Zoo News Digest 26th April - 31st May 2014 (ZooNews 894)
Pallas Cat Kitten
Courtesy RZSS
Dear Colleagues,
I was called a liar
on Facebook this week. That would be fair enough if the 'lie' could be pointed
out to me. The accuser was unable to do so however. I am opinionated that's
true, and I freely admit it.. but lie, no I won't do it…at least not intentionally.
The links to the stories I post on Facebook and here are just that, links,
mainly to stories written by other people. Some of these are beyond lies and
they are frequently bullshit. I include them because the remit of Zoo News
Digest is, and always has been, to point Zoo Staff towards those news items
which would be discussed by zoo staff in staffrooms around the world. I like to
know what is going on and I know most zoo professionals do too. The massive
readership of Zoo News Digest shows that is the case.
Congratulations to
Bengt Holst on winning Copenhagen's 'Politiken' award.
'I am very pleased
and honored with the award and see it as a big pat on the back to the Zoo from
the guests. I see it as a clear indication that the Danes are very positive
about the open and honest way we talk about Zoo's work' says Bengt Holst.
My surface mail mail box is just not working out. Mail is going astray. Even lost my last but one passport for a while. So for now please send all paper mail, books for review etc to :
Peter Dickinson
10 Cheshire View
Appleyards Lane
Handbridge
Chester
UK
CH4 7DD
Bear in mind it is NOT where I live. My mail will be forwarded to me to wherever I am from there. My contact phone number remains the same:
00971 (0)50 4787 122
00971 (0)50 4787 122
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Why Defenders of Killer Whales Are Worried About
China.
Feds issued halt to rehabbing stranded dolphins in
November
Virus killing scores of marine mammals behind the
decision
Oregon Zoo firings: What we know and (more
importantly) what we don't
Oregon Zoo firings: Vet techs say Metro's
investigation was 'skewed,' 'incomplete'
Little penguins at National Zoo massacred by a fox
Goodall is being influenced by the ‘activist
community’: Vancouver Aquarium CEO
Responds to letter from the renowned researcher
regarding its keeping of whales, dolphin
Lion Man’s daring tales will be told
Big cat fans will
not have to travel to deepest Africa to hear stories of wild animals on
Saturday when Lion Man Craig Busch comes to North Walsham.
re the above
Craig Busch and Zion Wildlife Gardens
Prisoners help rehabilitate black cockatoos at
Kaarakin Conservation Centre
Go To
South African helps keep animals alive in Ukraine's
zoos
100th Arabian tahr, and twin tahrs welcomed in Al Ain
Knowsley Safari Park to highlight threat of extinction
to vultures
The zoo world owes so very much to this man....a sad
loss. My very sincere condolences.
Sacramento Zoo Mourns Loss of “Father of Zoological
Medicine”
The Hunt for the Golden Mole
Gallery: The zoo that Molly built
Safe sex and zoos
A Centre for Conservation
Barbary Macaque Awareness and Conservation needs your help to finish building a conservation, education and community centre in the Rif mountains, Morocco.
Penguin Malaria Workshop
From Oklahoma to Dubai
"The Prince’s private zoo consists of 44 giant
Nile crocodiles, lions, tigers, orangutans, giraffes, and many more"
Panda-monium at Zoo Negara but what about the tapirs?
Baby sloth born at London Zoo after parents ‘secret’
rendezvous
http://www.london24.com/news/baby_sloth_born_at_london_zoo_after_parents_secret_rendezvous_1_3612569
First ever OMR7.5 million aquarium to be built in Oman
This is what it is all about....Management of species.
This is also why all US zoos should be AZA members.
They were lucky, it could have ended so much
differently. Not the worst I have seen though. I recollect being shown photos
of visitors actually inside a lion enclosure and a bear enclosure in zoos I
have worked in.
Video shot at edge of polar bear pen prompts zoo probe
Iconic Jamaican iguana under threat from $1.5bn
Chinese port project
Development will destroy Jamaica's biggest nature
reserve and fragile coastal areas, conservationists warn
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/may/23/jamaican-iguana-nature-reserve-china-port-project
Wake-up Call: As Monarch Butterfly Numbers Plummet,
will their Migration become Extinct?
More alarming news
from the Monarch butterfly roosting sites in Michoacán last week: the 2013
season will surpass 2012 as the all time worst year for Monarch butterflies
since records have been kept.
