend, WA 98368 USA
Please note: Due to the volume of requests, application requests MUST be
accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Applicants outside the
US should contact PCWS via email with appropriate contact information. The
grant deadline is June 30, 2000.
Stamp Donations Are Welcome For This Project!
*********************************************************************
11th
International Zoo Collectors Meeting 9-10 September 2000 Every year
collectors of zoo guidebooks and other zoo related materials meet to trade
and swap items. The 2meeting will be held at 9th/10th September at Munster
Zoo, northern Germany, which celebrates its 125th anniversary.
Traditionally, there will be a guided behind-the-scenes zoo tour, an
auction (in favour of a turtle conservation project) and a visit to
another zoo the next day (this time Rheine Zoo). Attendance fee is 35 DM
(17 US$) including dinner. Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
*********************************************************************
Marwell Zoological Park Student Research Symposium 21 June 2000, start
9.30, finish 16.30 Everybody is welcome. For further information please
contact Tanya Langenhorst, Marwell Zoological Park, Colden Common, Nr
Winchester SO21 1JH. Tel: 01962 777407, Fax: 01962 777511, email:
tanyaL@marwell.org.uk
*********************************************************************
Elephant Birth on the Web
Zoo Zurich is expecting the birth of an elephant this May. The birth will
be broadcasted live on the internet. With this world first Zoo Zurich
intends to appeal to a large public and will make use of the probable
great interest to inform about the situation of the Asian Elephants in the
wild. At all time the animal’s welfare will be the prime consideration and
will not be affected in any way by the transmission. Already today live
pictures from the elephant house will be shown on the following websites:
http://www.zoo.ch and http://www.migros.ch and
http://www.tagesanzeiger.ch
*********************************************************************
Important Research on Captive European Otters
(If you are in a position to help, please do as it will sort out once and
for all the questions which have been bothering otter keepers in Europe
for many a year—Peter Dickinson)
Att.: Molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra lutra and Lutra
lutra barang.
First let us introduce ourselves. We are Edwin Leander and Pieter
Levelink, fourth year Animal Management students on the Van Hall Institute
in Leeuwarden, the Netherlands.
We are being supervised on this Institute by dr. T.H.M. Meijer and
drs.A.C. Meiners.
We have begun our final research regarding our course. This final
assessment, a molecular genetic research concerning Lutra lutra, is being
conducted on the Biological Centre in Haren, part of the University of
Groningen.
We are being technically supervised on this Centre by the geneticists
dr.R. Bijlsma and dr. L. van de Zande.
This research is being conducted for the EEP otter studbook of which
drs.A. Melissen is the coordinator, working at Aqualutra in the
Netherlands. Also the president of Aqualutra, drs. A. de Jongh, is fully
supporting our research. The otter studbook of the EEP is being divided in
an A- and a B-line. The A-line consists out of the circa 100 homogene
Lutra lutra lutra. The content of the B-line are roughly 200 otters from
which the pedigree and the relationship are not known. There is also an
assumption that the B-line is an interbreed from Lutra Lutra Lutra and
Lutra lutra Barang. With your help, by giving blood or/ and tissue
samples, we can start a good research with promising results which would
finally give an answer or a solution regarding to the stud-book problems.
Hopefully, this way, the A- and the B-line will be put together. Creating
an easier management and by clearing the ban on breeding the B-line
otters, higher welfare on all fronts can be accomplished.
Aim of the research
1.. To get a decisive answer concerning the interbreed of Lutra lutra
lutra and Lutra lutra barang in line-B.
2.. To measure the homozygosity of the B-line related to line A and a
wild population, if line- B is homogene Lutra lutra lutra.
What we need:
To conduct this research we need, as soon as possible, blood or tissue
(e.g. liver) samples from the A- and the B-line otters.
Please contact drs. A Melissen for the possible mailing of the samples, by
e-mail or fax. Could you send us an e-mail in which you state your reply
regarding this matter. E. Leander & P. Levelink, drs. A.
