Come
meet Sasha!
Louisville Zoo’s new
Amur tiger steals the show
Sasha, a 350-pound male Amur tiger, is
meeting Louisville Zoo visitors with open paws.
Eight-year-old Sasha—who arrived at the
Louisville Zoo two months ago from the Seneca Park Zoo in
Rochester, New York—is currently trading time in the spotlight
with 16-year-old female Amur tiger Sinda during the Zoo’s three
training and educational presentations at the newly renovated
Alice S. Etscorn Tiger Tundra exhibit.
“He is very smart,” Zookeeper David
Hodge said of Sasha. “So far we have taught him about four
training behaviors and we are working on teaching him more.
Training plays an important role in the lives of our animals at
the Zoo—it provides amazing enrichment by keeping animals active
and engaged, and it also helps us to take better care of them.”
Training is a vital tool in animal care
and allows keepers and veterinarians to do their jobs more
safely and easily as well as help form a complete picture of the
animal’s health.
Sasha has integrated well into his new
home, and when he isn’t meeting the public during training
demonstrations, he can often be seen playing with his favorite
toy, a large green barrel.
The Alice S. Etscorn Tiger Tundra
exhibit, which opened on June 2, represents innovative new
trends in zoo exhibit design and is a way of turning the Zoo
experience “inside out” by allowing special access to visitors
who can view these amazing Amur tigers up-close through a 1.5
inch reinforced glass barrier or a steel mesh barrier and watch
them being trained without a special behind-the-scenes tour.
“This exhibit allows you to get an
inside peek at what we do here at the Zoo each and every day,”
Hodge said.
Up-close Amur tiger training
demonstration are held at the Alice S. Etscorn Tiger Tundra
exhibit daily at 10:45 a.m., 2 p.m. and 3:30
p.m. For more information on the exhibit, visit
http://www.louisvillezoo.org/collection/exhibits/tigertundra/index.htm.
AMUR TIGERS
Amur tigers are the largest of the
tiger subspecies and were formerly known as Siberian tigers.
Males can grow up to 10 foot 9 inches long and weigh up to 660
pounds. Females are smaller, measuring about 8 1/2 feet from
head to tail, and weighing about 200 to 370 pounds. The Amur
orange coloring is paler than the coloring of other tigers. Its
stripes are brown rather than black, and are widely spaced. It
has a white chest and belly, and a thick white ruff of fur
around its neck.
It is estimated there are about 500
Amur tigers left in the wild, and about 150 in managed
Association of Zoos and Aquariums institutions in North America
and 315 overseas.
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The Louisville Zoo, a non-profit
organization and state zoo of Kentucky, is dedicated to
bettering the bond between people and our planet by providing
excellent care for animals, a great experience for visitors, and
leadership in scientific research and conservation education.
The Zoo is accredited by the American Association of Museums (AAM)
and by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums
(AZA).
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