Ever since 1994,
scientists have measured the hectares occupied by the migrating insects in the
high altitude forests west of Mexico City to get an idea of their numbers. That information typically works as a key indicat
The May 2014 issue of ZOO’s PRINT Magazine (Vol. 29, No. 5) is online at <www.zoosprint.org> in a format that permits you to turn pages like a regular magazine.
If you wish to download the full magazine or certain articles click on <www.zoosprint.org/ showMagazine.asp>
ISSN 0973-2543 (online)
May 2014 | Vol. 29 | No. 5 | Date of Publication 26 May 2014
CONTENTS
CBSG South Asia and Zoo Outreach Organization joins “Wild Face of Climate Change” -350.org climate change movement
-- R. Marimuthu, Pp. 1-4
Report of the Invertebrate Conservation Sub-committee meeting: 11-12 April 2014
-- B.A. Daniel, Pp. 5-6
Awareness Campaign Against Ritual Hunting - Sumansa v/v Vishu Sendra, Participation of Tata Steel Zoological Park, Jamshedpur in association with Forest Department, Government of Jharkhand against ritual hunting (Vishu Sendra) at Dalma Wildlife Sanctuary by NGO Sumansa
-- Seema Rani, Pp. 7-10
Workplace Safety - Part I (from Zookeeping An Introduction to the Science and Technology)
-- Ed Hansen, Pp. 11-13
Addition of Orchid Eulophia pratensis Lindl. To the Flora of Nashik district, Maharashtra, India
-- Jatin J. Shrivastava, G.S.Chaudhari and Tanveer A. Khan, Pp. 14-15
Rescue, Rearing & Rehabilitation of Alexandrine Parakeets - success story of Indira Gandhi Zoological Park, Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh
-- G. Ramalingam, Pp. 16-19
Some Death Incidents of Spectacled Cobra (Naja naja) at Jahangirnagar University Campus, Savar, Dhaka, Bangladesh
-- Ashis Kumar Datta, Pp. 20-21
Monkey Management in Kanpur Zoological Park
-- U.C. Srivastava, R.K. Singh and Swati Gupta, Pp. 22-25
Announcement: International Species Information System - Vacancies
P. 25
Treatment of Traumatic Myiasis of Indian Lion (Panthera leo) at Chittagong Zoo
-- Md. M.M. Chowdhury, M.S.H. Suvo, M.S.I. Khan and M.R. Begum, Pp. 26-27
Teaching Biodiversity in Freshwater wetlands - A field based teaching strategy for school students
-- R. Alexandar and G. Poyyamoli, Pp. 28-33
My Volunteering experience at Jamshedpur Zoological Park
-- Jayashree Ram Mohan, Pp. 34-35
BOOK REVIEW: Butterflies on the roof of the world: A memoir, Reviewed by Milind D. Patil
P. 36
Announcement: The 41st Annual AAZK National Conference, Orlando, FL, September 8-12, 2014
Chester Zoo use scouring pads help rear rare chicks
Two rare chicks are
being hand-reared by keepers at Chester Zoo - with the help of scouring pads.
The white-naped
pheasant pigeons named Kola and Wokam were rejected by their parents so the zoo
has been using the bristly pads to help them thrive.
Keeper Gareth Evans
said the pads stop them slipping away and help their feet and legs develop, as
they mimic a nest.
The exotic birds
were named afte
Campaigners' fury as court says move of Morgan the
whale to zoo was legal
Animal rights
campaigners have vowed to continue fighting to free Morgan the killer whale
from a Spanish tourist centre despite losing a legal battle, writes Patrick
Hill in the Sunday People.
They are furious
over a Dutch court’s ruling that the creature, also known as an orca, was
legally moved to the zoo in Tenerife.
The campaigners
believe they have found the rescued sea mammal’s family “pod” off the coast of
Norway – and if possible want to reunite her with them.
But in a blow to the
campaign, Holland’s Council of State has ruled that an official acted lawfully
in granting permission for Morgan to be transferred from the Netherlands to the
Spanish holiday island.
The court made clear
that its deliberations concerned only the legality of the November 2011
transfer.
The council –
similar to the House of Lords – said there was no alternative for Morgan at the
time. But it did not consider a claim by the Born Free Foundation that it has
now located the family pod.
And it ruled that
concerns about Morgan’s living conditions and health in Spain were outside its
jurisdiction.
Campaigners,
including the Free Morga
How to milk a naked mole-rat
For the sake of
science, Olav Oftedal has milked bats, bears and a lot of other mammals. But a
naked mole-rat was something new.
