Sunday, February 22, 2009

Zoo prepares to add tigers--BREC Baton Rouge Zoo


World-class exhibit to hold Asian big cats

LSU’s Mike the Tiger and Southern University’s Lacumba will soon have some more four-legged neighbors.

Construction is under way at BREC’s Baton Rouge Zoo for the “Realm of the Tiger,” which promises to immerse guests in the sights and sounds of Asia while they watch eight tigers from that part of the world.

One will be a white tiger, which the zoo already owns. That tiger is being kept at an Audubon Nature Institute facility in New Orleans until the new $3.8 million exhibit in Baton Rouge is completed.

Phil Frost, director of the zoo, said the exhibit also will feature a rock garden, a koi pond, a walk-through aviary with exotic birds from Asia and Siamang gibbons, monkeys that live in the rain forests of Malaysia and Sumatra.

Frost said the exhibit, which should be completed by late fall or by the end of the year — depending on the weather — has two main purposes.

“You want to give people the feeling that they are in a part of the world where the tigers live. When you walk in, you are not in Baton Rouge anymore,” Frost said recently.

The second purpose is to raise awareness about endangered tigers and why it’s important to save them.

Frost said there were about 100,000 tigers across Asia in 1900, but that number has fallen to as few as 5,000 today. He also said there are fewer than 500 Sumatran tigers left in the wild.

“They are unique animals and hopefully, it will be a call to action,” Frost said. “People won’t want to save a animal if they don’t know about them or haven’t seen them.”

The money for the project came from a 3.253-mill property tax East Baton Rouge Parish voters approved in 2004, money dedicated to the parish’s Imagine Your Parks program.

The $300,000 seed money for initial planning and design of the tiger exhibit was donated by ExxonMobil, Frost said.

The East Baton Rouge Parish Recreation and Park Commission hired Bassett Associates, an Ohio-based landscape architecture and zoo planning firm that specializes in these kinds of projects.

“Hopefully, this is going to be the start of a redevelopment of the Baton Rouge Zoo,” said Dave Bassett, who designed and planned the exhibit.

“It’s a new type of exhibit and it’s a more natural setting where visitors can be immersed in a certain geographical setting,” Basset said.

The zoo’s previous large cat exhibit was torn down to make way for the new exhibit, Frost said. Prior to the demolition, the zoo relocated its large cats to other zoos.

The former large cat exhibit, Frost said, was based on an outdated zoo model.

“There’s been a change. Before, it was all about the numbers of what you have. A lion, a leopard, a North American cougar, whatever. Now, we want to focus on the right species in the right region,” Frost said.

BREC Superintendent Bill Palmer said he’s very excited about the new exhibit.

“It will be the first thing people see when they walk in at the entrance and the last thing they see when they go out,” he said.
Construction by general contractor Faulk and Meek of Baton Rouge started in December.

Although zoo officials don’t yet know exactly what kind of tigers will be part of the exhibit, zoo curator Sam Winslow is working on that now to make sure the tigers are all from Asia, Frost said.

“It’s going to be a world-class exhibit. It’s certainly the biggest and most ambitious exhibit we’ve had in the zoo’s 39-year history,” Frost said.

Courtesy of Mary Ann Howell

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The Baton Rouge Zoo seems to have a dilemma here, before the "rain forests of Malaysia and Sumatra" exhibit is even started/completed. If they are going to be even remotely "authentic" they need to get rid of the White tiger, as well as the LSU tiger as well as SU's Lacumba. They are working now to "make sure the tigers are all from Asia" so they at least will have an alibi if they cave to public sentiment and keep the above mentioned trio. Trying to mesh what is right with public sentiment is very difficult for today's zoos as they become "Nature Institutes/Conservation Centers. etc. In the past, I think public sentiment had a priority, and is still a major consideration, but the zoological field now has a different agenda.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Joey, is the white tiger in question Tora?

Wade, if so then the question of the white tiger is a non-issue. Tora was born in 1991, and like Kumar at the Erie Zoo, is one of the senior citizen descendants of Mohini who is being "managed to extinction", that is they are not being bred but being allowed to live out their lives at the public zoos where they reside. I know who they are, where they are, and how they are related, and we try to see as many of these as we can before they are gone.
Mary Ann

Wade G. Burck said...

Mary Ann,
But they have nothing to do with "rain forests of Malaysia and Sumatra", but by making sure they are from at least from "Asia" means they already have their patch in, in case their is a public outcry to keep the "zoo mascot" as well as the other "mascots".
Wade

Casey McCoy Cainan said...

I don't think Mike from LSU is going to live at the zoo. The school has a great tiger compound they recently renovated for him, I think they are just going to be neighbors.

Anonymous said...

Mary Ann, I don't know anything about Baton Rouge's tigers. If your guess is Tora, that is good enough for me.
Casey is right about "Mike the Tiger" not living at the zoo. Audubon's Mammals Curator and Carnivore manager assisted in the design of his exhibit at the school.

Wade G. Burck said...

Casey,
Where do you suppose he would be relocated to at the first sign of trouble? I don't agree with them being able to have him in the first place.
Wade