Archive for the ‘Aquarium’ Category

World Ocean’s Day

Posted by Rochelle Joseph in Aquarium,Conservation,Endangered,Events,Reptiles

Did you know tomorrow, June 8th was World Ocean’s Day?  Since December 2008, this day has been officially recognized worldwide by the United Nations.  It’s a great support to people and organizations who work tirelessly in ocean conservation.  It seems especially important now, as the ocean, it’s in habitants and the coastline is very much on our minds.

This year World Ocean’s Day coincides with the 50th anniversary of the publication of Dr. Seuss’s book, One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.  Join the Houston Zoo on Tuesday. June 8, and Saturday,  June 12, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day for readings of Dr. Seuss’s beloved children’s book as well as special sea lion presentations and enrichment activities with denizens of the deep such as lionfish, eels, piranha, and the Houston Zoo’s resident octopus.  Kids and families will get to know funny fish “from here to there” and learn how everyday actions impact their ocean home.

The the Ocean Project’s website  said that the wealth of life in the oceans is so incredibly important for so many reasons:

* Each of us relies on a healthy ocean with a rich diversity of life to provide most of the oxygen we breathe, much of the food we eat, as well as medicines and other essentials that we need to survive.

 *The ocean provides endless opportunities for inspiration and recreation such as diving, snorkeling, fishing, and boating. How much would you enjoy the ocean without its great diversity of life?

*The greater the diversity of life in the ocean the better job the ocean will do in helping maintain the planet’s normal climate conditions and in adjusting to a changing climate.

One way the  Houston Zoo participates in ocean conservation is in our work with sea turtles.  Our Veterinary Department examines and treats injured and sick sea turtles on the upper Texas Coast.  Some of the injured sea turtles treated at the Houston Zoo take a mini-vacation at the Kipp aquarium until they are fully rehabilitated and ready to be released back in the sea or transferred to a permanent home. Come by and say hello during your next visit at the Zoo!

Baby Kemp ridley sea turtles make their way across the sand on Padre Island National Seashore to the life-giving ocean.

Additionally, one of our Conservation Department staff members conducts weekly patrols in Galveston during nesting season. During this 2010 nesting season 97 nests have been confirmed on the Texas coast for Kemp’s ridley sea turtles.  And there have been 11 on the upper Texas coast, including 5 on Galveston Island!

You can help sea turtles by picking up trash at the beach and by calling 1-866- TURTLE-5 if you see a dead or live sea turtle or nest when visiting Texas beaches.

 To read more about World Oceans Day visit their official website at http://theoceanproject.org/index.php

Written by Rochelle Joseph

Photo credit: Thank you to PINS for Kemp ridley sea turtle and http://www.flickr.com/photos/smallthingsiced/ for the Seuss fish.

Photo of the Day: May 8

Posted by admin in Aquarium,Photo of the Day

Skunk Anemone Fish

Skunk Anemone Fish

Photo of the Day: April 27

Posted by admin in Aquarium,Photo of the Day

Orangespot Freshwater Stringray

Orangespot Freshwater Stingray-0001

Photo of the Day: April 12

Posted by admin in Aquarium,Photo of the Day

Green Sea Turtle

Green Sea Turtle

Photo of the Day: April 8

Posted by admin in Aquarium,Photo of the Day

Pacific Giant Octopus

Giant Pacific Octopus

St. Patrick’s Day Green Animals

Posted by admin in Aquarium,Birds,Reptiles

Happy St. Patrick’s Day! Are you wearing your green?

Here’s a look at some Houston Zoo animals that show off St. Patty’s green every day…

Volunteer Extraordinaire Series: Pat Pilkington

Posted by Rochelle Joseph in Aquarium,Mammals,Volunteers,Zoo Births

Meet Pat, a simply lovely person and wonderful volunteer who I mentioned I’d write about in a previous post a little ways back. Pat has been giving generously, not just of her time but in many other ways for over 6 years! She comes in weekly — in the morning as an Elephant Keeper Aid then pitches in at the aquarium afterwards, which is where her husband Paul also volunteers.

Pat started out at the general commissary where food for our animals is ordered, prepared to the needs and specifications of each species and delivered to our keepers. Once she moved on to feeding the fish, all that experience came in handy.