“The thin, hairless
skin is so translucent that you can see the milk accumulating in the mammary
glands,” says Oftedal, of the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center in
Edgewater, Md. For once he could tell exactly which glands were full.
“In most small
mammals,” he says, “the big problem is you have hair that can wick the milk
away. You have a capillary tube, and you’re trying to catch the milk so it
can’t touch any hair.” Naked mole-rats, though, are helpfully hairless.
Oftedal collected
milk from the queens of Heterocephalus glaber colonies at the Smithsonian’s
National Zoo. In colonies of dozens or hundreds of mole-rats, only the qu
Man who tended to Lucy the elephant dies
A man who fought
vigorously against animal rights activists who wanted to see Lucy the Elephant
moved to an animal sanctuary, has died.
Doctor Milton Ness,
a chief veterinarian at the Edmonton Valley Zoo, passed away last week.
The Valley Zoo
Development Society confirmed Ness’ passing on Facebook Saturday afternoon.
“We would like to
acknowledge the loss of an important member of our Edmonton Valley Zoo family.
Dr. Milton Ness, a passionate and dedicated friend to all animals,” the
statement read.
“Our thoughts are
with his family and all of his co-workers at this difficult time. He will be
greatly missed.”
But like some of his
endeavours, that post attracted some negative comments, primarily linked to his
fight to keep Lucy in Edmonton.
Ness has been a
vocal proponent of keeping the pachyderm in our city -- she’s been here for
most of her 37-years -- as he says the move to a sanctuary in the Southern
United States would likely kill her.
The Society quickly
put a stop to the negativity, saying “using this post to further you personal
agenda, cause grief to the family and friends of a man who was respected, loved
and dedicated his life to animals is unacceptable.”
Others however noted
how much Ness ha
Journal of Threatened Taxa
The International Journal on Conservation & Taxonomy
ISSN 0974-7907 (online) | 0974-7893 (print)
May 2014 | Vol. 6 | No. 5 | Pages 5677-5796
Date of Publication 26 May 2014 (online & print)
DOI: 10.11609/JoTT.26may14.5677- 5796
Contents
Species and habitat conservation through small locally recognised and community managed Special Conservation Sites
-- Hem Sagar Baral, Bittu Sahgal, Samiul Mohsanin, Kuenga Namgay & Aleem Ahmed Khan, Pp. 5677–5685
Distribution, threats and conservation status of the Wayanad Mahseer, Neolissochilus wynaadensis (Day, 1873) (Teleostei: Cyprinidae): an endemic large barb of the Western Ghats, India
-- Anvar Ali, Neelesh Dahanukar, Siby Philip, K. Krishnakumar & Rajeev Raghavan, Pp. 5686–5699
A review of the genus Bornargiolestes Kimmins, 1936 (Odonata: Zygoptera) with a description of two new species from Sarawak, Malaysia
-- Rory A. Dow, Pp. 5700–5711
Subspecies identification of Chimpanzees Pan troglodytes (Primates: Hominidae) from the National Zoo of the Metropolitan Park of Santiago, Chile, using mitochondrial DNA sequences
-- Javier Andrés Vega, José Suazo, Susan Valerie Smalley, Luis Rodrigo Cataldo, Guillermo Cubillos & José Luis Santos, Pp. 5712–5717
Species diversity and conservation of avifauna in three different habitat types within the Mihintale Sanctuary, Sri Lanka
-- Chathurabhani Wimalasekara & Sriyani Wickramasinghe, Pp. 5718–5725
Conservation of the threatened Sarus Crane Grus antigone (Linnaeus, 1758) around Alwara Lake in Kaushambi District, Uttar Pradesh, India
-- Shri Prakash, Shubh Narain & Sunil Kumar, Pp. 5726–5730
Freshwater ichthyofauna in the Mullegama-Habarakada area, Colombo District, Sri Lanka
-- B.S.A.T. Hiranya Sudasinghe, P.W.D. Thisara Nilupul & Sudeera P.J Bandara, Pp. 5731–5737
Additional record of Batasio merianiensis (Chaudhuri 1913), a catfish (Teleostei: Bagridae) in upper Brahmaputra River drainage in Arunachal Pradesh, India
-- Lakpa Tamang & Bikramjit Sinha, Pp. 5738–5743
New records of dragonflies and damselflies (Insecta: Odonata) from the Western Ghats of Maharashtra, India
-- Pankaj Koparde, Prachi Mhaske & Ankur Patwardhan, Pp. 5744–5754
A preliminary checklist of butterflies (Lepidoptera: Rhophalocera) of Mendrelgang, Tsirang District, Bhutan