Melissen
Students Animal Management EEP Coordinator
P.B.Levelink@biol.rug.nl info@aqualutra.nl
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Zoo Staff Personals
Looking for work? Someone to travel with? Somewhere to stay? Let me know
and I will post it here.
*********************************************************************
Situations Vacant (Please mention you saw the advertisement in ZooNews
Digest should you apply for any of these posts, many thanks) Do you have a
vacancy to advertise? Please email me.
Linton Zoo are looking for Experienced Keepers. They are looking for
people with a minimum of five years experience with mammals, in particular
ungulates and large cats or birds and reptiles. Having an interest in
gardening would be advantageous. Please send a full CV for application
form to: Kim Simmons, Linton Zoological Gardens, Hadstock Road, Linton,
Cambridgeshire. CB1 6NT
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The Welsh Hawking Centre are looking for a school leaver and a trainee to
all aspects of the captive management of Birds of Prey. A willingness to
learn and commitment are essential. Accommodation is available. Please
send a letter and full CV to: The Welsh Hawking Centre, Weycock Road,
Barry, South Glamorgan. CF62 3AA
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AVICULTURE INTERNS WANTED for the Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation
Program at the Maui Bird Conservation Center on the island of Maui and
Keauhou Bird Conservation Center on the Big Island. Daily tasks include
husbandry duties such as: diet preparation, aviary and facility
maintenance, behavioral observations of breeding birds, grounds keeping,
predator control. Applicant must be able to live with several roommates in
a remote area and should show enthusiasm for work with captive endangered
Hawaiian birds. Driver’s license and proof of health insurance are
required. Internships last for three-month periods. Interns receive
$15/day stipend plus housing.
For more information, please send a resume, cover letter (with location
preference) and the names and contacts of three references to: Tracey
Powers P.O. Box 39 Volcano, Hawaii 96785 or fax: 808-985-7034.
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The Philadelphia Zoo currently has positions available for mammal keepers.
1 year keeper experience required; degree valued. Interest in
conservation education and ability to interact in a positive, friendly
manner with the public. $14.13/hr plus benefits package. Send resume to
Human Resources, THE PHILADELPHIA ZOO, 3400 W. Girard Ave., Phila., PA
19104. PH: (215) 243-5350. Visit our Web site at
http://www.phillyzoo.org
Specific positions are:
Small Mammal House Keeper: This is one of two line positions in the
building. Collection for this line is a combination of nocturnal and
diurnal species, including vampire bats, lorises, mouse lemurs, African
dormice, Malagasy giant jumping rats, mouse deer, tree shrews, pygmy
marmosets, and elephant shrews. Exhibits and work are exclusively indoors.
Interest in small mammal husbandry and creative exhibitry, some previous
experience in same required. Days off would be consistent, but most likely
weekdays.
Assigned Relief Keeper: This position is in the "Rare Animal House",
relieving for three line positions on some of the line keepers' regular
days off. The collection consists mostly of primates, including lemurs (2
species), marmosets and tamarins (4 species), spider monkeys, mangabeys,
and langurs. Other species include naked mole rats, Rodrigues and Egyptian
fruit bats, dwarf mongoose, armadillos, acouchi, and tree kangaroos. Most
exhibits/work indoors. Interest and some experience in primate husbandry
required; experience, ability in exhibit furnishing a plus. Days off would
be consistent, but most likely weekdays.
For questions, contact Andy Baker, baker.andy@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5245, or Heidi Hellmuth, hellmuth.heidi@phillyzoo.org,
215-243-5319.
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CONSERVATION AND SCIENCE PROGRAM ASSISTANT
Conservation and Science program assistant sought by the American Zoo and
Aquarium Association, a non-profit association based in Silver Spring, MD.
Reports to the Director of Conservation and Science. Responsibilities
include: preparing and editing reports for publication, assisting with the
distribution of information, communicating with members, and general
clerical duties.
