ReportWire

Tag: wild animals

  • Years after Argentina shut a notorious zoo, the stranded animals are finally being rescued

    LUJAN, Argentina (AP) — Lions, tigers and bears that managed to survive in substandard conditions at a now-shuttered zoo on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina, paced weakly in their claustrophobic cages on Thursday, waiting their turn to receive urgent veterinary care for the first time in years.

    The 62 big cats and two brown bears were being evaluated and treated before their eventual transfer to vast wildlife sanctuaries abroad — one of the largest and most challenging yet after a recent arrangement between Argentina and an international animal welfare organization.

    Argentine authorities in 2020 shut down the Lujan Zoo — famous for letting visitors handle and pose for pictures with tigers and lions — over mounting safety concerns.

    But the plight of the captive cats there only worsened. For the past five years, the animals were sustained by little more than a few loyal zookeepers who, despite having lost their jobs at Lujan, took it upon themselves to feed and care for the stranded lions and tigers left behind.

    Most didn’t make it.

    When Four Paws, an international animal welfare organization, first visited the zoo in 2023, caretakers counted 112 lions and tigers — already down from the more than 200 big cats believed to have been housed in the zoo at the time of its closure.

    Two years on, almost half of the animals have succumbed to illnesses from poor nutrition, wounds from fights with animals they’d never encounter in the wild, infections from lack of medical attention and organ failure from the stress of living in such cramped conditions.

    “It was really shocking,” said the organization’s chief program officer, Luciana D’Abramo, pointing to a 3-meter by 3-meter cage crammed with seven female lions. “Overcrowded is an understatement.”

    Next-door, two Asian tigers shared a tiny cage with two African lions — a “social composition that would never be found in nature,” D’Abramo said. “There’s a lot of hostility, fighting.”

    A single lion typically gets 10,000 square meters to itself at Four Paws’ sanctuaries around the world.

    After striking an agreement with Argentina’s government earlier this year, Four Paws took over responsibility for the surviving wild animals in Lujan last month.

    The memorandum of understanding involved Argentina committing to end the sale and private ownership of exotic felines in the large South American country, where enforcement efforts often run aground across 23 provinces that have their own rules and regulations.

    Although the Vienna-based organization has previously evacuated starving tigers from Syria’s civil war, abandoned bears and hyenas from the war-ravaged Iraqi city of Mosul and neglected lion cubs from the besieged Gaza Strip, it has never rescued such a large number of big cats before.

    “Here, the number of animals and the conditions where they are kept make this a much bigger challenge,” said Dr. Amir Khalil, the veterinarian leading the group’s emergency mission. “This is one of our biggest missions … not only in Argentina or Latin America, but worldwide.”

    On Thursday, veterinarians and experts from the organization were scrambling around the derelict zoo to assess the animals one by one. Most had not been vaccinated, sterilized or microchipped for identification.

    The team whisked sedated lions and tigers onto operating tables, dispensing nutrients, antibiotics and doses of pain medication via IV drips.

    The quick checkups frequently transformed into emergency surgeries. One tiger was treated for a bleeding gash in its tail last week, another for a vaginal tumor on Thursday. Several tigers and lions needed root canals to repair infected molars that had been broken on the steel cage bars.

    Others received treatment for claws that had grown inward from walking too much on unnatural, plank flooring in the spartan enclosures.

    After evaluating each animal in the coming weeks, Four Paws will arrange for their transfer to more expansive, natural homes around the world.

    Some Argentine zookeepers who spent decades feeding and caring for the big cats say they’re happy to see Four Paws improving the conditions. But there was also a sense of nostalgia for how things were.

    “It used to be a very popular place … I’ve seen people cry because they could touch a lion or feed a tiger with a bottle,” said Alberto Díaz, who spent 27 years working with the wild cats at the Lujan Zoo, overseeing hands-on experiences that catered to countless tourists.

    “Time changes, laws change, and you have to adapt or get left behind.”

    Source link

  • Can you spot the five great white sharks lurking close to the shore?

    Can you spot the five great white sharks lurking close to the shore?


    A drone photo captured off the coast of Hartenbos, South Africa, has wowed views with the number of sharks spotted, especially as the population seemed to have dispersed in recent years.

    At first glance, the ariel photo of Mossel Bay shared to Facebook by user Drone Fanatics SA might seem like another shot of the coastline, but drone photographer Christiaan Stopforth pointed out there is more lurking in the depths of the sea.

    Look close enough and you might be able to spot “not one, not two, but five great white sharks” swimming near the beach. (It’s harder than it looks!)

    A drone image that shows five great white sharks in the waters. The photo was captured in Hartenbos, South Africa.

    DRONE FANATICS SA

    For all that do not live near shark-infested waters, five seems like a steep number for these kings of the ocean to be roaming near the coast. But drone photographer Christiaan Stopforth told Newsweek that in the past he’s seen numbers closer to 12 and 15 of sharks in the area.

    Mossel Bay is known to be a “hot spot” for great white sharks with some 40 to 60 sharks stalking the area at any given point, Live Science reported. But those numbers have seemingly been affected after the true rulers of the sea came into the area.

    “Since the orcas came through and killed some of the sharks, [the sharks] were gone for quite some time,” Stopforth said.

    Orcas started turning to great white sharks in South Africa’s waters from 2017 to 2019, causing the great white populations to disperse, Newsweek previously reported.

    Stopforth added that it is only now the great white numbers are starting to pick up again.

    The impressive photo was captured the morning of February 5 and shared in a Facebook post later that day. As of Friday, the photo had over 5,000 likes, 1,100 comments, and 1,200 shares.

    Admittedly, I could not find the sharks without looking at Stopforth’s highlighted photo. And now I know to never step foot in this great white shark hotspot. I’ll just appreciate their beauty from afar like a majority of the other Facebook users are doing.

    Drone spots five sharks highlighted
    A drone image captured five great white sharks near the coast. The photographer highlighted the location of each shark.

    DRONE FANATICS SA/Facebook

    “Wow. So happy to see this! Such beautiful creatures,” commented Catharine Antonizzi.

    Annamarie Nèe Schoeman-Aucamp Roux added: “We coming next month for our holiday. I love swimming in the sea, but I’ll give it a skip I think.”

    Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@newsweek.com with some details about your best friend and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.