-- Irungbam Jatishwor Singh & Meenakshi Chib, Pp. 5755–5768
Record of the genus Arrhenophagoidea Girault (Hymenoptera: Chalcidoidea: Encyrtidae) from India, description of a new species from the Andaman Islands
-- Mohammad Hayat & K. Veenakumari, Pp. 5769–5773
A taxonomic account of Amischotolype ( Commelinaceae) and notes on the occurrence of Porandra in India
-- Mayur D. Nandikar & Rajaram V. Gurav, Pp. 5774–5780
‘Broken wing display’ in an unfledged Indian Eagle Owl Bubo bengalensis
-- M. Eric Ramanujam, Pp. 5781–5783
Lichens of the Mahabaleshwar Panchgani Ecosensitive zone (MPESZ), Maharashtra, India
-- Gargee S. Pandit, Pp. 5784–5791
Mind the map: an atlas of amphibians of the Western Ghats
Atlas of Endemic Amphibians of the Western Ghats - K.A. Subramanian, K.P. Dinesh and C. Radhakrishnan
-- Book Review by Neelesh Dahanukar, Pp. 5792–5794
A compact amphibian field guide for Kerala
Common Amphibians of Kerala (Frogs and Toads) - P. S. Sivaprasad
-- Book Review by Unmesh Katwate, Pp. 5795–5796
Largest project in zoo history announced
The Omaha Henry
Doorly Zoo and Aquarium has announced plans for the largest project in its
history.
On Friday, zoo
officials said the $70 million project, called African Grasslands, will enter
the first phase of construction this summer.
"African
Grasslands will be a full immersion outdoor habitat featuring breathtaking
panoramic views and long vistas of grasslands teeming with African
wildlife," the zoo said.
The zoo said it will
use grasses, acacia-like trees, rock kopjes and minimal barriers to provide
unobstructed views of the animals. New
restrooms, food service and visitor activities will be carefully planned along the
path.
The project will
provide exhibits for elephant, giraffe, white rhino, cheetah, impala, zebra and
more, including mixed species habitats, pools for animals and interactive
demonstration areas.
The elephant herd
room will be the
Hanging around at the zoo
Animal management
used to be all about suppression and violence, according to a second generation
keeper at Dublin Zoo. Now, it’s about caring and a bit of pampering
The zoo’s other aim
was to provide easy access to animal corpses for doctors not mad on
grave-robbing. Once animals – specially the primates – had outlived their
usefulness as spectacles, their cadavers were much sought after for research
purposes.
Paul O’Donoghue is
the assistant director of the zoo and I disturb him in his office. He is
staring intently at a computer screen. “Here, have a look at this,” he half
whispers in an Australian accent. It is a map of England on which a little
orange dot is flashing. The dot is a hippo who has just been transferred out of
the zoo and is on her way to a new home in Rotterdam. A pan-European stud book
– kind of like Tinder for exotic animals – found her to be an ideal genetic
match for a Dutch hippo so she’s going over to make friends. And maybe more.
The animal traffic
is two-way and recent arrivals in Dublin include some red capped mangabeys from
Barcelona. The zoo wants these primates to share its “rain forest” with the
gorillas. It can’t happen overnight and the mangabeys are now living in a compound
next door. The two species have met but through a metal grill and only when the
zoo is happy the two groups won’t tear strips off each other will they be
allowed come together.
“I don’t know if it
will work but this is the perfect habitat to try it,” O’Donoghue says. “And I
think the company will be good for the gorillas.” So far the gentle
introductions are going well and the Don of the gorillas, known as the
Silverback, has shown little interest in his new neighbours, while his children
are more interested “but seem very relaxed, very chilled.” The mangabeys
haven’t hit any of the gorillas in the face with fruit either. And that can
only help.
As we walk through
the zoo checking that all is well with the 700 animals under his care, I ask
O’Donoghue what is the main purpose of the zoo? “Conservation,” he says without
a pause. “That is why we exist.” He shows me an App on his phone, similar to a
baby monitor. It streams live footage from all the cameras dotted around the
zoo. “If I wake up in the middle of the night I pick up the phone and check on
them. It is very reassuring.”
