Posts Tagged ‘Animal Photos’

Camera Traps

Posted by in Conservation

Written by Peter Riger

When you hear fly trap, you know it is meant to trap flies. But camera traps?  These remotely activated cameras have become very sophisticated and specialized pieces of equipment for field conservationists and researchers alike and have revolutionized the way we look at wildlife today.

Sensors on the camera use a light beam as a trigger. Once this beam is broken, the camera simply clicks a photo and we have a window into either the animal we are looking for, or any other species that happens to walk across the cameras path. Also known as trail cameras, this piece of field equipment not only tells us what species are in the area, but can also offer is a look into population size, territories, and even detection into rarely seen species.

More advanced camera models take video which help field researchers get a glimpse of rarely seen behaviors. And the better the imagery or video, the closer we can bring you into the lives of some of the worlds least known species without them ever knowing you are watching.

The pictures in this blog are from camera traps set up by our researchers studying bantengs in Borneo. We are even letting the public name a young female banteng. Be sure to read our earlier post on bantengs and submit a name for our competition.

 

 

FOTO Friday Winner of the Week

Posted by in Aquarium,Contest

Welcome to the Houston Zoo’s FOTO FRIDAY Caption Challenge results post from Friday, November 11!

Last Friday, we asked you to leave your best caption in the comment section. Then readers could “like” each caption comment to vote for their favorites. Their votes, combined with those of our own panel, determined the caption to appear under the picture right here on the Official Houston Zoo Blog this week. We hope you’ll come back for the fun EVERY FRIDAY.

YOUR VOTES HELP DETERMINE THE WINNERS!

Here is the picture that was posted with the top voted caption by Sandra Fleming Studios, who is no stranger to our Caption Challenge. 

Let’s high five her with a big, green slimy fin!

Hey, its me, Swampy! I'm going to get you out there, okay? In the meantime keep it low key!

FIRST RUNNER UP:

 
Shannon Krugman: Holy Crap!!! I hope that’s not my reflection!!

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SECOND RUNNER UP:

 Stacey Ricks: Take me to your leader!

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THIRD RUNNER UP:

 Kristen McGrady: I challenge you to a staring contest…and go……5 minutes later and winner still has not been declared!

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HONORABLE MENTIONS:

Johnnie T. Melia Moving & Storage Co., Inc.: Well lets see if eharmony can find a match for me…

Amy Farrugia Jones You are getting sleepy. When you awake you will bark like a dog every time you see the color red.

Kristal White If you believe it you can do it. Now concentrate and swim thru the glass

Erika Wehmeyer Livingston I hate it when these fish come by my aquarium to stare at me!

Barbara Blanchard Reed ‎…They really do exist…

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Thanks for joining in the fun!

And please come on back for the next FOTO Friday!

Why not visit the Kipp Aquarium over the Thanskgiving holiday? It’s a great way to walk off the turkey or let the kids get their extra energy out! We will be closing early, at 3:00 PM on Thanksgiving day, to allow our employees to have more time with their families. The last ticket will be sold at 2:00 p.m.

 

 

FOTO Friday Winner of the Week!

Posted by in Contest,Primates

Welcome to the Houston Zoo’s FOTO FRIDAY Caption Challenge results post from Friday, October 14!

Last Friday, we posted  not one but TWO photos on Facebook and asked you to leave your best caption in the comment section. Then readers could “like” each caption comment to vote for their favorites. Their votes, combined with those of our own panel, determined the caption to appear under the picture right here on the Official Houston Zoo Blog this week. We hope you’ll come back for the fun EVERY FRIDAY.

Here is the picture that was posted on Facebook last Friday, with the top voted caption by Julie Wood! ** Insert a Halloween Happy Dance!**

YOUR VOTES HELP DETERMINE THE WINNERS!

Picture # 1

It'll be better feng shui if I put the pumpkin over here.

 

FIRST RUNNER UP:

Stacey Ricks: JACK! My Orange Brotha from anotha Motha!