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Then she heard about an opportunity to be on the rare and unique experience of a birth watch for one of the baby elephants. Taking the midnight to 4 AM shift, Pat and a handful of like-minded volunteers (meaning: crazily committed people– Dale, who I wrote about HERE, was one of them) kept their vigil in a trailer with TV monitors trained on the pens for months and months waiting for the baby to be born.  But it’s clear the rewards were great.  “I was there when the baby was born!” says Pat. She was able  to watch over the TV monitors since only our highly trained staff were allowed in the actual barn. “We continued our shifts for awhile after she’d arrived”

Pat says she made many friends in those wee hours, as the weeks of waiting piled up. “And,” added Pat, “ it was then that I witnessed  the tremendous devotion of the elephant keepers.”  Pat decided she wanted to continue working with the elephants and boy did she get into it, as the picture below shows!  Pat told me with a twinkle in her voice, “Elephant pooper-scooper, that’s my claim to fame!”

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Hey, I understand. After my stint as a carnivore keepers aid, I wrote about scooping bear poop myself.  Let’s face it, it’s an amazing job!

When the opportunity to go on safari with zoo staff and other volunteers came up, Pat went along with them to Kenya and got to know a new bunch of people over the dozen days they were traveling.

Pat 4

“It was like a walking encyclopedia to be on safari. People like Sharon Joseph and Tammy (in Primates) were so knowledgeable about all of the animals that they knew more than our guides occasionally! My daughter and I didn’t have to use our guide books very often, since we could just ask them the questions.” And with that, she gave a little chuckle.

When Pat sent me the picture below, my eyes almost fell out of my head!  I mean, how many people can say they’ve done this?!?!!!

Pat Pilkington 2

She’s even had parties at the zoo for her sister’s 50th birthday and for her own 60th. “I don’t know if people realize just what a great venue the zoo is for throwing your own parties.”

For as much as Pat gives to our zoo, she’s also a volunteer and on the Board of Directors for Taping for the Blind and is a tour guide for Houston TranStar. Known for “adopting” zoo friends, most notably a Thanksgiving meal for those who aren’t with family each year and throwing baby showers and the like, Pat and Paul also found room in their rather large hearts to adopt two rescue kitties! (Note to self– get Pat and Paul to bring in cat pictures).

Becoming a volunteer at the Houston Zoo opens the door to many a world. Certainly being a visitor is a way to experience things, see things, feel things that you might only if you were a world traveler — and an exotic one at that (and you don’t even have to leave your own back yard). But becoming a volunteer expands that, and Pat’s story is a stellar example of how it can manifest. As she so aptly described, “These experiences have been the highlight of my retirement!”

Written by Rochelle Joseph. Come visit my personal animal blog at www.naturegirrrl.blogspot.com

Thank you to Pat Pilkington and Stephanie Adams for the photos

On The Tenth Day Of Christmas

Posted by admin in Aquarium,Christmas,Holidays

…The Houston Zoo Gave To Me

Ten Floating Jellies

jellies

Nine Ne-Ne Geese Singing

Eight Growing Giraffes

Seven Orangs a’Hangin’

Six Entertaining Elands

Five Elephants Trumpeting

Four Komodos Crawling

Three Leaping Leopards

Two Curious Coatis

And A Toby The Red Panda In A Tree

Stay tuned to our blogs as we count down the 12 Days of Christmas at the Houston Zoo.

Volunteer Extraordinaire Series

Posted by Kelly Russo in Aquarium,Featured,Natural Encounters,Volunteers

Meet Paul.  
 
That’s him in front of the entry foyer tank at Natural Encounters.

Paul standing in front of Natural Encounters aquarium tank.

Paul standing in front of Natural Encounters aquarium tank.

You may be scratching your head, as all you see is a blue volunteer tee shirt, khakis and a hat. Well, Paul is a little bit of a mystery… and he likes it that way.
 
But I can tell you this much: Paul is a volunteer who comes twice every week, and has been for the last four years.  Among other things, he’s in charge of making all the meals for the fish in the Aquarium and Natural Encounters.  But Paul is also is famous for his baking skills.
 
I think I hear you asking: Do fish have a sweet tooth?
 
No!  But people do. And as the many of the zoo staff and volunteers will attest, Paul’s baked goods are the best. Though I imagine those in Paul’s immediate department would like this to be a well kept secret, it seems that word has spread. And folks from other areas of the zoo have been known to pilfer– er, sample–Paul’s homemade cookies.
 
Which are their favorites?  Hard to say, as Paul has brought in at least one if not several bags of different, bite-sized cookies each day and tells me he has not repeated the same recipe, save once or twice, in all his time at the Zoo. If you do the math for 4 years of volunteering twice weekly that’s hundreds of different cookies made and consumed!
 