His
impossible-to-miss love of the animals here should be reassuring for anyone who
has ever wondered about the role
Fruit bats, the eco-friendly creatures
Bats are remarkable
for their high diversity and broad geographic distribution representing over
20% of all the living species of mammals distributed over all continents except
Arctic, Antarctic and some isolated Oceanic islands. They are unique in the sense,
they are only mammals capable of true flight and can cross the barriers other
mammals cannot. Large fruit eating bats are represented by 176 species
worldwide and 4 of them are present in Pakistan. These include short-nosed
fruit bat (Cynopterus sphinx), the Indian flying fox (Pteropus giganteus) the
fulvous fruit bat (Rousettus leschenaulti) and the Egyptian fruit bat (R.
aegyptiacus). Large colonies of the Indian flying fox, the largest fruit bat of
South India is reported from the Baag-i-Jinnah and Lalazar garden, Lahore and
is usually seen with fear and as a superstitious creature.
Tayiba Latif
Gulraiz, a PhD Scholar in the Department of Wildlife and Ecology, University of
Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Lahore conducted studies on Indian flying fox
under supervision of Dr. Arshad Javid and concluded that these fruit bats
should not be considered as pests as the
ecosystem services provided by them out weight the losses caused by them.
Perhaps, they served mankind with number of services as a pollinators, seed
dispersers, bio-indicators and afforest agents can commute up to a distance of
50km. Fruit bats transport pollens and disperse seeds of many economically
important and edible commercial tree species such as banana, avocado, date
palm, fig, peach and mango. These fruits contribute a sizeable portion of the
annual GDP of Pakistan. The economic importance of these flying foxes as p
Rescued Jumbos a Burden for Bannerghatta Zoo
The Forest
Department has temporarily put on hold the request made by the authorities of
Bannerghatta Zoo to release a dozen elephants back to the forests because of
huge cost of feeding them.
Recently, the zoo
authorities wrote to Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (wildlife) to shift
around 12 rescued elephants which are presently housed in the zoo’s elephant
rescue centre.
Sources told Express
that the Forest Department had not kept its promise to release more money
towards feeding those pachyderms and the additional burden has fallen on the
zoo. The zoo required just three to four elephants for display purposes, but it
has 15 elephants. Maintaining them has become a big problem.
Sources said despite
shortage of staff, the zoo has managed to put 30 people to look after the 15
elephants. Each jumbo is taken care of by two people — a mahout and a kavadi —
and they need to stay with them day and night to prevent them from mingling with
visiting wild elephants from nearby forests. Feeding of each elephant costs
around `1.25 lakh-1.5 lakh per month and the zoo was not in a position to spend
that much. “We can manage if the Forest Department gives us additional funds,”
sources said.
Two days ago, an
elephant calf, which separated from its herd near Kanakpura, was brought to the
zoo. “If the Forest Department goes on adding elephants where is the money to
feed them. Even the request to provide the services of veterinary doctor has not
been fulfilled,” sources alleged.
When contacted, PCCF
(wildlife) Vinay Luthra said the Central Zoo Authority has set guidelines
within which all the zoos have to function. “Shifting of elephants from one zoo
to another or from zoo to forests require the CZA’s permission. Till they get the permission, the elephants
are the property of the zoo and they will stay there. I am not aware of the
number of elephants which were housed at Bannerghatta Zoo. Once the permission
comes, we will take steps to shift them.”
Luthra said it has
been the practice to house rescued jumbos in nearby elephant camps. Since all
the five elephant camps are full, some of them have been kept in the Zoo. “I am
optimistic of finding an early solution to this problem,” he said.
Solitaire
- Publication of Durrell Conservation Academy -
Zoo parting ways with celebrated animal care director
The Calgary Zoo’s
animal care director is leaving the top spot for work in Europe, capping off a
more than three-year stint as the city’s zookeeper who led an overhaul of
welfare practices and received widespread acclaim for heroism when he rescued
animals from flood water.
Dr. Jake Veasey, a
respected conservation biologist, will leave the zoo after its elephants are
shipped to the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington, D.C., later this month.
The zoo released few details about the departure of its high-profile director, simply
posting on its Facebook page that Veasey has decided to split with the zoo to
“begin the next phase of his career back in Europe.”
“Since joining the
zoo in November 2010, Jake has had a remarkable impact on both the Calgary Zoo
and our city,” the post states. “His leadership and scientific expertise in
animal welfare and conservation helped shape a world-class animal care
department.”
Veasey could not be
reached for an interview Monday.
Born in London,
England, Veasey is a recognized leader in managing animals, both in the wild
and in zoos, having worked in North America, Africa and Europe. He also designs
animal enclosures for zoos worldwide and advises officials on managing their
facilities and assessing animal welfare.