Requires a Bachelor's degree; excellent writing and computer skills,
including proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, and related
software programs. Degree in biological sciences and interest in wildlife
conservation a plus. Starting salary in the low to mid-$20's, depending
on experience. Full benefits. Please submit resume and one writing sample
to American Zoo and Aquarium Association- C&S Search, 8403 Colesville
Road, Suite 710, Silver Spring, MD 20910 or fax to: (301) 562-0888.
http://www.aza.org EOE. No phone calls please.
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Position Available: Chimpanzee Caregiver at the Wildlife Waystation, CA
Job Description: You will be working with 31 chimps (age 3-11 yeas) in 9
social groups
Your duties include cleaning cages, raking, feeding, and enrichment. 95%
of your job is CLEANING.
Qualification: You must be healthy, fit and ready to work outside for
hours, and be able to lift and carry 35 lbs. Must be flexible and
resourceful. We need someone who can work both as a team and
independently. Working experience with any animal is a plus but not
required. Please have a reference from your current/former employer or
from your teacher if you've just finished school. High school diploma
required.
This is an On-Ranch Volunteer position. The position consists of
on-facility trailer style living with housing and utilities paid, and
there is a food give-away once a week. Compensation for this position is a
non-taxable volunteer reimbursement and expense of $258.00 every two
weeks. A minimum six- month stay required.
If interested, please send your resume and a reference to Dean Seymour,
The Wildlife Waystation, 14831 Little Tujunga Canyon RD, San Fernando, CA
91342
For further information, please contact Dean Seymour at
dseymour@waystation.org or Asami Kabasawa at asamikabasawa@yahoo.com
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For the most up to date links to sites advertising Zoo work go to:
http://members.tripod.com/~Sciurus/index.html
*********************************************************************
Meetings
First conference of the African Zoo and Reserve Educators Network
(AZOREN) 12 - 18 May 2000 Pretoria Zoo, South Africa Theme of this
training conference is “Effective & Efficient AZOREN; Starting the
Conservation Educators Network”. For further information please contact:
Cherylene Odendaal or Dina Roos of Pretoria Zoo. Telephone :
0027-12-3283265 / 3206020 Fax : 0027-12-3234540 E-mail :
zoologic@cis.co.za
AnnualConference of the Federation of Zoological Gardens of Great Britain
andIreland 19- 21 May 2000 hostedby Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens at the
Maidshead Hotel, Norwich. The principal focus of this year’s conference
will be nutrition.
TheUnion of the Czech and Slovak Zoological Gardens Annual Conference 25-
27 May 2000 ZooChomutov, Czech Republic Forfurther information please
contact: fax: +420-66-7302839 e-mail:jizoo@brn.pvtnet.cz
FifthInternational Elephant Research Symposium
1-3June 2000
Portland,Oregon
email:dolson@indyzoo.com
ANIMAL TRAINERS' NETWORK WORKSHOP
June 11, 12 & 13, 2000
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
To get a registration form or for more information, please
contact:
Email: hospital@cincyzoo.org or jenny.kroll@cincyzoo.org
Course of Environmental Enrichment for Wild Animals in Captivity.
