desertvixen: (sadness)
[personal profile] desertvixen
Okay, this makes me ill.

http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/news/15202942.htm

Zoo meerkats test negative for rabies
Five of the popular animals euthanized after girl, 9, is bitten
BY MEGGEN LINDSAY
Pioneer Press

Public condolences poured into the Minnesota Zoo on Friday, as zoo visitors and staff mourned the deaths of an entire meerkat family.

Kids raced to the outdoor exhibit in Apple Valley and plastered their hands against the glass, only to find nothing inside. A small boy in a stroller wailed as his mother told him the creatures were away on vacation.

"This is a hard day. This was frustrating, sad and totally avoidable," said Tony Fisher, zoo collections manager. "People need to respect the barriers we put up to keep the public back. Instead, they try to climb over them, under them and around them."

The five meerkats were euthanized Thursday, a day after a 9-year-old girl reached her hand into the exhibit and was bitten.

The meerkats — two adults and their three babies born in spring — were vaccinated for rabies, but state health protocol required that they be killed and tested because the girl's parents didn't want her to undergo a series of six painful rabies shots.

The meerkats did not have rabies, tests done at the Minnesota Board of Animal Health showed Friday.

"Although we knew there was just a minute chance they had rabies, we had no choice in this," Fisher said. "Of course, the public's safety comes first."

Well-wishers called the zoo all day, and the zoo's e-mail inboxes were filled to capacity with mostly sympathetic words, spokeswoman Kelly Lessard said.

The meerkats' deaths marks the first time an animal bit a guest and was put down at the zoo, Fisher said. Zookeepers have been bitten before, but always underwent the rabies shots.

Meerkats have been on display at the zoo since 2001 and are one of its more popular attractions. The animals, made famous in Disney's "The Lion King" movie, are 12-inch tall members of the mongoose family. They live in the Kalahari Desert of southern Africa, dwelling in elaborate underground tunnel systems.

"They are active, curious creatures. They live as a family unit," Fisher said.

Although not typically aggressive, they bite if they feel threatened. Keepers use gloves when handling them.

"We display exotic, dangerous species here at the zoo," Fisher said. "That's the business we are in."

Mary Wahl of New Brighton and her multitude of daycare charges headed straight for the meerkat exhibit Friday afternoon, only to find it barren.

"It's really too bad," Wahl said. "We love seeing them every year. They are so little and active."

She said the outdoor exhibit looked perfectly safe. "Parents need to watch their kids better," Wahl said. "And a 9-year-old really should know better."

But Eden Prairie mom Liz Schewe said she wasn't surprised the exhibit's barriers were bridged. She called herself an "overprotective mom" but said she has wondered about the exhibit's safety.

"It's definitely given me pause in the past," Schewe said. "My 4-year-old is a monkey, and he could probably climb right over."

The girl had to work to get her hand inside the enclosure. Zoo officials said she must have crawled over a driftwood barrier, climbed up more than 3 feet of artificial rock and reached over 4 feet of Plexiglas to get her arm into the exhibit.

Because meerkats stand just a foot tall on their hind legs, she had to have dangled her hand low for an animal to bite her finger, they said.


"The barriers seemed fairly obvious to us and we've gone five years where nothing happened," zoo communications director Sue Gergen said. "But kids are braver and the animals are cute."

The exhibit will be closed for at least a week, while additional barrier measures are added. Zoo staff was already working on the modifications Friday.

A second group of four male meerkats will be moved from an adjacent indoor exhibit to the outdoor one when the adjustments are complete.

The zoo hopes to bring in a female next year to restart the breeding process.

"We'll be starting over to get a new family group," Fisher said.

Meggen Lindsay can be reached at mlindsay@pioneerpress.com or 651-228-5260.

So first of all, whoever is "supervising the child" obviously wasn't doing such a good job. Yes, I know children can escape before you realize it, but check out this:

The girl had to work to get her hand inside the enclosure. Zoo officials said she must have crawled over a driftwood barrier, climbed up more than 3 feet of artificial rock and reached over 4 feet of Plexiglas to get her arm into the exhibit. Because meerkats stand just a foot tall on their hind legs, she had to have dangled her hand low for an animal to bite her finger, they said.