The founder of
Veasey Zoo Design & Management, he has worked on $600-million zoo master
plans — blueprints t
New enclosures: Safari Park makes room for elephants
Four juvenile
elephants were brought from Tanzania in 2009 to the park but two of the females
were handed over to the Karachi Zoological Gardens in 2010.
The new enclosures
“The pair needs the
enclosed space and we hope the visitors like it,” said Safari Park director
Salman Shamsi, adding that they are expecting an increase in visitors during
the summer holidays.
Red-billed chough escapes Jersey's Durrell wildlife
park
A rare bird has
escaped from Durrell wildlife park and keepers are appealing for help in
finding it.
The red-billed
chough, a member of the crow family, is a small black bird with a bright red
beak.
Named Arthur, it is
a breeding male on the Birds on the Edge project, which aims to repopulate
Jersey with rare native birds.
Keepers believe a
rat may have chewed through netting in the bird's aviary.
Other choughs hav
Dubai’s Safari Park is on course to open next year
The Dh150m zoo will
cover 120 hectares and will house more than 1,000 animals
Tucked away behind a
large security fence on Al Aweer Road opposite Dragonmart, workers are
diligently building and landscaping the desert to shape Dubai’s new Safari Park
zoo in time for a 2015 opening, say officials.
Plans to relocate
Dubai Zoo, currently located on Jumeirah Road, have been on the cards for
nearly 10 years as the project has been scrutinised, reworked and revised to
come up with a feasible method of relocating roughly 1,000 animals from their
existing cramped quarters.
The development of
the new zoo is being carried out by Dubai Municipality and will see one of the
most modern facilities in the world rise from the sand in the Al Warqa area.
“The project is
smoothly running on track and will be completed by the end of 2015,” said an
official at Dubai Municipality who is working closely with the project. “The
project consists of 12 phases, and wi
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS --- Deadline June 30, 2014
SIXTH INTERNATIONAL TAPIR SYMPOSIUMThe first part of the Tapir Symposium will consist of talks by KEYNOTE SPEAKERS, PAPER and POSTER SESSIONS addressing tapir biology, research and conservation.
The Symposium Planning Committee will review all abstracts and determine which ones will be presented orally and which ones will be presented as posters.
How to Submit a Paper/Poster Abstract
Abstract Guidelines
•Electronic Format: Abstracts should be prepared in Word
•All abstracts should be submitted in ENGLISH
•Margins: Should be set at 2.54 cm (1 inch), top, bottom and sides
•Length: Abstracts should be no longer than 500 words
•Fonts: Use Tahoma at a size of 10 points
•Title: Type title in upper and lower case, standard title format (e.g. Emerging Diseases in Tapirs)
•List Authors: Presenting author first (In Bold)
•Group authors by affiliation
•Type affiliation immediately below authors lines
•Include complete mailing address, e-mail address, phone, and fax for the main presenting author
•Body of abstract: Type body without any indents or tabs
•Double space between paragraphs
•Apply emboldment, italics, underlining, superscripts and subscripts in your main text as you want it to appear in the book of abstracts
•Additional information: Provide us with a list of any technical equipment you will need for your presentation. Keep in mind that you need to think about two different forms of presentation, oral or poster
Submission of Abstract (Deadline June 30, 2014)
E-mail abstract as an attached file to:
PATRÍCIA MEDICI
Planning Committee
International Tapir Symposium
E-mail: epmedici@uol.com.br
By July 30, 2014, the notification of the acceptance of the abstract(s) submitted and final decision on whether it will be presented orally or as a poster will be sent to the author(s). Abstracts will be reviewed for their innovative, unique, or thought-provoking subject, topic, or strategy or relevance to current and future needs and challenges of tapir conservation. Abstracts submitted are accepted on the understanding that the presenting author will register for the symposium by August 15, 2014. We are still working on our online registration system and we will soon be ready to OPEN FOR REGISTRATIONS.
Important Dates for Paper/Poster Presenters
---June 30, 2014
Deadline for submitting abstracts. Submitted abstracts will then be reviewed by the Symposium Planning Committee.
---July 30, 2014
The Symposium Planning Committee will notify the author(s) of accepted abstracts and whether they will be presented orally or as a poster.
---August 15, 2014
The presenting author for each accepted abstract must register for the symposium by this date or presentation/poster is subject to cancellation.