When I went in to meet Paul for this interview, it was a day he’d brought in three different kinds: Orange Oatmeal Raisin, Chocolate Diamonds, and Peanut Butter.  I went for just one, then I had to try another, but told myself that was it.  But he encouraged me not to leave until I’d tried them all. Really, the sacrifices you make for writing!
 
All kidding aside, the experience was much like tasting fine wine. There were subtleties in flavor and texture, as well as being pleasing to the eye. The oatmeal was oh-so tender and had the lightest hint of orange essence. Exquisite! The peanut butter was great — how can peanut butter not be?  The chocolate cookies were cut into a diamond shape with a subtle sprinkling of multicolored dots on top and while quite thin, were somehow as moist and chewy as a thick brownie. I had no idea how he did it!
 
So how do the fish fare, if Paul takes care of human palates so well?  Paul took me around and explained how each bank of tanks have a number and that corresponds with various sizes and colors of Tupperware containers. What he feeds an octopus might be very different than what he feeds an eel. Some species are fed more than once a day, and those meals may vary to provide all the needed nutrition. I was impressed as Paul spoke easily to me about each different sea animal in detail, covering far more than their diet — including their habits, personality, breeding patterns, the kind of water each needed, and their history at the Houston Zoo. There wasn’t a question I asked that he couldn’t answer. 
 
When I trained as a docent, I remember thinking that the aquarium had to be one of the more difficult areas to run because each tank must maintain a delicate balance. Many elements need to be just right — temperature, water quality, plant life, complimentary co-mingling of species, cleaning and feeding. Paul takes to all that like a fish to water (I just had to say it!).
 
To feed the animals at the zoo you have to get in early. And Paul does. The Zoo’s general commissary delivers what’s needed on a daily basis to each section’s kitchen first thing in the morning. Then there’s cutting and measuring out each animal’s meal, which may be determined, among other things, by species, weight, general health needs and what’s found in their natural habitat. Then you either leave those prepared meals for the keepers to actually feed to them, as I did when I was a Carnivore Keepers Aid, or you may be able to assist in the feeding, as Paul does. 
 
So you just might find Paul behind the piranha exhibit in Natural Encounters. The day we met, during a Meet the Keeper Talk, he stood above the tank and the fish knew he was there. They went from randomly floating to swimming rapidly and in a tight circle right in front of him. They know he’s the man with the goods. 
 
I shivered at the idea of feeding piranhas, thinking of them from movies as flesh eating attack fish. Paul set me straight, “It’s a crock that piranhas are man-eaters! Those effects are staged.”  While he informed me that they do have a natural trigger that involuntarily makes their jaw snaps anytime it hits something, natives swim in the rivers where piranhas are found all the time without incident.  “Our very own keepers dive in the tank every two weeks to clean it,” Paul added, “and those fish go hide on the other side of the tank.”  While I was reassured, I think I’ll stick to watching him feed them!

Paul selecting one of the 35 specialized tubs of food� - coded by color and zone for the various tanks - from one of the aquarium�s refrigerators.

Paul selecting one of the 35 specialized tubs of food - coded by color and zone for the various tanks - from one of the aquarium's refrigerators.

Paul credits his wife Pat, who is also a weekly volunteer, for getting him started at the Houston Zoo.  When I asked what made him so devoted Paul said, “I enjoy it. I enjoy doing things where there’s a sense of accomplishment. You prepare the food and feed the fish and you feel you’ve done good.  And if it weren’t a good crew of people,” he added, “I wouldn’t be here.”
 
I could not agree more. Those who I’ve met at the zoo have been among the nicest, most dedicated and knowledgeable folks I’ve ever met. Paul and Pat demonstrate how much they care for their zoo friends in many ways (as if mouth watering cookies weren’t enough), often hosting anything from Thanksgiving dinners to baby showers for their co-workers. And they even come in on Christmas to work so others can get home a little early. Paul and Pat probably don’t realize that they are key members in the very group they admire!
 
Besides volunteering at the zoo, Paul goes every other week to the blood center to donate a pint of blood… He is closing in on his 79th gallon!!!  At 8 pints per gallon you can do the math on how often he has gone.  The record is 200 gallons and he’s well on his way.  Thankfully the piranhas aren’t taking any!
 
Please check back to learn a little more about Paul in the article I’ll post next about Pat… since it seems you can’t really talk about one without including the other. In the mean time, make sure to be on the look out for a tall, thin man feeding the fish.  It just might be our Paul.

Post written by Rochelle Joseph, Houston Zoo Docent
http://naturegirrrl.blogspot.com/