Posts Tagged ‘cassowary’

Fireworks on the 4th

Posted by in Animal Fun Facts,Fun on grounds

A great fireworks display!

Everyone loves a great fireworks display to celebrate Independence Day!  (Well, almost everyone.)  Houston has many fantastic pyrotechnic shows, including a big one here in Hermann Park.  This year a great patriotic weekend in the park included a visit to the Zoo for several thousand people – thanks for coming!

Fireworks are exciting for humans, but the “rockets’ red glare” and ”bombs bursting in air” are lost on most animals.  If your dog is anything like mine, fireworks are not just another weird human behavior, but possibly the beginning of the end of the world.  (I spent Sunday night re-confirming to my dog that it was not.  In fact, the whole weekend proved to be a test of his bladder, as he flatly refused to go outside once the neighbors started their festivities.)

Most of the animals at the Zoo are just fine on the Fourth.  Like the helicopters that fly nearby and the ambulances on their way to the Medical Center, the fireworks are one more human noise to ignore.   There are a few animals that are a bit more nervous, though, and those get special attention on the Fourth of July.  Our cassowary is one of those animals.  He gets his own personal keeper during the fireworks, someone to keep an eye on him and respond in case things get a little hairy.  Fortunately this year he was quite mellow and I’ve been told it was an uneventful watch. 

Fireworks aren’t the only thing that can spook our animals, but the keepers know what bothers their charges and adjustments are made to avoid these situations when possible.  For example, there are certain areas of the Zoo the street sweeper skips in the mornings.  But animals figure it out pretty quickly.  Even if something is scary at first, if it continues and nothing happens to the animal then whatever was frightening loses its threat.  (This is called desensitization in animal training lingo.)  A great example is the African Forest construction – it’s been ongoing for a while, so the neighboring animals have tuned it out completely.  Unfortunately it needs to be something that the animal experiences frequently or continuously, meaning that the handful of animals who fear the Fourth will continue to need special attention on the night the fire flowers fly.

How about your own animals?  Did they survive the Fourth of July, or maybe even enjoy it?

Ten Fun Facts by the Numbers

Posted by in Animal Fun Facts

Liberty, our Bald Eagle

Liberty, our Bald Eagle

10
A wild piranha can get as long as 10 inches, although they are sometimes bigger in captivity.

9
A young orangutan will stay with its mother up to 9 years to learn how to survive before going off on its own.

8
A Komodo dragon’s egg takes 8 months to hatch.

7
All mammals, from the tiniest bat to the tallest giraffe, have 7 vertebrae in their neck.

6
An American alligator will make a nest of plant material that can be up to 6 feet across.

5
A bald eagle does not get its distinctive white head and tail until it reaches 5 years of age.

4
A female cassowary lays 4 eggs in a nest, but the male cassowary sits on the eggs and raises the babies.

3
A tapir has 3 toes per foot, which makes it a relative of the horse and the rhino.

2
There are only 2 groups of animals that maintain a constant internal body temperature: birds and mammals.

1
All big cats except the lion are solitary, so the most common group size is 1.