How zoos are preparing animals for this weekend’s massive winter storm

How zoos prepare for winter storms
This weekend’s freezing temperatures and snow won’t just affect humans—zoo animals need to get ready for the coming storm, too

A tiger enjoys the winter weather at the Bronx Zoo in New York City in 2009.
James Devaney/Getty Images
Millions of people across the U.S. are bracing for a massive winter storm this weekend, with plummeting temperatures, “catastrophic” ice accumulation, freezing rain and heavy snow all expected, officials say. But humans aren’t the only ones hunkering down; zoos across the country are gearing up for the winter storm, too.
In Texas, the Houston Zoo has prepared its buildings and barns with heaters “designed to withstand extreme conditions,” the zoo said in a blog post on Friday. Animals will have access to extra hay and bedding, and food was stocked in advance. “Across the Zoo, sensitive plants are being protected with coverings, and generators are positioned to provide backup power if needed,” the blog post said.
Elsewhere in the state, the Dallas Zoo reportedly plans to bring many of its animals indoors and to ramp up enrichment activities like caretaker trainings, food puzzles and nature sounds. “Humans can stay inside and watch Netflix,” said zoo curator Keith Zdrojewski to the Dallas Morning News. “When animals are inside for days, it can get pretty boring for them.”
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Similarly, Fort Worth’s zoo has brought its endangered Pan’s box turtles inside, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported. Meanwhile in Cincinnati, animal care staff plan to stay at the zoo overnight to keep an eye on the animals, according to the Cincinnati Zoo. And in Washington, D.C., if temperatures dip below 35 degrees Fahrenheit (1.7 degrees Celsius), as they are currently projected to do, species at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo, including Asian small-clawed otters, brown pelicans, orangutans and gorillas, will likely be taken indoors, too, according to the zoo’s standard procedures.
Other animals, of course, will be just fine in the cold. At the Philadelphia Zoo, officials expect Marcy the snow leopard to be thriving this weekend, according to a local news report. And in Sedgwick County, Kansas, an Amur tiger, a species that is very well-adapted to low temperatures, reportedly “loves” the cold.
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