It makes me ill that they put down baby animals, because some human couldn't take care of their child. At least they aren't an endangered species, but that doesn't make it all right. If it had been our kid, they'd have been doing the rabies shots.

DV

DV

Date: 2006-08-08 04:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kishiriadgr.livejournal.com
*Sob*

I love meerkats! I have a picture of a meerkat family on my wall right now!

Date: 2006-08-08 04:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kishiriadgr.livejournal.com
Furthermore, that stupid mother also probably thought rabies shots are still given in the stomach, which they haven't been for decades. They're given in the butt now.

And yeah, my kid would be getting them too. Teach them a lesson.

Date: 2006-08-08 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hornedhopper.livejournal.com
It is rather amazing what the public gets up to at zoos.

Date: 2006-08-08 05:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lilytree.livejournal.com
I agree, it is terrible. Killing an entire family? Though it isn't fair to the child either - it truly is the parents' fault that this happened. But pain relievers can be given before shots and the area numbed. There are options.

Date: 2006-08-08 05:52 pm (UTC)
ext_5457: (Default)
From: [identity profile] xinef.livejournal.com
1. My kids would also have had the shots. Parents should be charged with negligence.

2. What would have happened if the child had managed to get that close to a lion or other large carnivore? I very much blame the parents, not the zoo. It is probably impossible to make a zoo exhibit completely inaccessible to unauthorized humans.

Date: 2006-08-08 06:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sweet-iced-tea.livejournal.com
What dumbasses. Sorry, yeah, kids can get away from you, I see it everyday. But watch your kids a little better and teach them some responsibility. My child would totally be getting the shots- if nothing else than to teach her a lesson. The zoo ought to be able to sue the parents for loss of property and income. I guarantee one of two things happened- either the parents were somewhere else sitting their lazy butt on a bench and chatting on the cell phone or they were right there going, "Look, it's Timone, how cute and fuzzy. You want to pet it? Sure honey, go ahead." Too bad they don't have security tapes.

I need a pissed off icon.

Date: 2006-08-08 08:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rockahulababy.livejournal.com
Not only would I be getting the shots, I would be a very unhappy kid, to boot. My parents would have punished me for doing such a thing, but I don't think I would have ever done such a thing. I knew better and my mother wasn't that oblivious that I would be able to get up to that much fuckery and her not know about it. That woman was everywhere, I tell you. (I still wait to see if she'll come out of nowhere.)

Those animals shouldn't have had to be put down because of the incompetence of a parent.

Date: 2006-08-08 11:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mamid.livejournal.com
Kid sounds like my son. I sneeze and he's pulled a "code adam." Or up a tree. Or down the block. or whatever.

It might not have been mom's fault. I'd like to know if she was actively looking for the child or goading the kid on. Or just ignoring her. The first one would not be her fault. The other two would be mom's fault.

Date: 2006-08-09 01:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anneebrat.livejournal.com
Hmmmmm......well first kid should have gotten the shots anyway. Second, if the barrier was the way the article discribed it, if mom was paying attention she should have caught the kid. I never...and mean never would have gotten away with that. Course I knew better cause I knew exactly what my Mom or Dad would have done to me. But to reach the Meerkats the kid would have had to and I quote

"The girl had to work to get her hand inside the enclosure. Zoo officials said she must have crawled over a driftwood barrier, climbed up more than 3 feet of artificial rock and reached over 4 feet of Plexiglas to get her arm into the exhibit. Because meerkats stand just a foot tall on their hind legs, she had to have dangled her hand low for an animal to bite her finger, they said."

Sorry thats pretty obivous to any parent thats paying attention.

Date: 2006-08-09 10:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stardragonca.livejournal.com
Tourists come from U.S. to visit Canada.They receive repeated instruction,written and verbal,not to feed or molest the bears.They feed and/or molest the bears.They get mauled or killed.Bears are hunted down and destroyed.Sometimes we get the wrong bear by mistake.
Next year same story.

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