Dallas Zoo update on missing clouded leopard


Dallas Zoo update on missing clouded leopard

11:26

Dallas police have opened a criminal investigation into the disappearance of a clouded leopard from her habitat at the Dallas Zoo, the police department confirmed to CBS News Friday. 

Zoo officials said earlier in the day that the animal had gotten out of her enclosure, calling the incident a “serious situation.” CBS DFW reported the zoo was closed while police helped in the search.

“We have an ongoing situation at the Zoo right now with a Code Blue — that is a non-dangerous animal that is out of its habitat,” zoo officials said in a statement. “One of our clouded leopards was not in its habitat when the team arrived this morning and is unaccounted for at this time.”

The zoo added: “Given the nature of these animals, we believe the animal is still on grounds and hiding.”

The missing leopard, named Nova, was described as weighing between 20 and 25 pounds.

Later the zoo posted a photo of a sleeping clouded leopard on a tree limb, writing the image was  “for anyone in the areas surrounding the Zoo who may be curious or have concerns.”

Nova’s habitat is located in an area not far from the Children’s Zoo, CBS DFW reported. It’s in between the Prime Meriden Cafe and Primate Place, across from the tigers and tortoises in the northeast area of the zoo. 

“While I wouldn’t put it past her to hunt squirrels or birds given the opportunity, she is absolutely not a danger to humans at all,” said Harrison Edell, Dallas Zoo’s executive vice president for animal care and conservation, the station reported. “If you happen to see a cat that’s bigger than a housecat, but smaller than a bobcat, please call us.”

Clouded leopards are from Southeast Asia. Nova came to the Dallas Zoo from the Houston Zoo, where she was born alongside her sister Luna. 

Often called the “smallest of big cats,” the clouded leopard isn’t directly related to regular leopards, according to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo Conservations & Biology Institute. Males weigh up to 50 pounds while females are significantly smaller, usually 25 to 35 pounds.

This isn’t the first time an animal has escaped its habitat at the zoo, CBS DFW reported. 

In 2004, a 300-pound, male gorilla named Jabari cleared a 14-foot wall and mauled three people. Police killed him. 

In 2010, another gorilla named Tufani escaped a holding area when a worker left a door open. Tufani never got into a public area.

The following year, in 2011, the zoo declared a Code Red when an adult chimpanzee named Koko escaped through an unsecured gate in what authorities called a sort of “bedroom” area. She was shot with a dart gun in a hallway and sedated. 

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