The Zoological National the Aurora of Guatemala, and El Zoo Conservation
Outreach Group (ZCOG), presents/displays: 21-24 June 2000 Zoological
National “The Aurora” City of Guatemala, Guatemala C.A Further
INFORMATION: Maria Jose Iturbide, Zoological Technical Department Aurora
Tel. (502) 4720507 4720885, Fax (502) 4715286. emailmjiturbidef@hotmail.com
The2nd Zoo Research Symposium
6- 7 July 2000
PaigntonZoo
E-mail: aplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk
Symposiumon Asian Raptors
25-27July 2000
Bandung,Indonesia
Forfurther info email : ypal@bdg.centrin.net.id
The2000 Invertebrates in Captivity Conference
3– 6 August 2000
RioRico, Arizona, USA
Fordetails see: http://www.sasionline.org/2000conf/2000confrpg.html
Fourth International Penguin Conference
4 – 8 September 2000
Coquimbo,Chile
ForFurther info : gluna@nevados.cecun.ucn.cl
The Fourth European Elephant Handlers School
4-17 September 2000
Woburn Safari Park and Blackpool Zoo
Further details and a full course programme can be obtained from
Woburn Safari Park-tele-01525 290407or e-mail WobSafari@aol.com
Annual Conference of the Swedish Association of Zoological Parks and
Aquaria 6 – 8 September 2000 Boras Djurpark, Boras, Sweden. Email:
info@parkenzoo.se
11th International Zoo Collectors Meeting
Munster Zoo, Germany
9-10 September 2000
Registration and questions: Klaus Schüling -
schueling@tiergarten.com
ZooFederation Plant Group Conference
September13th - 15th 2000
CotswoldWildlife Park
For further info:
“Colin Wren” gardens@rzss.org.uk
InternationalWhite-tailed Sea Eagle Conference
13-17September 2000
Bjorko,Sweden.
email: bjorn.helander@nrm.se
17thEAZA/EEP Annual Conference
19- 24 September 2000
AalborgZoo,
Denmark
Allmatters with regard to registration etc : Hju@aalborg-zoo.dk
Anythingrelated to conference programmes, meetings etc : info@eaza.net
InternationalSymposium on Galliformes
23September to 1st October 2000
Nepal
Forfurther information contact the World Pheasant Association on email:
wpa@gn.apc.org
15th International Zoo Educators’ Conference
1- 6 October 2000
Guadalajara,Mexico
For more information contact Maria Eugenia Martinez Arizmendi,
headof the Education Department.
Telephone: 0052-3-6744104
Fax : 0052-3-674-4488
E-mail : 104164.3717@compuserve.com
Third International Symposium on Physiology and Ethology of Wild and Zoo
Animals 4 – 7 October 2000 Berlin, Germany Email: symposium@izw-berlin.de
ZooSciences 2000
Amiens, France
For further details Email: zoolille@nordnet.fr
2000 AAZK Conference
8– 12 October 2000
ColumbusZoo
Checkout information on this conference by accessing its
websiteat: http://aazk2000.homestead.com
ElephantManagers International Conference
6- 9 October 2000
Syracuse,New York
Formore information please contact
AdrienneWhiteley on : bpzoo@emi.com
Panda 2000 International Conference
An international conference on the giant panda will be held in San Diego,
California (USA) October 16-19, 2000. The Zoological Society of San Diego
and the World Wildlife Fund are co- hosts. A program consisting primarily
of work-shops, panel discussions and poster sessions is planned. Topics
in conservation, education, training, research, health, reproduction, and
captive management will be co covered. Persons interested in attending
thismeeting are encouraged to contact the Local Arrangements Chair:
HelenaFitch-Snyder, Zool. Soc. of San Diego, PO Box 120551, San Diego, CA
92112.Phone: (619) 557-3954, FAX: (619) 557-3959; E-mail
helena@sandiegozoo.org.
Reproductionand integrated conservation science.
9thand 10th November, 2000
AZoological Society of London Symposium
TheMeeting Rooms, Zoological Society of London
To register your interest in attending this symposium please contact: D.
Body, Scientific Meetings Co-ordinator, Zoological Society of London,
Regent’s Park, London NW1 4RY, UK or email: Deborah.Body@zsl.org If you
would be interested in submitting a poster presentation, please indicate
this.
5thInternational Aquarium Congress
20- 25th November 2000
Monaco
Organisedby the Oceanographic Institute of Oceanography
Forfurther information email: iac2000monaco@meditnet.com
or write to : Secretariat of the 5th IAC 2000, Oceanographic Institute,
Av.St.Martin, MC 98000 Monaco Tel.: +377-93-25.36.00, Fax :
+377-93-30.90.95.