Paper Session Guidelines
Authors giving oral presentations should be aware of the date and time of their presentations and be available at the session room 30 minutes prior to it starting. The chair of your paper session will introduce you, as well as monitor timing, and preside over the question periods. Speakers will have 15 minutes for their presentations. In the end of each paper session we will have 15 minutes for questions and discussions including all presenters in that session. At some point, the chair of your paper session will contact you for your BIOGRAPHY so that you can be introduced properly.
Poster Session Guidelines
If the Planning Committee decides that your abstract should be presented as a poster, you have to take into account the following information and guidelines:
Authors presenting posters must have their posters set up on Monday, November 17, anytime between 8:00AM and 2:00PM
Posters will be exhibited in the coffee break area throughout the conference and presenters must be available by their posters during the coffee breaks
Posters must be removed on Wednesday, November 19, in the end of the day
At least one presenter (co-author) nominated for each poster must be a registered attendee at the symposium
Advertisements will not be accepted as posters
Poster Guidelines
The main goal of our poster session is to offer symposium participants a chance to interact with the authors and to establish contacts for further correspondence. For this reason, it is important to feature the following PROMINENTLY on your poster and on any handouts you distribute:
1. The title of your poster
2. The name(s) and institution(s) of the author(s)
3. The e-mail address of at least one author
4. The mailing address, phone, and fax numbers of at least one author
Posters should be readable from a distance of 5 feet. The smallest readable type font at this distance is 20-25 point. If you have to resort to a smaller font size, you are using too much text. Artwork, photos, charts, and graphs typically make up the bulk of a good poster. Detailed information is more effectively conveyed in printed handouts that can be read outside the charged atmosphere of a symposium. You might prepare a short (5-10 minute) verbal presentation which you can give to people who want to be "talked" through your project.
Technical Demonstrations
If you believe that multimedia equipment would greatly enhance your audience's comprehension of your poster, a VERY LIMITED number of technical demonstrations will be possible, based on the number and location of electrical outlets in the poster display room. Additionally, while we will be supplying multimedia equipment for the oral paper presentations, you must supply and maintain your own multimedia equipment if you feel that it is needed for your poster presentation.
In order to give you timely notification of whether we can meet your technical requirements, the Planning Committee must know at the time of your application what technical set-up you would like to bring.
Be aware that no Internet connection will be supported.
Presenters should also be aware that there is no secure place to store technical components such as multimedia units or laptop computers when the poster display rooms are being used for other symposium activities.
The symposium organizers and the hotel assume no responsibility for loss, theft, or damage to these materials.
Important Reminders
Technical wizardry should be a supplement to a quality poster, not a substitute for a quality poster. Do not assume that your multimedia demonstration will make things so obvious to your audience that they will require no additional textual information. Your poster and handouts should clearly outline your important points, and your demonstration should illustrate them.
Posters are a tried-and-true method of communicating to milling groups of people. Laptop computers, on the other hand, have repeatedly proven ineffective for this type of setting. They use tiny font sizes; "disappear" if not viewed from a particular angle, are usually displayed on a tabletop well below the audience's field of vision, and often require the undivided attention of the presenter while the audience waits to ask questions. So, be sure to have plenty of interesting material on hand to entertain the crowd while they wait to get a closer look at your equipment.
Oregon Zoo firings and mystery of orangutan's death
show, once again, that a zoo is unlike any other government service
The executives and
elected officials at Metro, the Portland area’s regional government, oversee a
strange and sometimes incongruous collection of public services: golf courses
and garbage pickup, pioneer-era cemeteries and planning and convention center hotels.
Recent events
suggest none is as fundamentally challenging as the Oregon Zoo.
Metro officials
thought they had solved the zoo’s public relation problems after agency
auditors examined construction spending and found something near chaos. But
this week, the zoo became a public punching bag again as two of its top
managers – director Kimberly Smith and senior veterinarian Mitch Finnegan –
were fired. The dismissals were tied to the January death of a 20-year-old
orangutan after surgery, a Metro statement said, but beyond that Metro leaders
have offered few additional details.
Activists hoping to
free zoo elephants and stop the zoo’s nationally renowned -- and, in some
circles, vilified -- breeding program claimed some credit for the firings and
used the opportunity to promote their cause. They’ve called on Portland-area
voters to write in Packy, a 52-year-old elephant suffering from tuberculosis,
against three Metro Coun
More than 40 people testify at Metro Council about
elephant program
Holding signs and
chanting "Free Packy!", a crowd of more than 40 people packed the
Metro Council chamber Thursday, calling for changes to the Oregon Zoo's
elephant program.
