Posts Tagged ‘feeding animals’

Gift of Grub Series: Behind the Scenes -The Houston Zoo Animal Nutrition Team

Posted by in Supporting Your Zoo

From apples to zucchinis and lots of produce in between, meals for the Houston Zoo’s 6,000 animals are prepped in our Zoo kitchen (at the Commissary building) by our Animal Nutrition department. Our Animal Nutrition team is a group of six dedicated, hard-working individuals who play an important role in the health of our animal family.

Each of our animals receives uncompromising excellence in animal care including basic husbandry, training and enrichment, veterinary care, and of course, the best in nutrition. The dietary needs of our animals are almost as varied as the animals themselves. All animal diets are developed in consultation with a specialist in exotic animal nutrition and are regularly analyzed for nutrient composition in order to ensure the optimal health and welfare of our animals.

Each day, the Zoo’s Animal Nutrition staff begins work at 5 a.m. so they can have meals prepared and bulk food items delivered to the various animal sections in time for breakfast. There is a whirlwind of activity in their building including thawing meats, fish and rodents, chopping produce, sorting insects, loading bales of hay and bags of grain for delivery, and preparing specialty diets. They are quick to respond to last-minute requests for specialty food items that might be needed for medical reasons. They will go to whatever lengths are required to ensure that every animal’s nutritional needs are being met each and every day.

The Commissary building boasts a state of the art kitchen that includes commercial-grade appliances and equipment, 540 square feet of freezer space, three walk-in coolers, 2,000 square feet of dry storage, and a 4,000-square-foot hay barn. Despite all the activity, at the end of every day the kitchen is left clean and sparkling.

You can help provide the tasty treats and nutritious meals prepared by our Animal Nutrition department by giving the Gift of Grub. TXU Energy has generously offered to match any donation made to our Gift of Grub holiday campaign, up to $50,000 total! That means your contribution will go twice as far to help supply breakfast, lunch and dinner for our wild bunch all year long.

This Holiday Season, Give the Gift of Grub

Posted by in Supporting Your Zoo

This holiday season, while you are enjoying a lovely dinner with your family, take a moment to consider the massive amounts of food that is required to feed the animals at the Houston Zoo. Think you have a pretty good idea on the what it takes? Here are just a few interesting facts about feeding the our wild gang:

- Feeding the entire bird collection can take a team of 10 keepers over 3 hours!

 

- Darwin, our cassowary, is fed several times a day and can easily eat up to 10 lbs of greens, fruit, and pellets. He is even known to eat large pieces of fruit in one gulp!

 

- Our male tiger, Pandu, eats more than 2,000 lbs of meat each year, nearly the equivalent of a Volkswagen beetle filled with meat!

- Jonathon, our male lion, is offered 3,500 lbs of meat every year. He is also a bit spoiled…in addition to his normal diet, he also receives ice water in a squirt bottle and 1/4 of a chicken every day.

You can help provide nutritious meals and tasty treats to the Houston Zoo animal family by giving the Gift of Grub this holiday season. To learn more, or to donate today, check out our Gift of Grub webpage! Thanks to a generous matching gift from TXU Energy, your contribution will immediately be doubled, up to $50,000 total!

 

 

 

Look Who is Trading in The Naturally Wild Swap Shop

Posted by in African Forest,Children's Zoo,Feeding Our Animals,Giraffes,Hoofed Stock,Just for Kids,Swap Shop

Meet Hailey Wolfe, self proclaimed Naturalist and Budding Zoologist.  Hailey recently brought in an excellent nature journal to trade titled “The Pros and Cons of Being a Giraffe”.

Hailey’s Giraffe Journal

Hailey is quite the gifted writer and created a journal that reads like a storyteller’s tale.  She begins with a description of feeding the giraffes here at the Houston Zoo that includes beautiful and artistic detail about the giraffe’s long tongue and big, calm eyes.  She invites all to come along with her to learn more about these sweet giants.

She then moves on to giraffes in the wild and completes her journal with information and pictures of the giraffe herd here at the zoo.

Hailey has been trading with us since early this year and has brought in a variety of items including bones, shells and journals.  At 11 years old, she already has quite a knowledge of animals and a talent for writing about them.

Nature Journals are one of many things that can be brought in for trade.  The more time and effort put in to them, the more points a journal will receive.  To see Hailey’s journal and many others, come by the Naturally Wild Swap Shop at the front of the Children’s Zoo.

Don’t know about trading at the Swap Shop?  Click here to find out more.