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A  SECOND RUNNER UP

 Carla Combs: Now, How am I supposed to light the candle in this big orange thing all my appendages are busy already !!!

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Honorable Mentions: 

Montero Aura: I Got This!

April Walker:  My pumpkin and I are just hanging around…

Rosie Villegas: Its mission impossible!

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FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER, THERE IS A TIE FOR THE WINNING CAPTION! CONGRATUALTIONS TO Cassidy Lentsch and  Shannon Krugman. In honor of this momentus occasion, we will post two, count ‘em two of the pictures, so you each can see how your caption looks in the wining spot! SWEET!

This caption is from Shannon Krugman

Picture # 2

Ok kid, this is how were gonna do it. First we carve out the pumpkin. Then we put it on our head and walk right out of the gate just like all the other trick or treaters.

 

And this caption is from Cassidy Lentsch:

That tiger from last week thinks he's going to win the zoo pumpkin carving contest? HA! Now hand me the knife, Indah- one gourd-geous Mona Lisa coming up!

 

FIRST RUNNER UP:

Sandra Fleming Studios: You are going to eat this monkey biscuit and like it, Pumpkin! 
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A  SECOND RUNNER UP

Alma Garza Mescher: You do it your way and I’ll do it mine!

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THIRD RUNNER UP!
 
 Crystal Worley:  WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT?
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Funny Honorable Mentions:

Cathleen Grauel Schlechte: Heyyyy! Can’t we get some alone time with our pumpkin please?

Kasi Silguero: Ready to get my carve on

Jennifer Hillier Rodriguez: I’m going to play this pumpkin just like Matthew McConaughey plays the bongos!

Guppy Man:  What do you mean, you are supposed to roast the seeds first? These tatse just fine!

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CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL!

Thanks for joining in the fun!

And please come on back for next Friday!

You can come get your very OWN pumpkin from our pumpkin patch on any one of the TEN, count ‘em TEN days of Zoo Boo this year. Visit our website for dates and details. Times vary, so be sure to check. See you ghouls, goblins and geeks there!


FOTO Friday Winner of the Week!

Posted by in Carnivores: Spots, Stripes and Sharp Teeth!,Contest,Mammals: Our Furry (and Hairy!) Friends

Welcome to the Houston Zoo’s FOTO FRIDAY Caption Challenge results post from Friday, September 30!

Last Friday, we posted a photo on Facebook and asked you to leave your best caption in the comment section. Then readers could “like” each caption comment to vote for their favorites. Their votes, combined with those of our own panel, determined the caption to appear under the picture right here on the Official Houston Zoo Blog this week. We hope you’ll come back for the fun EVERY FRIDAY.

YOUR VOTES HELP DETERMINE THE WINNERS!

Here is the picture that was posted on Facebook last Friday, with the top voted caption by Tiffany  Alton- Herrmann!!!  Everybody ROAR!

Darn you Yogi Bear!

 FIRST RUNNER UP:

Sandra Fleming Studios: Alrighty then Doctor . . . let’s hope for another successful organ transplant.

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SECOND RUNNER UP

Enchanted Forest: Heeeey BooBoo, It’s a pic-a-nic basket!

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THIRD RUNNER UP TRIFECTA!
Wendy Kolleski: I can’t bear this anymore, I’m hungry!!!!

Della Schapiro: I’ve had a long hard day… Where’s my Bud Light?

 Logan Crocker: alright guys the fun stops when you take away my beer….

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MANY Funny Honorable Mentions:

Bridget Robbins Haines: WHERE’S THE BEEF!?

Amanda Pinup’perfect Isbell: Aren’t polar bears supposed to be at the north pole? I’m telling Santa they took my Coca-Cola again and they are going on the naughty list!

Stacey Ricks: Who drank the last Coke? Grrrrrr……

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CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL!

Thanks for joining in the fun!

And please come on back for next Friday!