European Squirrel Workshop
The next WORKSHOP is planned for the year 2001 in Turin, Italy
For further details contact : Kathy Hodder, Institute of Terrestrial
Ecology, Wareham,Dorset, BH20 4LN Tel. +44 (0) 1929 551518 Fax. 551087,
Email k.hodder@ite.ac.uk
Ecologyand Conservation of Mini-antelope
Aninternational symposium on duiker and dwarf antelope in Africa
Hostedby the Marwell Zimbabwe Trust
12th-17thFebruary 2001
Bulawayo,Zimbabwe
Contactaplowman@paigntonzoo.org.uk for further info
Second European Zoo Nutrition Conference
6- 9th April 2001
Southampton, UNITED KINGDOM
More detailed information about the programme and registration/abstract
submission deadlines will be available commencing 1st May 2000 at
http://www.marwell.org.uk To join the conference mailing list, send your
contact details (after the above-mentioned date) by email to:
Nutrition2001@marwell.org or by post/fax to: Zoo Nutrition 2001, Marwell
Zoological Park, Owslebury, Winchester, Hampshire, SO21 1JH, United
Kingdom. Fax: (0) 1962 777511.
FourthWorld Congress of Herpetology
1-8August 2001
Colombo,Sri Lanka
Pleasepre-register at website: http://www.4wch.com
Help Wanted
Need assistance? You could try Zoo Biology, it is probably your best bet
for animal information. However ZooNews Digest reaches more like minded
people, more often than any other similar publication on the planet! So
you could try here. Let me know and I will post it.
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Carlos Boix is a Spanish Veterinary student (in his fourth year) who´s
very interested in doing field work with marine mammals of any kind. If
it´s student practice, volunteer work, any other kind of work, he doesn´t
care. He is available in the summer, is very motivated is an advanced
diver (PADI).
Contact Carlos on : karlosvoix@LatinMail.com
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Dear Zoologists,
The Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford, and the
Laboratory of
Genomic Diversity, NCI-FCRF, USA, are together initiating a project in the
conservation and phylogeography of the wildcat (Felis silvestris ssp.) .
This project will develop a suite of diagnostic genetic markers useful in
distinguishing wildcats from domestic cats or hybrids, define
phylogeographic boundaries in wildcats, and determine the origin of
domestication of the domestic cat.
A collection of reliably provenanced samples is critically important to
the success of this
project. We are therefore seeking collaborators either having wildcat
samples, wildcats in their collection or those who are doing fieldwork on
them. If you have access to wildcats, or wildcat samples of known
provenance from anywhere in the world, and would like to help, your
assistance in this important conservation project would be tremendously
appreciated. Please contact Carlos Driscoll with questions and for further
information on the project.
Wildlife Conservation Research Unit
Department of Zoology
University of Oxford
South Parks Road
Oxford, England
OX1 3PS
carlos.driscoll@zoology.oxford.ac.uk
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Zoo Biology
To subscribe send an e-mail to: zoo-biology-subscribe@egroups.com For
those of you unfamiliar with Email groups they work like this. You
subscribe. You can then post questions, answer questions, make
observations, inform or just read the Email. This will arrive with some
regularity (depending on the flow of information). By Zoo Biology I mean
anything relating to zoo management. Hediger described this as “the
science which embraced everything which was biologically relevant to the
management of the zoological garden.” The more that join up the more
effective a management tool it will become. Go on, give it a try, and
subscribe. Remember no-one will pressurize you to contribute....but you
may want to help. There is a members only chat site attached to Zoo
Biology. This appears to work quite well. There are 600+ Zoo Biology
subscribers to date. More join each week.. Do be prepared to get a lot of
messages.
Sites worth checking out
Have you got a suggestion? Let me check it out.
WILDLIFE INFORMATION NETWORK
http://www.wildlifeinformation.org
ZooNews Digest is an independent publication, not allied or attached to
any zoological collection. Many thanks. For those of you who have not
received the News previously, you have been included because someone has
suggested you might be interested. If this is not the case please email me
and I shall remove your name. Kind Regards,
Wishing you a wonderful week,
Peter Dickinson,