 

 

 

Give the Gift of Grub

Posted by in Supporting Your Zoo

Every day, as part of the Houston Zoo’s outstanding animal care program, our Zoo Keepers ensure that our animal family receives fresh water and a variety of nutritious meals. With over 6,000 mouths to feed, this is quite an undertaking! Each year it takes a LOT of grub and green to meet the vast diet needs of our wild bunch. We rely on generous support from many donors, members, and guests to help provide our residents’ breakfast, lunch, and dinner all year long.

 

For the second year in a row, TXU Energy has generously offered to match donations made to our annual Gift of Grub campaign! That means that every dollar you give from now until December 31, (with total matches capped at $50,000) will go twice as far in keeping tummies full and providing the best bites for our animals.

 

Your gift of $30 could help provide three bales of hay for our elephants; $50 could help supply a day’s worth of fresh fish for our sea lions; $100 could help feed our meerkat mob for an entire week! Much like mealtime for your family, eating is an exciting and anticipated event for our animals at the Zoo. Your contribution of any amount will have a meaningful impact when our animals gather for grub. Thank you in advance for your support.

 

Will you give the Gift of Grub to our animal family this year? To donate today, please visit www.houstonzoo.org/grub

 

12 Days of Grub: Day 10 – Ten Chimps a Chasing

Posted by in African Forest,Chimpanzees,Feeding Our Animals,Supporting Your Zoo

On the Tenth Day of Grub, your zoo gift will help to feed…Ten Chimps a Chasing, Nine Fruit Bats Flying, Eight Giraffes a Galloping, Seven Snakes a Slithering, Six Mole-rats Mining, Five Golden Frogs, Four Calling Birds, Three Wild Dogs, Two Grizzly Bears, and Darwin the Cassowary! CLICK HERE to read them all!

For most wild animals, the acquisition and consumption of food is not just a casual activity, but in fact a full-time job.  A wild chimpanzee in Africa must always be on the search for ripe fruit, edible greens, tasty termites or antshard-shelled nuts  and yes, even small animals to hunt and eat.

Although we can’t re-create a wild chimpanzee diet, here at the Houston Zoo, we provide our chimps with a healthy variety of food including many types of lettuce, fruits, vegetables, nuts, different types of local plants and a specialized “biscuit” made for primates in zoos.  We also give them many types of treats which make up only a small portion of their diet, but are their favorites, including popcorn, peanut butter, honey and fruit juice.

Lucy enjoys some sweet potato and sunshine

Our chimps did not grow up hunting or eating termites, ants or meat, so this is not included in their Houston Zoo diet, but they are given the daily opportunity to show off their amazing ability to use tools by “fishing” for sweet or savory treats in our termite mound replica.

The chimps enjoy using sticks to “fish” for delicious treats

In order to keep their day interesting and to keep them active, the chimps’ meals are provided at different times throughout the day.  One of their favorite types of food is “browse”, or edible plants collected for them throughout the zoo by our own amazing Horticulture team.  Everyday the chimps get some combination of mulberry, banana leaves, willow, fig leaves or other edible plants.

Mac enjoys fig leaves

Chimps aren’t great at sharing their food with one another with a few notable exceptions (moms and their babies, males “wooing” receptive females, etc.)   They have a fairly stable social hierarchy and the higher-ranking chimps have first access to the yummy stuff.  For that reason, it is important that we make sure the food is scattered throughout the chimps’ entire habitat so that each member has the opportunity to collect food, and there is always enough for everyone.

Feeding the zoo’s animals is one of the best parts of being a zookeeper.  We enjoy giving them their food almost as much as they enjoy eating it!

Give the Gift of Grub this holiday season to help provide tasty meals for our chimpanzees and all of the animals at the Houston Zoo!  Our chimps send their ape-preciation for your support.

Thank you also to TXU Energy for generously matching the first $25,000 in donations this year!

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!

 

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!

 

Give the Gift of Grub to 6,000 animals at the Houston Zoo

Posted by in Feeding Our Animals,Holidays

It’s New Years Eve folks!  The last day of the year to contribute to our Gift of Grub fundraising campaign and receive a tax deduction for  2010. Help us to feed our 6,000 animals and priovide everything they need to be healthy and happy in the coming year by clicking http://www.houstonzoo.org/gift-of-grub/ or our CONTRIBUTE tab on Facebook!

We’ve looked all month in this blog series at just what it takes to feed our 6, 000 animals at the Houston Zoo, and provide what they need to be healthy and happy.

It all starts with our commissary, and while our first five blog posts focus on the variety of items they procure and prepare, this video gives you a true feel for what goes on while the rest of us are still asleep…

Have a safe and happy New Years Eve everyone!

We appreciate you so much for visiting us here to read our four blogs, to comment, Like, Tweet and share them on Facebook.

There’s all kinds of fun and interesting things in store for our blog readers in the coming year so we’ll see you in 2011!

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