Animal Enrichment: A Komodo and his Egg

Posted by in Enrichment: Keeping it Interesting,Events,Reptiles

Animal keepers at the Houston Zoo are constantly thinking of new ways to enrich the lives of the animals in their care.  Reptiles and birds often lay infertile eggs whether they have mated or not.  The Zoo’s two female ostriches frequently lay infertile eggs, we don’t have any male ostriches…….so, in the spirit of “reduce, reuse, recycle”, we find an interesting use for these eggs.  No, we don’t make giant omelettes!!  Sometimes we give one to our awesome Komodo dragon “Smaug”.  Dragons are meat eaters but they like eggs also.  As you can see below the egg is too big for him to swallow whole and this presents a challenge. 

The egg rolls away from him and he has to pin it against something and bite it to crack it.  Of course all the yolk runs out and he tries to suck it up and usually eats some or all of the shell.  Smaug doesn’t wind up getting to eat much of it but it gets him excited and keeps him busy for a while! Take a look.


We strive to continually come up with things to keep our animals busy and to elicit natural behaviors.  This is just one of the many fun aspects of taking care of the animals we love.

Written by Judith Bryja.

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

 

Animal Enrichment: Yummy for the Tummy

Posted by in Enrichment: Keeping it Interesting,Events

The Commissary at the Houston Zoo works like a five star restaurant!  The staff prepare animal diets daily, consisting of fresh produce, fruits, meats and an assortment of many other foods.  But who doesn’t like a special treat now and then….many of the animals certainly do and the Commissary makes sure they get a favorite treat. 

Some of those treats are also part of the animal’s enrichment.  Those include ice pops, from 8 oz cups to 5 gallons!!

Now, I know you’re thinking who would get a 5 gallon ice pop!!!  Those lucky animals would be the bears and the elephant herd.  The bear’s pops are filled with fish or fruit.  The elephants’ pops are fruit filled with apples, pineapple, pears, mangos and grapes. 

Primates get the smaller ice pops.  Their pops contain fruit juices and another item such as currants, sunflower seeds, grapes, etc.  Here’s a picture of Rudi enjoying his ice pop, although it looks like he’s dreaming of a 5 gallon ice pop!

The Carnivores enjoy an assortment of bones once a month.  Watch the video below, they really seem to love stalking and capturing their “prey”.

Holiday food enrichment is also something different for the animals.  Putting something new and different in their habitat helps to enrich their lives by finding something unexpected, something unknown.  One of those items is pumpkins at Halloween.  Most animals receive pumpkins and have a great time playing and foraging through them.  Watch the Meerkat search for yummy treats in their pumpkin.

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

 

Animal Enrichment: What’s That Smell!

Posted by in Enrichment: Keeping it Interesting,Events,Hoofed Stock

When potential food is all around, a good nose can help pick out the best tasting dinner.  The animals in the Houston Zoo’s Hoofstock collection have just that – a keen sense of smell.  Animals can tell which plants are sweet and delicious or bitter and noxious just from their odors.  Scent marks on trees and rocks can also signal a predator, rival or potential mate is nearby.

 

Such a strong sense enables a wide variety of enrichment opportunities for the keepers to maintain an interesting exhibit for the residents within.  Spices, perfumes, and other smells are conservatively sprinkled or sprayed in a few spots to attract and pique the interest of the animals.  Different types may illicit different reactions.  Calvin Klein’s Obsession™ has been proven to be one that animals like to rub on themselves.  Other colognes will keep the duikers busy all day re-marking their exhibits with the glands located on their faces. Some spices may be licked off for a unique taste while others merely make the animals sneeze. 

Colognes and seasonings aren’t the only options for olfactory enrichment.  Moving soiled bedding from a female into the exhibit of a male may cause great interest due to the female’s pheromones.  In contrast, urine from a predator can illicit a reaction that a lion or leopard may be near.

Perhaps most importantly, a variety of smells and their locations can encourage the animals to further explore and move about their exhibits.  Natural behaviors are a key element of the Hoofstock enrichment program and these foraging behaviors are indicative of how wild herbivores might spend their day.  What are your favorite smells and how do they make you behave?

