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Skip Navigation LinksDNREC : News : Brandywine Zoo receives Siberian tiger


 
 
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Three-year-old Siberian tiger Zhanna has arrived at the Brandywine Zoo.
She will be in quarantine for about two weeks, after which she will be
ready for her public debut.
Nancy Falasco, Brandywine Zoo Director, 302-571-7788
Beth Shockley, Public Affairs, 302-739-9902

Brandywine Zoo receives Siberian tiger

WILMINGTON (June 29, 2011) – The Brandywine Zoo welcomed its newest resident, a three year old Siberian tiger named Zhanna (pronounced ZAN-ah), who arrived today from the St. Louis Zoo. Zhanna will be off exhibit and in quarantine for approximately two weeks, to enable her to get used to her new environment and bond with her zoo keepers.

Zhanna’s arrival is significant for numerous reasons including the fact that Siberian tigers are critically endangered; there are fewer than 500 living in small populations in far eastern Russia and northeast China. Loss of habitat due to logging activities, human encroachment and poaching are the main threats to their survival in the wild.

“We are delighted to welcome Zhanna to Delaware and the Brandywine Zoo,” said DNREC Secretary Collin O’Mara. “Zoo tigers are ambassadors for tiger conservation efforts worldwide. Through zoo tiger education programs, the Brandywine Zoo engages zoo visitors in creating an informed and enlightened constituency for tigers. We are fortunate to be able to add such an amazing and regal animal to the Brandywine Zoo,” O’Mara said.

“Our emphasis is to help educate people about tigers, the problems tigers face as an endangered species and the efforts zoos and other organizations are making to conserve them and their wild habitats,” said J. Gregory Ellis, president of the Delaware Zoological Society, the non-profit group that champions the Brandywine Zoo’s mission.

The Delaware Zoological Society provided the $75,000 funding needed to create Zhanna’s enclosure, which combined two existing exhibits. The work was completed earlier this month.

“Zoo staff are looking forward to caring for Zhanna,” said Brandywine Zoo Director Nancy Falasco. “Her new home has been almost completely redesigned and rebuilt. We are so pleased that our zoo keepers, experienced and trained in working with large cats, will have the opportunity to work with this magnificent animal.”

 Zhanna was born on April 28, 2008 at the St. Louis Zoo. Her mother came from the Philadelphia Zoo and her father came from Russia and is considered one of the most genetically valuable tigers in North America. Zhanna is part of a litter of five – three females and two males. The males now reside at the Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, Kansas. The second female was sent to the Indianapolis Zoo. The remaining female will stay with her mother at the St. Louis Zoo.

Tigers are solitary animals by nature, and are technically known as Amur tigers. Tigers in the wild have a lifespan of 10 to 12 years. In captivity, longevity may reach as high as 20 years.

Amur tigers are part of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ Tiger Species Survival Plan. The plan is responsible for maintaining a genetically healthy population of tigers in North American Zoos, including the Amur. There are approximately 300 tigers in this program.

The last Amur tiger to reside at the Brandywine Zoo was Ashley, the beloved female cat who died in 2010. She was 20-years-old at the time of her natural death.

The Brandywine Zoo and the other zoos mentioned herein are accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. Such facilities are dedicated to providing excellent care for animals, a great experience for visitors and a better future for all living things. With its more than 200 accredited members, AZA is a leader is global wildlife conservation, and an important link to helping animals in their native habitats. The Zoo is managed as part of Wilmington State Parks by the Division of Parks and Recreation with the support of the Delaware Zoological Society.

Vol. 41, No. 246

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A press conference to meet Zhanna will be held following her quarantine, in approximately two weeks. A media advisory will be sent separately with the date of the press conference for the official public welcome of Zhanna.

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6/28/2011
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