Many expressed
frustration with the zoo's implementation of its 2008 bond program, which
called for upgrades to the zoo's elephant habitat. Others said the Oregon Zoo
should end its elephant program, as some other zoos in North America have done,
and send the herd to a sanctuary.
"Packy has paid
his dues," said Portlander Will Windham, referring to the elder elephant
born at the Oregon Zoo in 1962. "He deserves a peaceful retirement."
"How would you
like to be in house arrest for 52 years?" asked Portlander Bob Bernstein.
"Do you think you could endure it? I doubt it. You'd all punk out compared
to Packy."
Vancouver resident
Ann Radley said she's watched videos of elephants in a sanctuary.
"It's beautiful
to watch them step out. I watched elephants have their first swim in a pond,
their first swim in a lake, their first roll in the mud. Elephants love to play
in the mud," she said. "Their first time dusting with dust, foraging
on a hill, foraging through trees, lying down to sleep on a hill baking in the
hot sun."
Zoo officials say
they're moving closer to that vision as construction moves forward on the zoo's
$53 million Elephant Lands exhibit. The new six-acre area, four times the size
of the current exhibit, will include ponds, sand and both indoor and outdoor areas.
In an e-mail to
Metro News, interim zoo director Teri Dresler addressed the calls to send Packy
to a sanctuary.
"There are no
plans to send Packy away from his family members at the zoo, where he receives
expert care by experienced keepers and vet staff," she said.
Many of the
"Packtivists" Thursday called for Metro to expedite its plans for an
off-site elephant habitat, and to end the breeding of
www.zoolex.org in May 2014
~°v°~ ~°v°~ ~°v°~ ~°v°~ ~°v°~
Hello ZooLex Friend,
We have worked for your enjoyment!
~°v°~
NEW EXHIBIT PRESENTATION
Beehive is an animal exhibit at the Vienna Zoo that challenges many
stereotypes about zoo animals. The bees are free ranging, but not wild.
They are domesticated, but not tame. They are scary for many people, but
not dangerous. They are hardly noticed by most, but heavily needed by
all. Beehive is a colourful and playful stage for their show:
http://www.zoolex.org/zoolexcgi/view.py?id=1504
~°v°~
ZOO ANIMAL WELFARE
The book "Zoo Animal Welfare" by Terry L. Maple and Bonnie M. Perdue is
reviewed by Kara Chirgwin and Monika Fiby from ZooLex:
http://www.zoolex.org/publication/chirgwin_fiby/book_review.html
The book reference can be found in ZooLex Publications:
http://www.zoolex.org/publication.html#m
~°v°~
We keep working on ZooLex ...
The ZooLex Zoo Design Organization is a non-profit organization
registered in Austria (ZVR-Zahl 933849053). ZooLex runs a professional
zoo design website and distributes this newsletter. More information and
contact: http://www.zoolex.org/about.html
~°v°~ ~°v°~ ~°v°~ ~°v°~ ~°v°~
Hello ZooLex Friend,
We have worked for your enjoyment!
~°v°~
NEW EXHIBIT PRESENTATION
Beehive is an animal exhibit at the Vienna Zoo that challenges many
stereotypes about zoo animals. The bees are free ranging, but not wild.
They are domesticated, but not tame. They are scary for many people, but
not dangerous. They are hardly noticed by most, but heavily needed by
all. Beehive is a colourful and playful stage for their show:
http://www.zoolex.org/zoolexcgi/view.py?id=1504
~°v°~
ZOO ANIMAL WELFARE
The book "Zoo Animal Welfare" by Terry L. Maple and Bonnie M. Perdue is
reviewed by Kara Chirgwin and Monika Fiby from ZooLex:
http://www.zoolex.org/publication/chirgwin_fiby/book_review.html
The book reference can be found in ZooLex Publications:
http://www.zoolex.org/publication.html#m
~°v°~
We keep working on ZooLex ...
The ZooLex Zoo Design Organization is a non-profit organization
registered in Austria (ZVR-Zahl 933849053). ZooLex runs a professional
zoo design website and distributes this newsletter. More information and
contact: http://www.zoolex.org/about.html
Three Zoos, One Park package tour for 999 baht is
launched to promote Chiang Mai tourism
Chiang Mai Zoo
Chiang Mai Night Safari
Chiang Mai Aquarium
*******************************************************************************
ZOO BIOLOGY
The Zoo Biology Group is concerned with all disciplines involved in the running of a Zoological Garden. Captive breeding, husbandry,cage design and construction, diets, enrichment, man management,record keeping, etc etc
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