By Tim Junker, Hoofstock Keeper

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

 

Chimp Enrichment: Blankets,Termite Mounds and Painting! Oh My!!!

Posted by in Chimpanzees,Enrichment: Keeping it Interesting,Events

If you have visited the chimps in the African Forest at the Houston Zoo, chances are you’ve seen them toting around blankets or resting with them in the hammocks.  “Why in the world would a chimpanzee have a blanket?” you may be wondering.  Well, because they like them, that’s why!  Our chimps grew up having blankets to sleep with and to play with, and this affinity has carried over into adulthood.  Blankets are comfy, they smell nice (the keepers launder them regularly), they keep you warm in winter and sometimes, they have treats hidden inside them.  Who doesn’t enjoy a blankie?

Annie (on the ground) and Sally (in the hammock) enjoy their blankets

Sometimes, just to make it interesting, the keepers hide food in a folded blanket, or spread food out on it for a picnic.  A dash of perfume or essential oils makes it even more intriguing.

Blankets are just one of the many types of enrichment we use to keep the chimps engaged and to encourage the expression of  natual behaviors.  “What kind of ‘natural’ behavior can a blanket encourage?”, you are asking yourself.  Chimpanzees, as well as other apes, are nest-builders.  Meaning that whenever and wherever they rest, they will build a “nest” for themselves out of whatever materials are at hand.  In the wild this may be leaves, branches, grasses or even entire small tree limbs.  Often these nests are high in trees to avoid predators.  They rarely use the same nest twice and, except for infants, each chimp makes his or her own nest.  Can you think of a better material for making a nest than a blanket?  Me neither.

 “So what other types of enrichment do the chimps get?”, you are now asking.  You certainly are full of questions today!  Well, since this is one of my favorite subjects, I’ll tell you.

One of the most remarkable discoveries in the field of animal behavior was the observation in 1960 that wild chimpanzees make and use tools.  Previously, it was thought that only human beings were capable of this.  There are many ways in which chimps use tools, but one of the most well-known is using grass stems or sticks to “fish” for termites.  (Click this link for more info on termite fishing.)  Our chimps are not used to eating termites, but they do love a sweet snack, so we load our termite mound replica with semi-liquid food that might be sweet one day, or savory the next.  We try to keep it interesting and different each day.  The only way the chimps can reach their treat is to fish for it using whatever they can find, usually bamboo sticks.  This built-in innovative enrichment device never fails to captivate chimpanzees and guests alike.

Above you can see the chimps using the termite mound replica (clockwise from the top: Mac, Lulu, Willie, Riley and Annie). Guests can see, through the window on their side, what the chimps are fishing for inside the mound.

Being intelligent and curious, chimps love to investigate and manipulate objects.  They especially love cardboard and paper that can be torn up and rearranged to their liking. Cardboard boxes can hide food or treats and then be used for nesting when the food is gone.  Big ones like refrigerator boxes make great forts. (I bet you’ve done this, too, haven’t you?) This type of enrichment is usually reserved for the off-exhibit holding area as it can create quite a mess.

Not all enrichment has to encourage “wild” behaviors; Sometimes it is just something the animal finds interesting and fun. For great apes especially, one such behavior is painting.  Keepers generally hold the canvas with paint on it and hand the animal a paintbrush. Participation in this activity is completely voluntary, but we find the chimps rarely turn down the opportunity to smear the paint around on the canvas… and then eat some of it.  Don’t worry, it’s all non-toxic.  And apparently delicious, though I have not tried it myself.

Charlie working on his masterpiece. And having a paint snack. Bonus!

 For chimps, though, the ultimate enrichment is other chimps.  By nature chimpanzees are gregarious and have incredibly complex social lives.  Daily, they must negotiate their relationships with each other: cementing friendships and alliances, squabbling over food or toys, resolving conflicts and angling for a higher position on the social ladder.  Our group of five males and five females are incredibly interesting to watch and learn about.  They may just be a great source of enrichment for you!

Written by Judy McAuliffe
All photos by Ron Santos

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

 

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